I had to rack my brains to figure out what would be the first recipe I would want to post. It had to represent me. I think this dish is perfect: 1. It's got a decided Indian spice kick 2. Definitely comfort food 3. Big starch element...yay potatoes! 4. It's fusion food!
The dish has two elements: meat and potatoes. The two elements are prepared separately, and put together at the end for optimum taste. :D
Here's what you'll need:
1 lb of ground meat- you can use any kind you prefer-chicken,turkey,lamb, pork, beef... I generally use a half and half mixture of lamb and turkey or lamb and beef
5-6 large potatoes
1 large onion, chopped
4 cloves of garlic, grated
2 tablespoons ginger, grated
3 tablespoons tomato paste
1/2 of a small bag frozen peas
2 tbsp butter
1/2 cup of milk
1/4 cup of yogurt/sour cream
Salt, to taste
2 tbsp vegetable/canola oil
1 tsp mustard oil (optional)
Spices:
2 tbsp coriander seeds
2 tbsp cumin seeds
1 tsp turmeric powder
1 tsp red chilli powder
4 cloves
2 cardamon pods
1 small cinnamon stick or 1 tsp cinnamon powder
1 tbsp black peppercorns/cracked black pepper
To make things easier, you can substitute the following: 2 tbsp coriander powder, 2 tbsp cumin powder, 1 tsp turmeric powder, 1 tsp red chilli powder, and 2 tbsp garam masala powder.
What to do:
In a hot pan coated lightly with oil, saute the chopped onion until caramelized into a deep golden brown. Remove about 1/4 of the browned onions and set aside. Add the tomato paste and saute for an additional 2 minutes, until the red color deepens and the oil begins to separate. Add the ground spices and about 2 tsp of salt. If you are using the whole spices, make sure to dry roast the spices till the pungent smell hits your nose, and then grind. Saute the spice mixture thoroughly for about a minute and half. All of this can be done on medium heat.
Crank up the heat to high and add the ground meat. Break it up before adding, and continue to break up the mixture once added to the hot pan. **Neat trick** You can use a potato/vegetable masher in your pan to break up the meat. Otherwise, you'll most likely get some chunks larger than others. A masher is the best way to get the meat cooked evenly and coat the spices through the meat.
Another side note, try to get meat closer to room temperature before hitting the pan with it. If the meat is cold, it won't brown, and it'll release a whole bunch of water right away. Ends up looking like a gray mess. NOT good!
The ground meat does eventually release some liquid, but that's okay, work the pan a bit and the water will dry up. When the water has almost dried up, lower the heat to medium, add the frozen peas, and cover. Cook for about 4 mins, stirring occasionally.
While you're working on the meat, boil the potatoes. There's 2 ways to do this. The faster way is to peel and cut the potatoes into 1 inch cubes and boil till fork tender. But I prefer to boil them with the skin on. That way the skin peels off, and I don't have to cut them. Either way, run a fork through the thickest part of the full potato, or potato piece to make sure it's ready. Once peeled and ready, mash up the potatoes. Normally, I don't mind mashed potatoes with some potato chunks, but here, you want them nice and creamy. Add the milk, butter, the yogurt/sour cream and the onions we saved earlier. Add salt to taste, and add the mustard oil. This is optional, but definitely adds an awesome depth to the flavor.
We're ready to assemble. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. In a baking dish (about 4-5 inches deep), pour in the ground meat mixture. Push it down so you don't get any big air pockets. This will also help the pie cut and stay together like a pie later. Make sure the ground meat is pushed down tight. Then add the mashed potatoes on top as an even layer. Throw in the oven, middle rack. Let it rip for about 15 mins. You should end up with some nice golden color on the top.
Time to eat!
(The Shepherd's Pie is on the bottom left of the picture. I'll post the recipes for the other mystery dishes later!)
PS- the meat is a good keema recipe. Mix with cooked pasta for an Indian kick, or eat with bread/roti/naan. Good stuff.