Haleem is a traditional dish of meat (mutton) and wheat that is stewed overnight during Ramadan, so it can be had as a nutritious and filling breakfast before sunrise the following day. Hyderabad has the most amazing varities of Haleem available during this period and we endeavoured to taste our way through as many of them as possible. It's a dish that is definitely worth waking up early for , but these days its available all around the year.
Haleem at home is served with toppings on the side, so everyone can choose their favourite flavours.
Since I wanted to recreate the recipe at home with better quality boneless mutton, I followed the recipe from the Essential Andhra Cookbook by Bilkees Latif, with my minor adjustments
Ingredients :
1/2 kg boneless mutton (or chicken)
1 tbsp garlic paste
1 tbsp ginger paste
1 tbsp ginger paste
Juice of half a lime
1/2 kg broken wheat (dalia)
1 handful each masoor (Egyptian / red), channa (Bengal gram) and moong (husked green gram) dhals/lentils2 tbsp ghee (Bilkees recommends 1/2 cup)
2 onions finely sliced
6 cloves
6 cardamom
2 " cinnamon
1 tbsp corriander powder
red chilli powder to taste
1 tsp ground caraway seeds - I skipped this
3-6 green chillies sliced or ground
1/2 tsp haldi - for colour I added
water
salt to taste
Options For Garnish :
chopped mint
quartered limes
chopped corriander leaves
chopped green chillies
ginger juliennes
Method :
Marinate mutton overnight in ginger garlic paste and lime juice.
Soak dhals and broken wheat for 1 hour (or overnight if you want to cook this as soon as you wake up as a breakfast dish)
Heat ghee
In the same ghee, fry cloves, cardamoms, cinnamon for a minute.
Add the spice powders and stir a bit.
Before the powders begin to burn, add the meat and marinade and saute till brown.
Add green chillies, soaked wheat, soaked dhal, 4 cups water and close the pressure cooker.
Open and dry out to desired consistency (like porridge)
Mash the meat and wheat a bit.
Add salt to taste.
Garnish with your choice and combination of fried onions, chopped chillies, chopped mint, ginger or chopped corriander
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