Jalfrezi can be made with any meat of your choice including chicken, but red meat works better in texture for this dish.
I had stewed pork in ginger, lemon and red chillies and was using the stock in other dishes, while the meat just kept getting more and more kisparla lending beautiful flavour, but too flimsy/fiddly to eat.
So I fried it up with onions, tomatoes, chillies, potatoes and spices - such a taste of eating at my grandparents home.
The recipe below is the way I made I made it this time, scroll to the end to see the way my nana would make it.
Ingredients:
250 gms leftover boneless cooked roast or stewed meat or meat leftover when making stock (see option at end of post)
3 tbsp mustard oil (can use regular oil, but mustard oil gives a nice bite)
2" cinnamon
1 star anise
1 large onion halved and sliced thin
2 tbsp chopped ginger
100 gms boiled potato skinned and chopped large (I used halved skin on baby potatoes this time)
2 large fully ripe tomatoes sliced thin
2-8 green chillies chopped (as per taste)
salt to taste
handful fresh corriander chopped
Method:
Pull the meat apart - so it forms threads / reshis.
Pork fat and skin or chicken skin can also be added chopped in small chunks.
Take a large frying pan on high heat.
When it is hot, add the oil.
When the oil is almost smoking, add the cinnamon and star anise.
As soon as the spices start releasing their aroma, add the sliced onions and fry until they start to caramelise.
From here on, the recipe needs constant monitoring and gentle stirring.
Now add the ginger and boiled potatoes and fry, till the edges of the potato start to crisp up.
Now add the tomatoes and turn the heat to medium.
Cook until the tomatoes release all their pulp and the tomato skins start to curl up on themselves. This will take a little time, but this caramelisation of the onion and tomatoes is where all the taste in this dish comes from.
Now add the chopped green chillies , give a quick stir, then add the shredded meat. You can increase the heat now, but keep an eye and keep stirring.
Adjust salt to taste (you would have most likely added salt when initially cooking the meat, so be cautious.)
Fry until the meat starts crisping up.
Garnish with corriander and serve hot with rice and dhal or rotis and dhal.
I served it with rice, leftover rajma madra and cabbage stir fried with crisped up garlic, topped with chilli oil.
Kim's Tip 1 : If you don't have leftover meat, slow cook 300 - 400 gms meat (bones extra if you want) with chopped onions, ginger, garlic, red chillies or spices and veggies of your choice in lots of water. Use the liquid as stock in any dish and use the meat for this recipe.
Kim's Tip 2 : If your tomatoes have no tartness at all, you may like to add a squeeze of lime and stir, once the meat is fried.
Kim's Tip 3 : Do not stint on the oil in this recipe. I rarely use a lot of oil, but this recipe needs the oil to fry the onions, the tomatoes, the potatoes and the meat. It will seperate at the end and you can remove it before serving.
Kim's Tip 4 : Do not make this in very large quantities, the meat needs space in the pan to cook properly.
Kim's Tip 5 : Garnish with sliced fresh onion rings for a stunning presentation
Nana's Version Ingredients:
250 gms leftover boneless cooked roast or stewed meat or meat leftover when making stock.
3 tbsp sunflower oil
2" cinnamon
3-4 cloves
1 large onion halved and sliced thin
2 tbsp chopped ginger
2 large fully ripe tomatoes sliced thin
2-8 green chillies chopped (as per taste)
salt to taste
100 gms boiled potato cut in slices and deep fried
handful fresh corriander chopped
Method :
Same as above, except the deep fried potatoes are added at the end just before serving.
2 comments:
Thank you for this. I did try this. I would emphasise the need to not skimp on the oil. The boiled potatoes I used disintegrated in the process, so next time I would parboil instead. Otherwise a lovely recipe, which gave me lovely memories of Calcutta food. Thank you for posting.
Thanks for letting me know how it went Anjona. I’m glad you enjoyed the recipe.
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