Khichdas/khichdras are thick legume-and-grain porridges. This one contains wheat, rice, pigeon peas, and yellow split peas. They also generally contain beef, goat, or both. This one just contains a relatively small amount of beef, but I think that goat would also be excellent in it (either instead or as well).
This was one of those almost "too simple" recipes that made me a little nervous. Because while it contains a lot of legumes and grains, it doesn't have that much in the way of seasonings. It's mostly just cumin. Cumin, ginger, and garlic. And a little cilantro and coriander. But that's not a whole lot to hang your curry on! No asafetida. Not even any turmeric! But, honestly, it was still great! Even with the limited spices. And the beef came out ultra-tender!
While I won't go so far as to say this is a new "favourite", it was very good. It may not be as tasty as some of the other curries in the book, but it has an impressive tastiness-to-effort ratio! And it's also very cheap to make. The most expensive ingredient is the beef. And you only need half a kilo of that. And cheap stewing beef works just fine. So you don't need to spend a lot of money on the meat for it. And, other than that, it's dried legumes, rice, and wheat! All very affordable ingredients. And it makes a
huge amount. So it's a great dish for feeding a hungry crowd.
Khichda
Slightly adapted from 660 Curries by Raghavan Iyer
Ingredients
- 1 c. cracked wheat
- 6 c. water
- 1/2 c. skinned split pigeon peas (toovar dal)
- 1/2 c. yellow split peas (chana dal)
- 1/2 c. long-grain rice1
- 500g stewing beef
- 1/2 c. chile-ginger paste2
- 2 Tbsp. dhania-jeera masala
- 1-2 tsp. black cumin seeds
- 1 tsp. cumin seeds3 (optional)
- 2 tsp. coarse sea salt, divided
- 1/4 c. ghee
- 1 Tbsp. cumin seeds
- 6-8 cloves garlic, minced
- 1/4 c. chopped fresh cilantro
Directions
- Rinse and drain the wheat thoroughly.
- Add it to the water and allow to stand at room temperature for 6-8 hours.
- Add the wheat and its soaking water to a slow cooker or InstantPot.
- Add the pigeon peas, yellow peas, rice, beef, chile-ginger paste, masala, black cumin (and additional regular cumin, if using), and 1 tsp. of the salt.
- Either slow cook on "low" for 6-8 hours or pressure cook on "high" for 1 hour. If pressure cooking, allow for a 15-minute natural release. When the khichda is done, the grains should be very soft and the beef extremely tender. The consistency should be similar to congee/jook.
- Once the porridge is ready, heat the ghee over medium-high heat.
- Add the cumin and sizzle for 10-20 seconds.
- Reduce heat to medium, add the garlic, and cook for a minute or two.
- Add the garlic-y ghee and the remaining 1 tsp. of salt to the khichda and stir to mix.
- Sprinkle with cilantro and serve.
Iyer calls for long-grain white rice specifically. I reasoned that, given how long it cooks for, there's no reason why I couldn't use brown rice instead. So I tossed 1/2 c. of brown basmati into my khichda. It worked great! Would definitely do it that way again in future.
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I use chile-ginger paste rarely enough that I don't bother keeping it on hand. For this recipe I just tossed 1/2 c. of store-bought ginger paste into the blender with 6 fresh green finger chilies and gave that a whiz. It did the job and saved me trying to find room for another jar in the fridge.
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I find black cumin quite strong and don't like excessive amounts of it. Neither does TF. So when recipes call for blak cumin, I tend to scale it back a bit. For this one, I cut the black cumin back to 1 tsp. and then added an extra tsp. of regular cumin to compensate.
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