Thursday, 1 August 2013

Traditional cooking-Iilsh maasor jhol

I was talking to one of my very dear friend Richa today. Now Richa and I have been friends for about 10 years now and its one of those friendships that you know will see you through this lifetime. So anyways, while I was talking to her I mentioned that nowadays I am quite a decent cook. And that I can cook fish. Coming from me that is a big deal. When Richa and I lived together, we were know for our lack of cooking skills. To be fair, Richa was worse than me. Her only job was to wash and cut the coriander for the salads. And she took her own sweet time doing it. Most of the cooking was done by Izeule (my other flatmate) a formidable one woman cooking-cleaning machine. So its been ten years, but I have finally managed to get down and dirty with my pots and pans in the kitchen.

My most recent culinary dish was to try one of my grandmother's fish recipe, Ilish maasor jhol. My granny is a legendary cook in her part of the world so after a lot of copious note taking over the phone, I recreated the dish and presentation aside, I nailed it. Part of it was due to the fish itself and mustard and Ilish is a heavenly combo like roast and potatoes, lamb and mint, scones and cream, oh I could go on. I find the ilish very like the Salmon, as in they are both anadromous species (born in fresh water, migrates to the sea and returns to fresh waters for spawning). They are both very popular food choices and they are both very tasty. The only difference is that the Ilish is full of tiny bones, so you need to be careful while enjoying it. In the UK you can get frozen Ilish in any decent Bangladeshi food store. I get mine sliced and diced at the store and put the slices in cold water to thaw before the hubby can get to cleaning the gut. And no, I haven't got down to cleaning the fish. its early days yet for this cook.

Before making the jhol, you need to fry the fish. At least that is how we do it in Assam. So once the fish is cooked and cleaned, I mix it in with some turmeric and salt (about a teaspoon each). I put about 2 tablespoon of good quality mustard oil, not the refine/mustard mix which is sold as pure mustard oil in Tesco. Wait till the oil is very hot before adding the fish, otherwise it will break or absorb too much oil.


I fry about 4 to 5 pieces at a time, so it all depends on the size of your pan really. About 2 minutes on both sides makes the fish nice and golden. The trick to frying fish is to do it with your sunnies on and a bottle of Sudocream at hand because chances are that you will get hit with hot oil. I look something like this when I fry these bad boys.





Now for the jhol, I make a yellow mustard seed paste. I soak 3-4 teaspoons of yellow mustard seeds in water for about 20 minutes. I make a rough paste of this on my mortar and pestle. You can also do it in a blender, grinder what have you.


In the oil left in pan (after frying the fish), I add two finely sliced onions, some dry chillis and a teaspoon of dry chilli powder for extra zing. I fry this till the onions soften and then add the mustard paste to the mix. I continue frying and add a little water so that the mixture doesn't get burned. After about ten minutes of frying, the onions and the mustard would emulsify into a golden-red paste (this would take about 7-9 minutes of frying).



I then add a cup of water (about 250 ml) and put the fish back in to the pan. Lower the heat and put the lid on for the fish to cook. The fish gets cooked in about 10 minutes. I then season it as per taste and because I have a heat index of 9/10, I garnish the dish with fresh red chillies and raw mustard oil before serving.







Serving suggestion: Works best with chilled Desperadoes and cooked basmati rice. And yes no forks, unless you want to choke to death on fish bones. Use your hands. Seriously.

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