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14 August 2007

Karimeen Pollichathu/Pearl Spot Kerala Style

I was recently back home in Kottayam for three weeks and my bro was also there on a vacation from Dubai. So was my sis from Trichy. So all of us were craving for some karimeen pollichathu, a toddy shop speaciality. The monsoons have been acting up this year and the toddy shops were making use of the opportunity and selling one fish at 150rs. Considering we are around 6-7 members in the house, we decided to cut the costs by preparing this at home. Mom immediately turned to me since she was not very comfy with making it on her own. I have experimented with Sardines/Mathi when I was in college, but with karimeen, one couldn't afford to experiment and mess up. Anyway, I decided to give it a shot and at the end of it all, we were all pretty happy :)

The marinated fish ready to be wrapped and fried


What I Used:

Pearl Spot/Karimeen - 4, cleaned and slit on the side.

For the paste:
Shallots - 10
Onions - 1 big
Ginger - a 2" piece
Garlic - 10 cloves
Chilly powder - 1 tbsp
Pepper powder - 2 tsp
Vinegar - 2 tsp
Curry leaves - 2 strands
Salt - to taste

Coconut oil - for frying
Tender banana leaves - to wrap the fish in while cooking

How I Made It:

1. Make a paste with all the ingredients mentioned.

2. Marinate the fish well in the paste. It may not completely stick to the fish, but make sure that it is mostly covered.

3. Place the fish in the banana leaf and wrap gently.

4. Pour some oil in a wok. Gently place the wrapped fish in, close with a lid and cook on a low fire till both sides are done. This took me around 30 mins, per fish.

Garnish with onion rings, tomatoes, cucumber and a piece of lime.

Final pic taken by my sis :)

The same recipe may be followed by big-sized sardines too, but I am not sure if it will come out well for canned sardines. I have only used fesh sardines and they come out nice and soft. The masala makes sure that the unpleasant smell of sardines is completely masked.

For a behind-the-scene story, visit my sister's blog.


18 Comments:

  1. Every one has to learn the story behind this from me..:)...Love the post..Hugs to u for posting the same..
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  2. nice one.. u probably gave the toddy shops a run for their money!
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  3. What a great dish, perfectly grilled.YUM!:)
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  4. Just perfectly grilled fish. I love it. Thanks for sharing your version. Happy independence day.
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  5. really looks delicious, I came here via Bharthy's blog. Great story there
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  6. The pics are awesome...i do not eat fish....But the picture is tempting enough :-)
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  7. Hi Nags I left a message on Spicy Chili blog I didn't know it was your sister. :) The fish looks lovely I may try this recipe but with a diffferent type of fish. Which other fish goes well with this recipe and I can't get bananna leaves - what could I use instead? Thanks :)
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  8. O o I love fish.....This is amazing...Mouth watering one...Love it....Nice picture....
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  9. Hi Nags,

    I came her from your sister´s blog. Now I see that great coooking runs in the family. I loved the story behind the grinning fish. You guys did a very good job ;-)
    ReplyDelete
  10. Hey Nags,
    Thanks for visiting simple and delicious!
    went through all recipes..
    Nice Pollichathu recipe, haven't tried this with Karimeen. It was good with mackerals..
    Nice blog, with simple recipes..loved it..
    ReplyDelete
  11. You are right...that last fish is UGLY!!!!

    ;-)

    xoxo
    jaden
    ReplyDelete
  12. aaah! Karimeen Pollichathu! definitely droolworthy! I was surprised to learn that this recipe originated from the toddy shops of kerala! I have only had this at posh 5star weddings and such!
    Am definitely going to try this out... but where i will find good karimeen is the question! Am no good at shopping for fish!
    ReplyDelete
  13. i live in the uk and we cannot get banana leaves here.is there an alternate option?
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  14. u can try using aluminium baking foil and bake it instead of fry. its healthier that way too! the flavour will be different but definitely yummy :) try it and let me know
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  15. this is definitely not meen polichathu... dont try to fool people.....
    ReplyDelete
  16. anon - this is how i make meen pollichathu. if you have a different recipe that's not my concern. this is a site where i feature recipes that i try, my way. if that bothers you, feel free to close the window and get out.
    ReplyDelete
  17. i live in the uk and we cannot get banana leaves here.is there an alternate option?
    ReplyDelete
  18. Hi Sis,gonna try this for coming easter!! :)
    ReplyDelete

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