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24 September 2011

Kathirikkai Channa Pitlai (Eggplant Chickpeas Pitlai) / Tamil Brahmin Recipes


I had never heard of pitlai before I tasted this in July this year when we were in Coimbatore at the in-laws' place. MIL had made this for lunch the day we landed and much like everything else she cooks, it was delicious.

channa pitlai recipe

I have learnt so much from her style of cooking, not to mention all the super easy yet delicious Tamil Brahmin recipes. Pitlai to me seemed like a mash-up between sambar and kootu but has a distinct flavour of it's own too.

Note that pavakkai pitlai and kathirikkai pitlai (pitlai with bitter gourd or brinjal / eggplant) are the popular pitlai recipes that show up in Brahmin homes all the time.

Channa Pitlai Recipe


Serves 6-8 people


Ingredients:
1 lemon-sized ball of tamarind
1/2 cup of cooked and mashed toor dal
1/2 cup of grated coconut
1 tbsp of sambar powder
1 pinch of hing / asafoetida / perungaayam
1/4 tsp turmeric powder
1/2 cup of cooked channa / chickpeas (soak overnight and pressure cook for 4-5 whistles or used canned chickpeas)
1 small eggplant, cut into cubes
A pinch of jaggery
Salt to taste


For Masala:
4-5 of dry red chillies
3 tbsp of kadala paruppu / Bengal gram / channa dal
4 tbsp of coriander seeds / daniya / malli
A few of fenugreek seeds


For Tempering:
1 tbsp ghee or oil
1/4 tsp mustard seeds
A few curry leaves
1/2 cup grated coconut

How It's Made:

1. Soak the tamarind in water. Extract juice and discard the pulp. Transfer the tamarind juice to a cooking pan and add salt, sambar powder, some turmeric powder, hing, eggplant and cooked channa. Keep in mediam flame and cook for about 20 mins.

2.  In the mean time fry the masala in a little oil until nicely browned. Cool slightly and grind it in to paste along with 1/2 cup of coconut.

3. Check on the boiling tamarind mixture now. Once the eggplant is cooked and soft, add the cooked toor dal, mix well and bring to boil. Then add the ground masala paste with some jaggery, bring to boil and remove from fire.

4. Heat oil or ghee for tempering and add the rest of the ingredients. When the coconut has turned golden brown, add to the pitlai and mix well.

Serve hot with rice and mor kozhambu


16 Comments:

  1. oh...what a coincidence:-) am planning to make this for dinner tonite and u hv posted the recipe:-)..u can make this with bitter gourd too...tastes great! Pls chk out my version of paarkai pitley at my site too:-)

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  2. I have heard about pitlai but havent tasted one... Yours looks lovely...
    Krithi's Kitchen
    Event: Serve It - Steamed

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  3. wow, that sounds superb, never heard about it, but looks super delish :)

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  4. looks delicious ... never tasted before .... wonderful pictures ......

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  5. Never had this, must try, esp with pavakkai..

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  6. Hi dear,

    I have tagged u in 7 link game,please do stop by and collect them...

    Luv,
    Prema

    ReplyDelete
  7. Its new to me...delicious..

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  8. It should be wonderful. Thanks a lot.

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  9. I love pavakkkai pitlai and make it all the time but never made kathrikkai pitlai - should try that next time - love the spice mixture in this.

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  10. I love this site I will follow him in my head also:
    http://apostasjogosonline.blogspot.com/

    ReplyDelete
  11. We usually make this with bittergourd. This sounds delicious though, maybe next time.

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  12. Sounds yummy and new to me.......

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  13. Even my mother in law makes this dish and i always wondered to ask her for the recipe. Thanks for posting it here.

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  14. I have had such fun browsing the recipes on this site. I spent a couple of months in Southern India a few years ago and consistantly crave the food I had there, but didn't know how to go about making it myself (or even remember what it was called)! So glad I've found this site, I will make myself a feast! Thank you :-)

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  15. My hubby likes this dish pretty thick.. When I end up making it watery, I grind the some of the channa into a paste and add it to the dish. It thickens quite easily and tastes even more delish. :)

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