Cookbook:Dum Aloo (Kashmiri Potato Curry)
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Dum Aloo (Kashmiri Potato Curry) | |
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Category | Potato recipes |
Difficulty |
Cookbook | Ingredients | Recipes
Dum aloo (also spelled as dam aloo) or alu dum is a potato-based dish and part of the traditional Kashmiri Pandit cuisine,[1][2] from the Kashmir Valley, in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. The potatoes are first deep fried, then cooked slowly at low flame in a gravy with spices.[3] Dum aloo is popular throughout India. In Bengal, it is a specialty dish eaten mostly with Luchi and is known as "aloor dum".
Ingredients[edit | edit source]
- Baby potatoes
- Salt
- Oil
- Mustard oil
- Cumin seeds
- Asafoetida
- Onion, chopped
- Ginger garlic paste
- Water
- Tomatoes, chopped
- Chili powder
- Cumin powder
- Coriander powder
- Turmeric powder
- Garam masala
- Cilantro
- Ginger root, sliced thin
Procedure[edit | edit source]
- Peel, wash, and prick baby potatoes all over with the help of a fork. In some recipes the potatoes are kept unpeeled. In this case, they should be washed properly.
- Soak the potatoes in salted water for 15 minutes.
- Heat a sufficient amount of oil in a kadai, and deep-fry the potatoes on medium heat until golden-brown. Drain, place on absorbent paper, and keep aside.
- Heat mustard oil in a pan to smoking point. Cool and heat again. Add cumin seeds and asafoetida, and cook on medium heat until the cumin seeds change colour.
- Add onion and sauté for 3–4 minutes or until the onion turns light golden.
- Add ginger-garlic paste, and sauté for 1 minute. Stir in a little water.
- Add tomatoes, and sauté for 1 minute. Add a little water, and cook until tomatoes turn pulpy.
- Stir in red chili powder, cumin powder, coriander powder, turmeric powder, and a little water.
- Add fried potatoes, stir to mix well, and cook for 2 minutes.
- Add a little water and salt. Mix well, and simmer for 5 minutes or until the potatoes absorb the gravy.
- Stir in garam masala powder.
- Remove from heat and serve hot, garnished with cilantro leaves and ginger strips. It can also be served with jeera rice, fried rice, or rotis.[4]