If I see a bag of baby potatoes when I head to the supermarket near my place, I pick it up. Always. Good things always come out of having a bag of baby potatoes in your kitchen. You will see. There are lots of good Indian recipes with potatoes and some of my favourites are a simple potato roast masala, aloo chana made in the pressure cooker, and these honey chilli potatoes.
So armed with about 15 baby potatoes, I turned to one of those small Tarla Dalal booklets, simply and efficiently called “Potatoes”. There were some really great looking recipes in there but I had to zero in on Banarasi Dum Aloo because that’s what I had all the ingredients for.
oil for deep-frying
For the gravy:
2 cups roughly chopped tomatoes (2 large ripe tomatoes)
1 tsp ginger garlic paste
3-4 dry red chillies (use dry Kashmiri red chillies for added colour)
2 tbsp broken cashew nuts
1 tsp cumin seeds (jeera)
1 tsp fennel seeds (saunf)
2 1/2 cups water
How to Make Dum Aloo:
1. Wash and dry the baby potatoes. Pierce each potato all around with a fork and deep fry in hot oil, with the skin on, till the potatoes are cooked and golden brown. Drain on absorbent paper and keep aside.
2. Combine all the ingredients together under the “gravy list”. I know this sounds weird but trust me on this. Dunk all the ingredients together along with the water and cook on a low flame for around 15 mins or until the tomatoes have turned mushy and soft. Cool and blend to a smooth paste. If you have one of those soup blenders like me, just go ahead and whip it up hot. Saves a lot of time.
3. Heat the butter in a pan and add the powdered cardamom and gravy paste and allow it to come to a boil. Simmer till the oil separates form the gravy. This will take about 12-15 mins. Keep the fire on simmer throughout and be prepared for a slight mess if you don’t use a deep pan. The tomato gravy will bubble up all over your stovetop.
4. When the gravy is ready, add the potatoes, kasuri methi, and salt and simmer for another 3-4 mins. Finally, add the cream and coriander and serve hot with jeera pulao or rotis.
Vegetarian Zest
Banarasi dum aloos look decadent. Never heard of Banarasi before. I think i can try these today itsel as all the ingridients are available at home.
DEESHA
there are soo many types of dum aloo .. A kashmiri one, a Punjabi one, & a Bengali one too.. But I haven't tasted Dum aloo yet, can you believe that !!! .. looks delicious
Priya
So rich and very inviting dum aloo, excellent!
Nags
Fenugreek seeds have a slightly different flavour but try it anyway ๐
Anonymous
This looks so good! Can you substitute Fenugreek seeds for leaves or will that change the flavor too much?
Anu Nandu
God -I was totally drooling at this pic and at first glance without reading I thought these were perfectly pressure cooked! And then i read and found out they were deep fried. Aaah..bliss. I got to go look out for the baby potatoes in my store now. And without anyone seeing, I just might deep fry it!
Nithya
Love baby potatoes and this is yum yum for sure ๐
Priya (Yallapantula) Mitharwal
Loved the name itself and then I noticed that it doesn't have any onions in it and if I minus the garlic too, it will become a recipe one can prepare even if they are not eating garlic/onion, love the pictures ๐
Krithi's Kitchen
Mmm… creamy and yummy… love this version of dum aloo.. gotta try soon..
http://krithiskitchen.blogspot.com
Event: Healing Foods – Banana
Xiaolu @ 6 Bittersweets
That looks so good!