For more thoran recipes, check out chicken thoran, raw papaya thoran, and cabbage thoran recipe.
TH thought it was ‘cheppan kizhangu’ or arbi (not sure of the english name for this) and since he loves stir-fried arbi, he encouraged me to buy it. I instinctively knew it was koorka but I didn’t whoop with joy until I came home, scratched some skin off the vegetable and smelled it ๐
Koorka is a hairy tuber that looks similar to arbi but doesn’t have that slimy feel to it when chopped. It also doesn’t make your hands itch like elephant yam / chena does.
Preparing it to cook, however, was a pain. My mom had warned me about this when I excitedly told her I found koorka in the supermarket but I didn’t think it will be this bad. Maybe I didn’t choose the easiest method to do this.
There are three ways you can prep koorka for cooking:
(a) pressure cook it for one whistle and peel it like you would potatoes.
(b) put it in a sack or jute bag and beat it on the floor till the skin peels off. I know this sounds weird but in Kerala, most households follow this method, apparently. I am guessing the koorka needs to be really fresh for you to be able to do this.
(c) Use a knife to scrape off the skin.
I followed option c. Pressure cooking it removes the flavour a tad bit and I didn’t want the final dishes to be anything less than delicious. I regretted this after scraping about 10 koorkas and had a gazillion more to go! I got TH to help me and he did after I swore it won’t irritate his palms like elephant yam does. Sheesh, touchy man, my husband.
Anyway, once I got all of them peeled, I felt much better. The worst was over. Since I couldn’t decide between a thoran and a mezhukkupuratti, I made both ๐
Before you decide to make anything with koorka, its a good idea to boil it in some water until half cooked and let it drain.
Recipe For Koorka Thoran
Ingredients:
Par-boiled koorka – 1 cup
Grated coconut – 1/3 cup
Green chillies – 2
Shallots – 4
Cumin / jeera / jeerakam – 1/2 tsp
Turmeric powder – a pinch
Urad dal / uzhunnu parippu – 1/4 tsp (optional)
Mustard seeds – 1/4 tsp
Curry leaves – a few
Oil – 2 tsp (use coconut oil for a more authentic taste)
Salt – to tasteHow to Make Koorka Thoran
1. Heat oil in a pan and add mustard seeds. When they pop, add the urad dal and fry until golden brown.
2. Grind together the coconut, green chillies, jeera, turmeric and shallots. Add this to the fried urad dal. Stir around for about 10 seconds.
3. Next add the boiled koorka, curry leaves and salt. Mix well and let it cook for another 2-3 mins.
Recipe For Koorka Mezhukkupuratti
Ingredients:
Par-boiled koorka – 1 cup
Dried red chillies – 2
Garlic – 3 pods
Shallots – 2 (optional)
Turmeric powder – a pinch
Oil – 1 tbsp (use coconut oil and it will be yummier)
Mustard seeds – 1/4 tsp
Curry leaves – a few
Salt – to tasteHow to Make Koorka Mezhukkupuratti
1. Heat oil and add mustard seeds. Once they pop, add the koorka and stir-fry for about 3-4 mins.
2. Crush the red chillies, garlic and shallots in a pestle and mortar if you have one. Otherwise just grind them together coarsely without water. Add this to the fried koorka with the curry leaves and the turmeric powder.
3. Fry for another 2 mins. Add salt.
The koorka thoran and koorka mezhukkupuratti were incredibly easy to make and tasted so good, just like how mom makes it, that one taste of these answered my question “why on earth did I waste so much time on this stupid vegetable when I could’ve made maggi for lunch?!”.
Nithya Praveen
I've never seen or heard abt this Nags.But must appreciate ur patience to do this."Anth Bala Sab Bala"(meaning if the end is good,everything is gud) this is used in reference to life.I wudn;t mind the pain to do this, when it wud taste so good in the end.lemme look around if i can find this here & try.Wonderful one!
Chitra
Looks new to me nags..really u had pain in cooking this.It made u forget everything in its taste i think:)nice post!!
Srivalli
heheh..it might be a pain to cook but tastes heaven!..my fav nags!..I have abt dozen on my blog..heheh..that crazy i am
Nags
Sravani – This is not arbi and though it looks a lot like it, the taste and feel is incomparable ๐
Me – The veg is too small to use the peeler on, like you guessed, there won’t be much of it left at the end of it ๐
Mahimaa – TH liked it but wasn’t too excited to discover this new veg. My bro-in-law loves it though and each time he visits home, mom cooks it for him. I don’t think much ppl in TN have heard of this.
Siri
sorry I missed the ‘me’ in the above comment ๐ I meant – ‘totally new to me Nags’..!!
Siri
This veggie is totally new to Nags and thanks for the pictorial.Lovely pics!
Siri
Asha
Hairy indeed and haven’t heard of Kooka before! But they do look fab after peeling the skin, guess makes a great Aloo Dum too. Dishes are yummy! ๐
Anonymous
hey this is what we call ‘Arbi’ in hindi, ‘Colocasia’ in Eng :). its available in veggie stores in hyderabad
-Sravani
sra
Haven’t ever tasted it but like the way you wrote about it. I wonder if they were trying to say Poor Man’s Yam but I don’t think the plain Yam is particularly upper class. Or maybe it is in Singapore?
Jayashree
I love koorka mezhukkupuratti. Chennai also stocks koorka, only it is called koorkankizhangu here….it is bigger….as big as a big baby potato….and doesn’t taste as good as the ones in Kerala, but not bad either. As far as I know, it is only mallus who buy it here as well.