Rasavangi, is a close cousin of the arachuvitta sambar. The
difference is in the ground spices. A few changes in the spices used for
grinding and the whole thing tastes very different. My family prefers rasavangi
to Sambar on any day. It has a very distinct flavor of Coriander Seeds and Black
Pepper. A perfect accompaniment with white rice and a simple potato roast.
The recipe shared here is the way my grandmother and then my
mother and now me have been making it for all these years. Though I see a lot
of variations of this recipe, I have stuck to my original family recipe.
Serves – 3 to 4
What you’ll need
- Brinjal – 1.5 cup, chopped into small cubes
- Tamarind – gooseberry sized
- Tuar Dal – 2 tbsp, heaped
- Turmeric Powder – ¼ tsp
- Jaggery – 1 tsp, powdered
- Salt to taste
To roast and grind
- Bengal Gram Dal/ Kadala Paruppu – ½ tbsp
- Coriander Seeds – 1 tbsp
- Dried Red Chillies – 2
- Black Peppercorns – 15 to 20
- Fresh scraped coconut – ½ cup
For tempering
- Oil – 1 tbsp
- Mustard Seeds – 1 tsp
- Curry Leaves – few torn
Method
- Wash the tuar dal and cook it. Cool and mash. Keep aside.
- Soak the tamarind in 1 cup of hot water for 10 minutes.
- Add another cup of water and squeeze out a thin tamarind extract.
- Heat a Kadai, with a tsp of oil, fry all the ingredients mentioned under “roast and grind” till the coconut turns brown.
- Grind it along with coconut into a smooth paste adding about ¼ cup of water.
- In the same Kadai, fry the brinjals for 3 to 4 minutes.
- Next add the tamarind extract, turmeric powder, jaggery and salt to taste.
- Let this boil on medium flame till the brinjals are cooked and the raw smell of the tamarind disappears.
- Now add the cooked and mashed dals. Mix well and let it come to a boil.
- Then add the ground coconut paste, mix well and let it simmer for 4 to 5 minutes.
- Heat a small frying pan with remaining oil. Add the mustard seeds once they crackle, pour it over the prepared rasavangi.
Garnish with curry leaves.
Serve hot with plain rice and any vegetable stir fry of your
choice.
Very flavorful and delicious preparation, would live to try this for sure...inviting pics Kaveri n loved ur presentation too!
ReplyDeleteVery new to me, really a flavorful and delicious curry. Will try it soon.
ReplyDeletetoday's recipe:
http://sanolisrecipies.blogspot.in/2013/01/vadakari-snc-challenge-4.html
Love rasavangi, actually learned them few years back and i do quite often, as you said a prefect dish to serve with rice and potato roast.
ReplyDeleteDelicious looks very inviting.. And awesome pic..
ReplyDeleteI love this, one of my favorites.. This looks delicious and tempting..
ReplyDeleteSpill the Spices
usually am not fan for brinjal... but its tempting akka... so yum...
ReplyDeletePaneer Burfi
VIRUNTHU UNNA VAANGA
Love this one ...long time I made this ...looks so delish
ReplyDeletetempting and mouthwatering
ReplyDeletewow looks like kurma to me.. perfect with roti..
ReplyDeleteThe name itself is poetic. Rasavangi..The recipe sounds super delicious too Kaveri.
ReplyDeletewow yum,delicious recipe...
ReplyDeleteMore than the rasavangi iam eyeing on the pictures only. Very neat set up and presentation. Loved the yummy kathrikkai rasavangi
ReplyDeleteRasavangi is a preferred dish at our home too! I am going to try your method soon - small differences at our place.
ReplyDeleteVery delicious and flavorful, very tempting with that potato curry..
ReplyDeleteDelicious looks very inviting.. And awesome pics..
ReplyDeleteDelicious rasavangi Kaveri Love to try your version.
ReplyDeleteI love brinjal and this curry is too good, book-marking it
ReplyDeleteVery new to me...Love brinjal when cooked with tamarind..but never tried with all these spices and masalas..Looks inviting...
ReplyDeleteMouth watering recipe,its been a while since I made this..looks wonderful and loved your presentation...
ReplyDeleteTraditional & delicious, I love the pepper flavor.
ReplyDeleteMust be aromatic. It looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteI too like Rasavaangi more than sambar.Your version looks delicious
ReplyDeleteDelicious rasavaangi n wonderful presentation too!!!
ReplyDeleteNeat presentation dear... The curry looks so flavorful... Bookmarking
ReplyDeletevery yummy curry,flavorful..this is new to me,looks delicious !!
ReplyDeleteJoin EP event-Nutmeg OR Parsley @ Chef Mireille's Global Creations
i didnt about this close cousin at all.. looks nice.. will give it a shot soon!
ReplyDeleteLuce muy rico es una delicia al paladar,abrazos y abrazos
ReplyDeleteLovely Post. Nice recipe too.love it..
ReplyDeleteMaha
this looks yum and using tuvar dal for eggplant is new and interesting to me.will try sometime
ReplyDeleteVijaya Subramanian Mumbai. October 15, 2013. At 20.27.
ReplyDeleteA Very Good Recipe. Easy to understand and follow.
Tfhanks for the antastic recipe. I added pIrkangAi (ridge gourd) to the brinjal. In food coma now !
ReplyDeleteHi, i came to know some persons in palakkad don't add coriander seeds for rasavangi.... they just add bengal gram and urad dal for fry, may i know which is authentic in palakkad....
ReplyDeletePaati used to use the small purple kathirikkais (without chopping them, but half sliced) and use gingelly oil for Rasavangi alone..
ReplyDeleteHow is this receipe different than Arachavita Sambar
ReplyDelete