Thursday, April 7, 2011

Kothu Parotta


Every country boasts of it's own "street food". Pad thai for Thai, Kway Teaw for Malay, probably a hot dog for the US of A. When it comes to South Indian cusine, my vote would be for Kothu Parotta. Kothu parotta (meaning "chopped" up parotta) is a typical road side delicacy you would find on any road side non-vegetarian stall in Tamil Nadu. If my memory serves right, the first time I had a "professional" kothu was on a roadside shop on the way from Coimbatore to Salem. Don't remember the place, but probably returning from one of my uncle's wedding. My first successful kothu  was done in Portland, OR with the help of THE Mangalam masala. I have to time the preparation of KP right along with making a chicken curry and hence the perfect sequel to Chicken Chettinad. Left over chicken curry gives the extra kick or the professional touch. 

What goes in:

  1. Parotta. This has to be the flaky kerala style or ceylon style parotta available in Indian stores. For those in India...try to get it from the nearby kaiyendhi bhavan (road side shop).
  2. Eggs
  3. Onions
  4. Tomatos
  5. Chicken masala powder
  6. Chicken curry (Should not be too thick. If thick, lighten it up with water.)
  7. Green chillies 
  8. Curry leaves 

The method:
  1. Chop up the parotta into as small pieces as possible. Recently I found a technique with the frozen parottas. I heat it up on a tava and chop (kothu) it up with a knife. I used to do it with hand but found the knife to be doing a better job. (Edit: I used a blender today and "pulsed" the parotta. It gave a texture close to what you get in a restaurant.)
  2. Beat up the eggs separately to make an even spread. (Or just break it open on the parotta later).
  3. Sautee mustard seeds until they splatter.
  4. Sautee the green chillies and onions for a few minutes.
  5. Add the tomatoes to the mix. Need to make sure we dont over cook the tomato. Should maintain the chunky pieces.
  6. Add the chopped up parotta and the masalas (powder and half of the chicken curry).
  7. Add salt as required.
  8. Mix it up well so the masala gets mixed evenly.
  9. Create a space in the middle of the kadai by pushing the parotta mix to the side. (Alternatively just break open the eggs on the parotta or pour the beaten egg over the parotta).
  10. Pour the beaten egg and scramble it until its 3/4ths cooked.
  11. Mix up the parotta along with the scrambled egg so that a light coating of the egg is applied on to the parotta as well.
  12. Empty the remaining chicken curry into the mix.
  13. Add curry leaves and coriander as garnish and give it a final toss.
The result:

Enjoy

C

5 comments:

  1. Yumm-o-licious..Thanks Chetty for sharing such wonderful recipes.. wil surely try al dese.. Keep us posted wid more.. 2 thumbs up--- Vaishali Kumar

    ReplyDelete
  2. Vaishali - You are most welcome and thanks for your comments. Do let me know how your experiments go. Yes, a lot more to come. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nice :) - need to try this one at home

    ReplyDelete
  4. Chicken curry with pieces?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Jimbo is that you?

    "Anonymous" - Feel free to add chicken pieces as long as they are boneless and preferably shredded.

    ReplyDelete

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Chetty