At home we are mostly vegetarian. Making fish curry is something that our mother convinced us was a major event requiring great planning and stringent execution. The days we made fish at our place we kept out of her way. We would be silent and forgiving and my father would escape on the pretext of paying bills or some such errand.
It could be that we lived in a neighborhood of brahmins and in order to avoid offending them my mom would be extra vigilant about the discarding of the waste and that my father being a picky eater required that the fish be 'extra clean', whatever that meant. So fish curry was a 'special' once or twice monthly treat.
Fast forward to after my wedding, I moved to Kerala to live with my husband and the in laws and here fish curry was a daily thing!, like sambar.
Except for Mondays, when my mother in law would undertake a 'fast' (meaning no non-veg!!)for the 'long life' of her husband and like at my place this would be the day everyone would keep out her way. She was very strict that she would do this every week, no matter how much it annoyed her, since he had suffered quite a few health problems in his lifetime. And invariably there would be sambar or avial for lunch. The only two vegetarian dishes she deemed worthy of lunch; with lots and lots of coconut.
Enough said that soon after the wedding i ended up putting on a lot of weight and being a kitchen virgin I couldn't fathom why, since my eating habits hadn't changed much. It took my in laws taking off to the US for a holiday and me finally learning how to cook for me to figure out that it was due to the astonishing amount of coconut she used.
Now, since fish curry was a daily thing at home it was done pretty mindlessly. While my mom toiled to make sure every dish coming out of the kitchen was perfectly seasoned my mom in law was more easy go lucky. If the dish lacked salt she would just shout out the maid to fetch the salt shaker and everyone could just shake out what they needed. As long as there was plenty of mota rice, fish curry with lots of coconut in the gravy, lunch was served!!
So this fish curry is the first one i attempted. She didnt actually teach it to me. Walking through the kitchen I would watch her stand in front of the mixie grinding the coconut mixture for so long that over time i just caught on.
Easiest Fish Curry Ever!!
Fish - 1/2 kilo or any amount.
Coconut - 1/2 (grated)......could be more, read on
Chilly powder - 2-3 Tbsp
Turmeric - 1 tsp
Coriander Powder - Depends...1/2 Tbsp- 2 Tbsp
Tamarind - lime sized ball (dunno why but every recipe i see this seems to be the 'default' amount)
Ginger - An inch (again seems to be a default amount, every recipe)
Shallots, Garlic, Green Chillies - Either one or both or all or neither
It could be that we lived in a neighborhood of brahmins and in order to avoid offending them my mom would be extra vigilant about the discarding of the waste and that my father being a picky eater required that the fish be 'extra clean', whatever that meant. So fish curry was a 'special' once or twice monthly treat.
Fast forward to after my wedding, I moved to Kerala to live with my husband and the in laws and here fish curry was a daily thing!, like sambar.
Except for Mondays, when my mother in law would undertake a 'fast' (meaning no non-veg!!)for the 'long life' of her husband and like at my place this would be the day everyone would keep out her way. She was very strict that she would do this every week, no matter how much it annoyed her, since he had suffered quite a few health problems in his lifetime. And invariably there would be sambar or avial for lunch. The only two vegetarian dishes she deemed worthy of lunch; with lots and lots of coconut.
Enough said that soon after the wedding i ended up putting on a lot of weight and being a kitchen virgin I couldn't fathom why, since my eating habits hadn't changed much. It took my in laws taking off to the US for a holiday and me finally learning how to cook for me to figure out that it was due to the astonishing amount of coconut she used.
Now, since fish curry was a daily thing at home it was done pretty mindlessly. While my mom toiled to make sure every dish coming out of the kitchen was perfectly seasoned my mom in law was more easy go lucky. If the dish lacked salt she would just shout out the maid to fetch the salt shaker and everyone could just shake out what they needed. As long as there was plenty of mota rice, fish curry with lots of coconut in the gravy, lunch was served!!
So this fish curry is the first one i attempted. She didnt actually teach it to me. Walking through the kitchen I would watch her stand in front of the mixie grinding the coconut mixture for so long that over time i just caught on.
Easiest Fish Curry Ever!!
Fish - 1/2 kilo or any amount.
Coconut - 1/2 (grated)......could be more, read on
Chilly powder - 2-3 Tbsp
Turmeric - 1 tsp
Coriander Powder - Depends...1/2 Tbsp- 2 Tbsp
Tamarind - lime sized ball (dunno why but every recipe i see this seems to be the 'default' amount)
Ginger - An inch (again seems to be a default amount, every recipe)
Shallots, Garlic, Green Chillies - Either one or both or all or neither
- Grind the coconut to a fine thick paste in a mixie using water. You may also grind shallots, garlic with this, if using (too lazy? dont bother!!!) Let the mixie run for atleast 2-3 minutes. If in doubt...grind some some more.
- Now for some colouring.....Add the chilly powder and grind until you get an orange color (like say kadai paneer? saffronish?) (you might need a lot..dont worry the sweetness of the coconut will offset any spiciness)
- If you want and have some around, add some coriander seed powder to get a brownish curry. (variation)(skip the first time you try this)
- Add salt to taste.
- Heat some oil in a pan, temper with mustard seeds, fenugreek seeds (or not!) add some curry leaves.
- Pour in the thick paste (add some water, so much that it will cook down to a thick gravy in 15 min...or not!!)
- Add sliced ginger, slit green chillies (if using) some tamarind paste (too lazy? just throw in the tamarind) and check for seasoning.
- Once it boils add fish and cook for 15 - 20 min or until fish is done( it will swell).
- Ta-da! Fish curry done.
- No frying or sauteeing, no messy coconut milk extractions, no guessing how much kudampuli, no roasting masalas NOTHING, what you have is a very rich, almost sweet fish flavoured sauce. Go ahead gobble it down with some rice and watch the pounds pile on!!