Toor or arhar daal is not a favourite lentil variety for Bengalis. In my home it was only cooked when we had non-bengalis over for dinner. In keeping with my antipathy to home food, I did n0t like regular mushurir dal. Toor dal was passable, its infrequent appearance making it tolerable. The first time I remember relishing and actually eating a whole katori (bowl) of it was in a resthouse...hence the name resthouser dal (which 6-7 year old can remember toor or arhar, moong or masur?). We were stuck in panchmari (a small hill station in Madhya Pradesh) forest guesthouse for a couple of days because of unprecedented rains which made the roads non passable. In borrowed sweaters and dog eared playing cards these couple of days of idleness were good for the adults. Maybe. I however, remember being very frustrated, being the only child in the whole group and nowhere or nobody to play. In those bleak days, the vibrant yellow dal was a saviour. I am sure my mom thought I was turning a new leaf. But alas my preference was just like monsoon. It ended with the season.
The warm dal was served with a squeeze of lemon and a helping of freshly melted ghee. And I loved it. The khansama was duly rewarded for extra 2 days effort. When we went back on papa’s next tour I did not like the dal. Maybe the cook left or maybe I needed monsoon and power cut to feel simple magic. Over years the only places which come close to the taste were resthouses. I think it is to do with the scarcity of ingredients deep in the forest combined with the smoke from wood burning chulhas to lend the wonderful taste.
Toor dal (non oily) – 1 ½ cup
Water – 4cups
Coriander leaves- 2 tbsp
Cumin seeds – 1 tsp
3 green chillies
½ tsp turmeric
Ghee -3 tbsp
In a pressure cooker take the toor daal, salt and water and soak for 30mins. I generally do not have the time to soak..so I just put it all in the pressure cooker and hope that I don’t have anything more to do..which is generally not true. Another bane of my kitchen existence is the spilling over of the daal. Everytime!!if I figure out a way of having perfectly cooked daal and not have a spilled drop on the base of the gas...I will share it. For now 3 burst of whistles at high flames does the work for me. I don’t let off the steam immediately, but let it prolong the cooking.
After everything else on the menu on cooked, it is time to put the ‘phoron’. Phoron is basically ‘tadka’ or ‘tempering’...but it is also used as a figure of speech if someone wants keep popping into a conversation with their comments, unasked for. Culprits can equally be children or adults. On my last Indian vacation, I acquired a useful item. A tadka spoon. It is a blessing. I do not need to wash a whole kadhai for the tadka.
And that is it really.
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