From: garhow@hpubmaa.esr.HP.COM (Garry Howard) Newsgroups: rec.food.veg,rec.food.cooking Subject: Re: REQUEST: Ethiopian recipies and food suggestions Date: 19 Nov 1993 19:41:20 GMT I found this recipe in the Lassen Family Natural Foods newsletter of August 1993; I haven't tried it yet, but it looks like fun. Judging from the source, I would guess that you can find the main ingredient in health food stores. Text and recipe copied/paraphrased without permission. Teff is the staple grain of Ethiopia. The grain yields a seed much smaller than the size of a wheat grain, but is the basis of Ethiopian traditional cookery. Teff flour is the main ingredient of the pleasantly sour pancakelike bread known as injera, which literally underlies every Ethiopian meal. To set an Ethiopian table, one lays down a circular injera on top of which the other food is arrayed, directly, without any plate. Other injeras are served on the side and torn into pieces to be used as grabbers for the food on the "tablecloth" injera. Eventually, after the meal is finished, you eat the tablecloth, a delicious repository of the juices from the food that has been resting on it. Nutrition-minded Americans have turned to teff as a source of calcium, fiber, and protein. It is also an alternative grain for people allergic to the gluten in wheat. It has an appealing, sweet, molasses-like flavor, and it boils up into a gelatinous porridge. INJERA Ingredients: 3/4 cup teff, ground fine (this may be done either in a flour mill or in a blender after moistening in 3 1/2 cups water) salt sunflower or other vegetable oil 1. Mix ground teff with 3 1/2 cups water and let stand in a bowl covered with a dish towel, at room temperature, until it bubbles and has turned sour. This may take as long as 3 days. The fermenting mixture should be the consistency of pancake batter (which is exactly what it is). 2. Stir in salt, a little at a time, until you can barely detect the taste. 3. Lightly oil an 8- or 9-inch skillet (or a larger one if you like). Heat over medium heat. Then proceed as you would with a normal pancake or crepe. Pour in enough batter to cover the bottom of the skillet. About 1/4 cup will make a thin pancake covering the surface of an 8-inch skillet if you spread the batter around immediately by turning and rotating the skillet in the air. This is the classic French method for very thin crepes. Injera is not supposed to be paper thin so you should use a bit more batter than you would for crepes, but less than you would for a flapjack. 4. Cook briefly, until holes form in the injera and the edges lift from the pan. Remove and let cool. Yields 10 to 12 injeras. But teff may be hard to find. Here's something else that came up in the search: From: Kemp Randolph A Mr. Wayne Carlson in Cadwell, Idaho has been raising teff commercially in an arid valley on the border of Idaho and Oregon. "Hundreds of acres" are mentioned. Tef Company and they begain by focusing on "tens of thousands" of Ethiopans immigrants. Arrowhead recently dropped their Tef ( I may have one of the last boxes). Injera bread fans should let them know they'd like it back. ======================================================== Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 11:24:59 -0500 From: john wynhausen Subject: south indian cuisine I just returned from a trip to South India where I had little trouble finding gluten free food in most little resturaunts. Some great breakfast/snack items included: Idilis (pronounced like Italy+s) Idilis are little steamed buns made with rice and urrad dal. They are very plain so they are usually served with a spicey broth called Sambar and a type of cocconut chutney unique to South India. A similar food is a thin crisp pancake made of the same mixture folded around a spicy potato mixture that is called masala dosa. It too is served with sambar and chutney. And yet another is a small donut made with the same basic mixture that is deep fried. It is called Vadai. Served with the same condiments. ======================================================== Date: Tue, 28 Nov 1995 11:47:40 -0500 From: Aruna Viswadoss Here is a recipe for "Aappam" -- a South Indian sponge type bread made with rice. For about 6 aappams, soak 1 heaping cup of rice (do not use Uncle Ben's or Basmati... Jasmine is fine) Soak the rice overnight in room temp. water (3 cups). The next morning, take 1/4 cup of cooked and cooled rice, 1/3 cup of fresh grated coconut, (if not available, use the dry shredded unsweetened type) and keep ready. Grind the rice in a blender after draining most of the water (add up to half and inch of water above the rice level in the blender) until smooth. (Feel the ground mixture between your fingers and it should not feel grainy, but smooth more or less). While the motor is running, add the coconut from the lid hole, and next, add the cooked rice. Grind till smooth. Add 1/4 cup more water if needed. Add 1 teaspoon of sugar, 1/4 teaspoon of salt, and 2/3 teaspoon of yeast to this rice batter. Keep covered in a warm place (I keep it near a heating device, or turn the oven on barely warm, turn it off after 3 minutes, and place this in there.) Make sure you have stirred this mixture well before letting it ferment. It only takes about 3 to 4 hours to ferment. (Once fermented, you can keep the batter in the fridge for up to 3 or 4 days). Now it will look very airy and bubbly. Stir it gently top to bottom like folding in cream or egg whites. Heat a wok (yes, that is right) on medium high, and smear the bottom with peanut or sesame oil (use veg. oil if you like) When warm, (not smoky hot), add a ladleful of the batter, and quickly rotate the wok gently so that the batter covers an area about 8 inches in diameter. The idea is to have a pancake like thing that is thick in the center, and really thin around the edges. Cover this immediately. After 30 seconds or so, remove cover to see if it is cooked. The color would have changed from a milky white to a translucent white. Lift it off gently using a spatula. Serve immediately. Do not stack these. Place them spread out on a bamboo plate or in individual plates. Side dish for Aappam: Rich but damn tasty coconut milk curry. Fry some fennel seeds, cloves, and cardamoms on a tsp of oil. Add chopped onions, garlic, green chillies, and minced ginger. Add salt and fry well. Next, add one fresh tomato chopped (optional), some chopped mint leaves, and some boiled potatoes and/or cauliflower. Add a pinch of turmeric, and 2 cups of coconut milk. (you might mix 1 cup of coconut milk with 1 cup of plain milk). Serve separately, or pour over aappams and eat with fingers. Egg curry for Aappam: Hard boil 2 eggs. Chop half an onion, 1 large tomato, 4 green chillies, and mince some ginger and garlic together. Heat 1 tablespoon of veg. oil. Add 1/3 teaspoon cinnamon powder, 1/2 tsp turmeric, and the onions, and green chillies. Add salt, and the minced garlic and ginger. Fry till onions turn golden brown. Add 1/2 teaspoon red chilli powder (this curry is supposed to be killer hot, and I would add 1 heaped teasp usually), the tomato pieces, and fry till pulpy. Slit the eggs from top to bottom keeping it whole still so that the masala will seep in. Add eggs to gravy, add 1/3 cup water, and let it evaporate. Serve hot. Garlic sambal: Grind 3 large cloves of garlic, 1/2 tomato (optional), 10 red chillies roasted in oil or plain roasted, 2 shallots, and 10 raisins till smooth. Add some salt and sesame oil in the end. Mix well. Serve all these with the Aappams. Gosh that is making me hungry! Aruna ====================================================== From: Aruna Viswadoss Subject: Indian Rice Bread (easy) Rice bread: Mix 2 cups of rice flour with 1/2 cup or less of boiling hot water, 3 tablespoons chopped cilantro, 3 minced green chillies, 1 teas. chopped curry leaves, and optionally, 1/2 cup of coarsely powdered roasted peanuts. Add some salt, and 1 tablespoon or 2 of softened butter. Knead into a firm dough. Keep covered when using it. Make 8 to 10 balls out of this. Heat a skillet on med. high. Sprinkle some rice flour on a clean working area. Flatten each rice ball into a thin bread [While traditionally Mom will not use a rolling pin for this, it will probably help beginners]. Cook one or two at a time [depending on size of skillet]. When one side is dry, flip it over to cook the other side, and when slightly golden, drizzle a few drops of veg. oil or ghee around the bread, Make sure the bottom gets the benefit, and flip again to cook the top and drizzle oil/ghee around. This does not need anything to "go" with it. But still, we serve it with coconut chutney made with fresh coconut, roasted peanuts, a wee bit tamarind pulp (can use paste), green chillies and red chillies, and a bit of ginger and curry leaves; add salt and water and grind them all together. ======================================================= From: Aruna Viswadoss Date: 27 Nov 1995 12:51:35 -0500 Back home, we treat sorghum/bajraflour/corn flour etc the way we treat wheat flour while making rotis. For 4 roties, take about a heaped cup of any of the above flours, (you can mix them if you want), add 2 teaspoons of vegetable oil, 1/4 cup of milk, and the rest water (about a 1/4? add more flour if necessary). Add some salt as well, and optionally, some grated radishes, green chillies, onions [when adding vegetables, make sure to reduce the amount of water-- mix flour with salt and veggies first, then add the liquids]. Knead into a tight and firm dough. punch it, make it into a ball, beat it forcefully on a hard surface (a good time to vent your frustrations/anger :))]. When the sides of the container are free of residual flour or dough, and the dough looks smooth , smear the surface with a few drops of oil, keep covered, and allow to rest. (all this takes about 3 minutes or less). Make four balls out of the dough, dip each into dry flour, and roll it out into thin and even circles using a rolling pin. (If you have not done this before, don't worry about the shape as long as you get even surfaces. Put this on a hot ungreased (non-stick can help beginners) skillet. When you see the color lighten because of the dryness, turn it over, and repeat the same on the other side. Now is the tricky part. If you have a barbecue type grill, cook this over live coals till brown spots appear. If you do not have much time, use a paper towel balled up, and while still on the skillet, increase the heat slightly, and keep pressing the roti gently while rotating it at the same time. Cook both sides till golden brown spots appear. It should puff up completely, or in places. Remove from skillet, beat it once to let the air out, smear some ghee on it, and stack the roties till all are done. [Once trained, you can make all this in 15 minutes if you parallel process]. ========================================= Date: Wed, 19 Apr 1995 10:41:36 -0400 From: CBraffet@AOL.COM Subject: /R Milk-free, Soy-free, GF Bread Recipes A number of us with children who have autism and gluten/casein sensitivity also have trouble using most of the recipes developed for people with celiacs only. Along with gluten, we have to avoid all milk products and most milk substitutes (most of the soy milks have added casein). To add to that, my son also cannot tolerate eggs and tree nuts. A couple of bread recipes for sandwiches I use are: Flatbreads 1/2 c. amaranth flour 1/2 c. tapioca flour 2 tsp. arrowroot powder 2 tsp. light, cold-pressed oil 1/2 cup water 1/3-2/3 cup extra flour for kneading Sift the flours with the arrowroot powder. In a separate bowl, mix the oil and water, then add to the flour mixture. Work the dough with a fork and then your hands. Knead briefly and roll into a ball. Divide the ball into 8 parts. Roll each part into a ball and pat flat. Sprinkle each bread with flour and roll between 2 sheets of waxed paper with a rolling pin. Turn frequently while rolling, and lift the waxed paper occasionally to add flour so the dough does not stick. The bread should be rounded and about 1/8 inch thick. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Lightly oil a frying pan and heat to medium-high. Put one flatbread in the pan and heat 15-20 seconds on each side. Immediately put bread in oven and heat 3 minutes. turn over and heat 1 1/2 - 2 more minutes. The bread will puff up a bit in the oven, but not as much as traditional pita because it has no yeast. Re-oil the pan with a paper towel dipped in oil, and repeat procedure for each flatbread. Cool breads before storing in plastic bags. Makes 8 breads. ----------------- Chick Pea Chipatis 1 cup chick pea flour 1/3 cup water 2 Tbs. arrowroot powder 1 Tbs. light, cold-pressed oil Optional: 1/4 tsp salt Mix all ingredients well. Roll into 1" balls and pat flat. With a rolling pin, roll out pastry-like rounds. Heat a lightly oiled frying pan until very hot. Reduce heat to medium high and heat each round for 1-2 minutes on each side, until warmed and slightly browned. Serve hot or store in the refrigerator. Chipatis may be eaten hot from the pan, or cold, or lightly toased. They are wonderful with rice or Indian foods, and they make a good bread substitute for sandwiches. This recipe makes 8-10 chipatis. These recipes I found in a vegetarian cookbook, _The All Natural Allergy Cookbook: Dairy-Free, Gluten-Free_ by Jeanne Marie Martin, Harbour Publishing, P.O. Box 219, Madiera Park, BC Canada V0N 2H0. This book has some good recipes, not all truly gluten or dairy free however. ===================================== Newsgroup: rec.food.cooking Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 18:33:24 -0700 From: TJ Subject: Re: Injera recipe found Kurt Foster wrote: > It's at > > http://www.cs.indiana.edu/hyplan/dmulholl/ethiopia/Injera_english.html This is basically the process I got from Tara. But sucess comes in small gains and I've had some set backs. I'm patient though. Took me 5 years to make a sabji that could make my Hub squeal. tj Anyone else attempting this recipe, I'm interested in your failures and, hopefully, successes! =====================================