Karibevu is Kannada for Curry Leaves and Pudi translates to Powder. Pudis and Pickles have always been an important part of our meals since childhood for several reasons. One, because granny made varieties of pudis and pickles all the time and another all of our summers spent at granny’s place ensured we ate them at almost every meal.
More than pickles, ajji makes various pudis (better known to some as chutney pudi) with curry leaves, fried gram (Dalia), dried coconut, groundnuts,cumin and the list goes on. Our favourite is the Poppindi, made with fried gram (dalia). Next, is the one made with curry leaves. These pudis were eaten with everything from idlis,dosas and everything in between….even bread toasted on a tava with ghee. Mmmm, the perfect combo! Often meals started with Pudi anna - mixture of rice, any one of the pudis, and a little bit of ghee.
You will need: (Makes about 1 ½ cups of Pudi)
¾ Cup dry grated coconut
8 Dry red chillies
2 Tbsp Urad Dal
1 ½ tbsp Cumin seeds
1 tbsp plus 1 tsp Powdered Jaggery
1 tsp Tamarind (remove seeds and fibres)
½ tsp Mustard seeds
¼ tsp Asafoetida
Salt to taste
Wash and dry the curry leaves. Dry roast them in a hot non stick pan till they are crisp and crumbly to the touch. Turn off heat and let cool.
Meanwhile dry roast each separately the urad dal, cumin seeds, dry red chillies and the dry coconut. Grind these to a fine powder.
Powder the roasted cooled curry leaves. Combine this with the other powder and blend one last time with tamarind, jaggery and salt.
In a pan, heat ½ tsp oil. Add mustard seeds and asafetida. When the seeds splutter, add the powder and sauté till fragrant and slightly changes colour. About 6-7 minutes.
Let cool completely before storing in an air tight jar.
interesting!
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love the flavor of curry leaves so I can imagine how much I love this... I should do myself a favor and try it sometime :)
ReplyDeleteThe colour is very attractive :) Sure it is aromatic!
ReplyDeleteI've never had this... seen it on a couple of blogs. Did u use a coffee grinder?
ReplyDeleteI've never had this... seen it on a couple of blogs. Did u use a coffee grinder?
ReplyDeletei started making this very recently and just love it with rice. nice pics.
ReplyDeletepodi looks beautifulll namratha ,love it with rice and ghee
ReplyDeletehmm..curry leaves pudi frangrance has reached Singapore Nams.. btw tried your mango kulfi with kesar, was lip smacking, will post soon, yet to try khara biscuit..eyeing on it for couple of months..no time :(
ReplyDeleteEven my mom makes it in the same way... it tastes wonderful with hot rice, and ghee :-)
ReplyDeleteThis must be the most good-looking curry leaf powder I've seen, will make it once the number of podis in my kitchen comes down at least by one!
ReplyDeletenam..thats a pretty picture..so beautiful!
ReplyDeletethis is a great idea! mom always says curry leaves are packed with iron :) will surely try it out. nice pics :)
ReplyDeleteWe too make this but slightly different...nice colour of the podi
ReplyDeletedear namratha
ReplyDeletethanks for sharing the magical recipes of your ajji...the pudis and pickles looks good and i know, it goes well with dosa, idli and evn parathas for that matter !
Love ur masala so m gonna make this one too. Look so good, and lovely color too !!!
ReplyDeleteNice one... & nice pic
ReplyDeletehey is karibevu as same as malabar neem? what is the difference between malabar neem and karibevu??
ReplyDeleteHi Poorna, sorry for the late response. Karibevu is Curry leaves, vastly used in seasoning. Malabar Neem on the other hand is a plant of the Neem species, not used in cooking but cultivated for timber.
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