Trini Chana and Aloo

- Total Time
- 1½ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½pound dried chickpeas, soaked overnight in 4 cups of water
- 1½ounces culantro (1 packed cup),(*see note) plus more for garnish
- Kosher salt
- 3fat cloves garlic, smashed
- ¼ to 1habanero chile, to taste
- 1large russet potato
- ¼cup vegetable oil
- 2½tablespoons Madras curry powder
- ½tablespoon ground turmeric
Preparation
- Step 1
In a medium Dutch oven or heavy soup pot, add water to cover the chickpeas by 2 inches, and bring to a boil over high heat, skimming the foam, then lower to a simmer. Simmer for 45 to 60 minutes, until chickpeas are tender; drain, keeping the cooking water. (I like to use it later in the recipe; it’s also a nice base for soups.)
- Step 2
Meanwhile, purée the culantro and ⅓ cup water in a blender until smooth. Add a pinch of salt, the garlic and the chile. (Half a deseeded habanero will make the dish gently but noticeably hot. Adjust from there.) Blend until smooth. Stir the herb purée into the hot, drained chickpeas.
- Step 3
Rinse and dry the pot. Peel the potato, and cut it into ¾-inch chunks. In the pot, heat the oil over medium heat, add the curry powder and turmeric and stir, until very aromatic and just starting to darken. Carefully add the potatoes and cook, stirring, for 3 minutes. Add the chickpeas and cook, stirring, until you get a little sticking on the bottom of the pot, 3 to 5 minutes. Add a little water to scrape up the stuck parts, then add water to cover by ½ inch. (I use the chickpea cooking water, but Dolly Sirju prefers fresh water.) Add 1½ teaspoons of kosher salt.
- Step 4
Bring the pot to a vigorous simmer, shy of a full boil, and cook until the potatoes are tender and the chickpeas are soft, about 30 minutes. Season with salt to taste. Chop some more culantro. Serve the curry with long grain white rice or roti, and garnish with chopped culantro.
- Also called shado beni, chadon beni or sawtooth herb. Or substitute 1¼ ounces cilantro (about ¼ bunch) and ½ ounce parsley (one big handful), plus more for garnish.
Private Notes
Comments
Would recommend adding fresh water rather than the soaked or cooking water. Beans contain pentoses (5 carbon sugars) which are not digestible by human enzymes - hence the reliance on gut bacteria to digest them with attendant auditory and olfactory consequences. When soaked and cooked some of those sugars leach out and dissolve in the water and when discarded reduce the load that the body must deal with.
On the West Coast, I had a real hard time finding Culantro in Latin markets... apparently, Mexicans and Central Americans don't use it very much - it's more of a Caribbean/Puerto Rican thing. However, the Vietnamese use this herb regularly and saved the day. Culantro is fairly easily found in Vietnamese or Chinese markets.... in Vietnamese it's known as Ngao Gai.
I wouldn't fret about finding the cilantro. Cilantro and culantro is pretty much interchangeable. However copy and paste this link in your browser to see what the culantro looks like:http://www.specialtyproduce.com/sppics/2723.png
Would recommend eating with a raita - yogurt and lime. The acidity and cooling effect worked well with the flavors!
I cook a lot of Indian food but have never tried Trini dishes. Though there were indeed similarities with Channa dals, this had a different spice mix and taste. Very much enjoyed and for the time being will stay pretty much to the root recipe though we did eat this dish with red rice! Very flavorful and rather easy to throw together! Highly recommend this recipe!
I made the recipe as written (cilantro + parsley in place of culantro), and agree with the commenter who said it was better the next day. The flavors came together and deepened. Very good with chutney.