Tag Archives: Kachampuli

Koli Kari Recipe: This Coorgi Chicken Curry Is Nothing Like You Ever Had Before

Coorg-style chicken curry is probably one of the best examples to understand the palate of the locals.

Koli Kari Recipe: This Coorgi Chicken Curry Is Nothing Like You Ever Had Before
Coorg-style chicken curry is quite popular. Here’s what makes it so unique. / Photo: Stock

Highlights

  • Coorgi chicken is one of the most delightful recipes
  • Here’s what makes the dish so unique locally
  • It has a generous use of spices that are grown in Coorg

We just love how varied Indian cuisine is! Every time we delve in deep, we come across some unique sub regional cuisine that mesmerizes us with their flavours, aroma and use of ingredients. This time, we came across a delicious chicken curry from the South Indian region – Coorg. Popularly referred to as ‘The Coffee Country’, Coorg or the Kodagu district of Karnataka boasts of its distinctive cooking style. The food pattern here is defined by its extensive flora and fauna and changes as per the season and its produce. And the Coorg-style chicken curry is probably one of the best examples to understand the palate of the locals. Let’s find out what makes the dish so unique and how to make it at home.

What Is So Special About Coorg-Style Chicken Curry:

This delicious dish is referred to as koli kari in regional language, where koli stands for chicken and kari is curry in English . A part of the Kodava cuisine (the food culture of Coorg district), koli kari is characterised by the generous use of spices, which are traditionally produced and picked in the coffee estates of the region. Another ingredient that makes koli kari so unique is kachampuli – the local version of the balsamic vinegar, extracted from a fruit called kudampuli. It has its own taste and aroma that adds on to the flavours of the chicken curry. Sounds indulgent, indeed!

How To Make Koli Kari | Coorg-Style Chicken Curry Recipe:

Here, we bring the authentic recipe of koli kari for you to try at home. This particular recipe is shared by Chef Anahita Dhondy on her Instagram handle, where she mentions, “Koli kari recipe is essentially a chicken curry made Kodava style with the usage of coconut paste and spices. It is a flavour packed chicken curry from South India. They make their food flavoursome and spicy, which makes it likeable by all.” She also states that if you do not find kachampuli, then don’t worry, simply eliminate it from the recipe.

To start with, clean and marinate the chicken curry with simple salt, red chill and turmeric and let it rest for at least two hours. Then add some clove, cinnamon in the wok and toss. Then add garlic, onion and other masalas and cook for some time. To it add marinated chicken and mix with the spices. Keep the flame low to avoid it from sticking to the base or getting burnt.

After a while, add coconut paste and a few other spices and cook. Here, you can adjust the quantity of coconut paste as per your preference. Finally, if you have kachampuli, add it to the dish along with green chillies and coriander leaves and turn off the heat. And you have koli kari ready to be relished.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CvbvL1-pxPJ/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=d785faa8-2da2-4c4b-bf56-d8fc3436dfdd

What To Pair With Koli Kari | What Goes Best With Koli Kari:

Koli kari is usually paired with akki roti, ghee rice or as per Chef Anahita Dhondy, you can have it with paputt too. For the unversed, paputt is a traditional Kodava rice cake, made by steaming rice with few basic spices. In the post on Instagram, she also gave us the recipe for paputt.

To make paputt, you need to first wash the broken rice and place it in a heat-proof plate. To it, add ingredients like grated coconut, salt, sugar and few other spices. Then pour water, covering the rice and the other ingredients. Now place the plate in a steamer and prepare it until it turns soft and well-cooked. Finally, cool it down, cut into triangles and serve hot with koli kari.

source: http://www.food.ndtv.com / NDTV Food / Home> Food & Drink / by Somdatta Saha / August 06th, 2023

Meet The Custodian Of Kodava Food: Kaveri Ponnapa

With Indian cuisine in focus both globally and locally, there has never been a better time to chronicle Indian culinary culture in all its diversity. Rushina Munshaw Ghildiyal, herself the custodian of Uttarakhandi food, showcases 16 other women who are each committed to keeping their own culinary heritage alive. These are some of India’s most passionate culinary custodians, who are driving conversations around and exploration of regional, micro regional and community cuisines through media, books, TV, home delivery menus from their own home kitchens, and pop-ups at restaurants.

Kaveri Ponnapa 

Kodava Food
Kaveri Ponnapa is a Bengaluru-based independent writer on gastronomy and heritage, who is thought of as synonymous with Kodava culture and cuisine.

Avare Curry

Why We Think Kaveri Is A Culinary Custodian
While researching her first book The Vanishing Kodavas, Kaveri spent a significant amount of time in the villages of Kodagu (Coorg), connected with the local people, and got a first-hand experience of their lifestyle, which is still connected with the land. The Vanishing Kodavas is acclaimed as a cultural study of the Kodava people based on 15 years of fieldwork documenting their history, customs, worship and cultural practices. Kaveri’s writings on these subjects have been published in leading national and global publications. Her website The Vanishing Kodavas, blog The Coorg Table and its Facebook page continue to be unique rich resources for information and authentic recipes and are followed by audiences from across India and the globe including the Kodava diaspora, as well as people fascinated by the unique cuisine of this small community. Her current project, based on her observations of how a cuisine is born out of a particular landscape, culture and history, is a book documenting the culinary culture of the Kodava community from an anthropological and cultural perspective, enriched with information on local ingredients, practices and recipes including many that are no longer eaten or being forgotten. Kaveri has curated successful Kodava food festivals with ITC Windsor, been consultant to the Leela Palace and Taj MG Road Bengaluru on Kodava cuisine, and continues to train chefs and speak about the cuisine at hospitality institutions such as The Oberoi Centre for Learning and Development, Delhi.

Bale Nuruk

What We’ve Learned About Kodava Cuisine Through Kaveri
– Kachampuli is a souring and thickening agent indispensable to Kodava cuisine. Every kitchen will have a bottle or three of this dark, tart vinegar – made for centuries from the ripe fruits of the Garcinia gummi gutta tree, indigenous to Kodagu – stored away. It is a signature flavour in all the classic Coorg dishes.


– Rice is central to Coorg cuisine and used in many forms. Tari is washed, dried and hand-pounded rice that breaks down roughly into three to four bits and is used to make all the Coorg puttusAkki podi is finely-powdered rice, used to make rice rotis and batters for some fried sweets.
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Kartha masala, or black masala, is a signature spice blend made of slowly dry roasted, ground spices that lends a characteristic flavour to many classic recipes. The basic ingredients of cumin, mustard seeds, black peppercorns and fenugreek seeds are roasted slowly to a coffee-brown colour, powdered and used in curries. A few other spices might be used too, depending on the recipe.

Access Kaveri’s Wealth Of Knowledge
Website: kaveriponnapa.com/category/the-coorg-table/; thevanishingkodavas.com
Facebook: The Coorg Table, Kaveri Ponnapa
Instagram: @kaverikamb
Twitter: KaveriPonnapa

Images: Kaveri Ponnapa

source: http://www.femina.in / Femina.in / Home> Trending> Achievers / by Femina Food / July 22nd, 2023