Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Teeny is not tiny anymore




It was not very long ago when our tiny girl searched for our hand in the dark to pat her to sleep.

It was not very long ago, either, when lights were off and she cuddled under our bed sheet and said “let's talk in the dark”

It was not very long ago that she insisted on us covering her forehead while shampooing, to avoid getting it into her eyes.

It was not very long ago when we led her into believing that Santa left the gifts while we were in church.

It was not very long ago when we answered all her 'WHYs' and she changed all her 'NOs' into 'YES'

Teeny is not tiny anymore and the following signs confirm that:

  • There are more clothes outside the wardrobe than inside.
  • We walk into her room to say something, look at the mess and forget what we intended to say.  
  • We receive missed calls from the very phone whose bills we are paying.  
  • The food she loved last week and we stocked up on, she isn’t interested anymore.  
  • She keeps postponing prayer time until she is asleep.  
  • She sleeps so long that we wonder whether she slipped out at night to work on a night shift.  
  • She speaks so well to others that they compliment us on her upbringing – but with us she speaks in mono syllables.  
  • The best is, she attends her friends’ calls even though her phone is on silent, but ours, she claims the battery was down.

I’ve thoroughly enjoyed the ‘Perfect Moment Mondays’ for the last seventeen years of my baby’s growing up years and looking forward to many more.


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    Lori from lavenderluz.com says “PerfectMoment Monday" is about noticing a perfect moment rather than creating one. Perfect moments can be momentous or ordinary or somewhere in between.

    On the last Monday of each month we engage in mindfulness about something that is right with our world. Everyone is welcome to join.

    To participate in Perfect Moment Monday, Follow lavenderluz.com.


    Friday, March 1, 2013

    Neer Dosas



    It’s getting warm in here now and the under graduate exams are on, which means kids are at home on study leave. At the best of times, my daughter has to be goaded to eat a well balanced diet, but these days being at home preparing for her exams, before I ask for an update on her preparation, she yells “I’m sooo hungreee” Being aware of her tactics, I stock up on some ready to eat store bought snacks as well as keep some home made stuff which just needs assembling or heating. 

    Neer Dosa is one such food item which I make once every week as it can be consumed for any meal. It’s light and can be had by itself or with coconut based vegetarian or non-vegetarian gravy or chutney (relish). I enjoy them plain with a hot cup of tea or coffee.

     Dosa is to India what crepe is to the West. Dosas can be prepared with various combinations of grains and pulses. Neer Dosa is generally made with only rice, but a friend of mine once suggested adding a wee bit of fresh coconut and after this advice; I’ve never altered the recipe.

    There are special cast iron pans available to make these dosas, but I use non-stick pans and I use two pans at a time to hasten the process.

    Ingredients
    Rice - One cup
    Grated coconut – ¼ cup
    Salt – One teaspoon or as per individual taste.
    Oil – Approximately two tablespoons to grease the pan
    Water - As required to grind and make the batter to a pouring consistency.




    Soaking rice for an hour or two helps in grinding it faster, but due to time constraints, sometimes I skip soaking.


    Add grated coconut to the soaked rice and grind adding little water at a time to butter like paste.


     



    Empty the ground paste in a bowl.


    Add a teaspoon of salt or as required, and water to make the batter a little thinner than pancake batter.



     
    Take approximately three to four tablespoon oil in a small container.

    Cut the broader end of an onion and insert a fork through it.



    Use as a pastry brush to grease the pan each time before pouring the batter. 

    Heat the pan on a medium flame after greasing.


     


     Take a deep ladle and stir the batter every time the batter is poured into the pan. 

    This ensures the rice paste is not settled at the bottom of the batter.



     




    Lift the heated pan slightly away from the burner.

    Pour a ladle of batter in the pan, swirling the pan around in one direction until the pan is coated with a thin layer of batter.
     










    Put the pan back on the burner and cover with the lid.
     






    Be alert to the sizzling sound from the pan.












    Open the lid and check if the dosa is leaving the sides of the pan.










    Turn over the pan on to a plate to gently flip the dosa off the pan.







    A minute or two later, when the dosa is cool enough to handle, fold it into a quarter and keep it closed in a box.




    Continue from step no.7 until all the batter is used.


    ENJOY!