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5 Yummy Dishes Made With Leftovers

By ZELDA PANDE
May 02, 2024

All photographs: Zelda Pande

Open your fridge and what confronts you?

Loads of leftovers, perhaps.

What do you do with that pile of spare rotis? Or the loaf of bread withering away? Maybe there is some way to make use of the extra pot of dal. Or the surplus laawaris coconut chutney.

Yup, we have a number of really quick fixes, as we kick off a Rediff Food leftover series.

1. Extra Coconut Chutney

Every time you order idlis, or other dishes from an Udupi restaurant, you are inundated with dabbas of chutney. There is only so much chutney one can eat and it seems a shame to throw the rest away.

I have discovered that extra chutney is a windfall. I pop it into the freezer and use it the next time I would like to make a Mor Kootan or pulissery or a kuzhambu -- yoghurt coconut curry or a tamarind coconut stew.

The best vegetable/fruit choices for such a curry are any of these: Mooli (radish) or white pumpkin or raw orange pumpkin (lal bhopla), mangoes, baingan (eggplant) bhindi (okra).

I decided to make a very simple, but not very traditional take (apologies) on the summer sweet-sour Kerala curry, Mambazha Pulissery, that uses a Kerala variety of mango, naatu manga. I had to make do with lumpy pieces of Totapuri and some kairi and added tiny sambar onions.

Mango Pulissery

Servings: 2

Ingredients

Method

2. Rotis

My grandmother had an easy solution for lingering rotis. No matter how crackly or old they had become, she would grind them up and make what she called prasad (a dry powdery sweet dish) or laddus out of them. The ingredients are rather variable in quantity and you can choose to add them or not. The black pepper powder contributes an interesting flavour.

Ammaji's Roti Prasad

Serves: 4

Ingredients

Method

Zelda's Note: Alternately, especially for children, make laddus. Instead of icing sugar, melt about 75 gm jaggery with 2 tbsp water in a thick-bottomed saucepan or kadhai till thick and viscous and add in the roasted roti mixture. When it cools a little, make into 1-inch diameter laddus and store in an air-tight container.

3. Dal

Cooked dal is a slippery commodity to store in your fridge. In hardly a day-and-a-half it can go bad.

A simple way to reuse it and extend its life is to quickly convert it to a sambar packed with vegetables and spiked with imli (tamarind).

Or else, better, make into a vegetable khichdi.

Spinach and Eggplant Rice and Matta Khichdi

Serves: 4

Ingredients

Method

Zelda's Note: If you prefer a more spicy khichdi, add in a few slit green chillies while boiling the rice and matta with the dal or add a few broken red chillies to the tadka.

4. Bread

A very common leftover is bread. But a very versatile one too.

Never discard excess bread.

There are umpteen zillion ways to use extra or even stale bread, right from making upma, or bakes with a top layer of bread crumbs, to soups (especially the hearty Tuscany bread zuppa, called Pappa al Pomodoro), bread alu cutlets, bread salad, bread dosa, Shahi Tukda, Bread And Butter Pudding and so on.

I offer you a recipe for crunchy, cheesy, piquant Caesar Salad, which is made with half croutons and half salad greens, and is a chilled gourmet salad.

In spite of the sound of its name, that hints at a Roman origin, Caesar Salad was first prepared all the way across the Atlantic in Mexico, at Caesar's restaurant, Tijuana, an eatery owned by a US-based Italian immigrant named Caesar Cardini.

Zelda’s Caesar Salad

Ingredients

For the croutons

For the dressing

For serving

Method

For the croutons

For the dressing

For the salad

Zelda's Note: A classic Caesar Salad, as per Cardini's recipe, uses coddled egg yolks (yolks beaten in a bowl over a hot water bath) in the dressing. I prefer to substitute the eggs with mayonnaise.

A Caesar Salad can also be garnished with fried bacon bits or finely-chopped fried anchovies or Worcestershire sauce with anchovies in it.

The preferred green is romaine lettuce, which not easily available in India. Hence use iceberg.

Instead of white vinegar, opt for 2 tsp freshly-squeezed lime juice.

Parmesan cheese is preferred and generally not negotiable, but a basic grated cheese can do some of the job.

5. Rice

On an average day, we all have some rice tucked away in the refrigerator, that lacks a purpose. Like bread, there are a hundred uses for it.

My mom's favourite breakfast was 2 handfuls cold rice in a bowl of cold milk with cinnamon powder and sugar, probably a throwback to her childhood in Sweden. I prefer to do a simple tadka/baghar, with onions and three spices and come up with a bowl of comfort food.

Baghara Rice

Serves: 2

Method

We ask you, Dear Readers, do you have any recipes for leftovers?

Do share your recipes with us and we'll publish them here.

Mail your recipe, recipe photo and your own photo to getahead@rediff.co.in (subject: Recipes For Leftovers) along with your NAME and the place where you LIVE.

 
ZELDA PANDE

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