Provenance Technique Library

Tamil Nadu — a staple of Tamil Brahmin cooking and the daily Saivite temple kitchen Techniques

1 technique from Tamil Nadu — a staple of Tamil Brahmin cooking and the daily Saivite temple kitchen cuisine

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Tamil Nadu — a staple of Tamil Brahmin cooking and the daily Saivite temple kitchen
Poriyal — Tamil Dry Vegetable Stir-Fry Technique (பொரியல்)
Tamil Nadu — a staple of Tamil Brahmin cooking and the daily Saivite temple kitchen
Poriyal is the South Indian technique for dry-cooked vegetables served as accompaniment to a full rice meal — different from the North Indian sabzi in that it always includes freshly grated coconut stirred in at the end and begins with a mustard-urad dal tempering. The range of vegetables used is broad (beans, carrots, cabbage, kohlrabi, raw banana), but the technique is consistent: finely cut vegetables are cooked in minimal water until just tender, the excess moisture is driven off over high heat, then the mustard-curry leaf-dried chilli tempering is poured in, and the fresh coconut is folded through. The coconut should not be cooked — it is added off heat to preserve its fresh, slightly sweet quality.
Indian — South Indian Tamil & Kerala