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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Dried curd chillies/ Sukhi dahi Mirchi

Known by different names across regions (e.g. Majjiga Mirapa, Challa Mirapakayalu etc.), these dried green chillies are very famous in South India. As is obvious from the name, curd and chillies are the main ingredients for making these chillies.

 
 
The entire process will take around a week’s time and is best carried out during hot summers to help effective drying of chillies. Though the process is a bit lengthy, I am sure you will enjoy making of these chillies as much as the final product!
 
In our family, we like to have it as an accompaniment with khichdi, dal-chawal, and curd-rice. Since chillies are soaked in buttermilk during preparation, their pungency mostly goes away. These chillies add a nice mix of sour, salty and mildly pungent flavor to the whole meal :).  Even my seven year daughter enjoys having 4-5 chillies at a time with khichdi!

 


 
Ingredients:

In the making process
 
Green Chillies ----------------------------------- 1 kg
Cumin seeds (Jeera) ---------------------------- 1/2 cup
Asafoetida (Hing) ------------------------------- 1 tbsp
Sour Curd ---------------------------------------- 1 litre Churned
Salt ------------------------------------------------ 3 tbsp


At time of cooking

Oil/ Ghee ----------------------------------------- 2 tbsp


Wash the chillies and dry them. Stem should be intact.

Take a chilli and make a slit on one side as shown in the picture below. Repeat the process for all the chillies. Huh...little tiring.

 
 
Grind jeera.
 
 

Add Hing and salt in it. Grind to mix all.

 

The curd should be sour...a real sour curd like 3-4 days old curd. Take the churned curd and mix enough water for a butter milk consistency.

Pour the butter milk into a plastic container with a tight lid. Add ground spices into it.

 
Mix Well and add chillies. Press the chillies so that they are well soaked in the butter milk. When you press them they will come up, but will be coated by the buttermilk.
 
 
 
Put the lid and leave this for 2 days on room temperature. Mix the chillies 2-3 times a day so that the chillies which are on surface go down into the buttermilk to soak it. You will notice that gradually the colour of chillies is getting lighter.
 
After 2 days; i.e. the 3rd day morning, take out all the chillies from the buttermilk. Keep them in a colander to stain all the buttermilk. Keep all the buttermilk safe in the container. Dry the chillies in the sun for the whole day. In the evening, put dried chillies in the buttermilk again. Mix well and put the lid.
 
Repeat the process for another 2 days. In this process you will see that the colour of the soaked chillies have changed from green to white. If not, then the same process should be repeated for another 1-2 days.
 
Now dry the chillies and store in an air tight container.


 
 
 
Cooking:
 
Heat oil in a pan. Add 4-5 chillies at a time to fry. Enjoy the yummy chillies.
 
 
 


 
 
Some Ideas:
 
1. Always start with small lots of chillies like 250 gms or even smaller. Rest of the ingredients can be taken in proportion of it.
3.When malai/ cream is churned to get butter, the residual liquid / matha (traditional buttermilk) can be used in this recipe.
 
 

3 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing this receipe, i have been buying more milagai from www.maxsupermart.com, it tastes good though but nothing can beat home made, i will sure try this receipe and update you the outcome. Thank you

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  2. Pl inform which are other vegetables we can in buttermilk?what is the shelflife of dried products?

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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