The idea of having challenges to come up with recipes with a set of ingredients was something Paul had been thinking about since we started the blog. I noticed recently that A Slice of Cherry Pie and Real Epicurean run such a competition, In the Bag. For March, the ingredients were Leeks, Eggs and Cheese. Our vegbox has been providing us with a decent stock of leeks so I thought this could be a good opportunity to give it a go. The set of ingredients lend themselves to pretty obvious dishes – leek and cheese quiche, baked eggs and leeks, leek and cheese frittata etc. I thought I’d try to come up with something totally out from what would be my first instincts.

First I thought about  the boundaries of the ingredients themselves – Leeks don’t vary that much that I know of. Cheese provides a lot of room to manoeuvre with. Eggs encompass many different types and a variety of cooked forms, I’m not that familiar with their tastes so I was slightly reluctant to experiment. On a side note, that reminds me of Andrew Zimmern’s show with Balut (don’t look if you’re squeamish about food!).

Welsh Paneer

I eventually settled upon trying to recreate an egg curry we had for breakfast in on the backwaters in Kerala, with some stuffed leek and paneer kulchas. I might need to explain myself: Curry for breakfast? Yep, it’s not like British-style curry though – far easier on the taste buds. Egg in curry? You might not get it in that many Indian restaurants in Britain, it’s fairly common though (I think it’s more of a south Indian thing) – they’re usually hard boiled. What’s paneer? It’s an Indian cheese, although I see it as having a taste and texture closer to tofu. It doesn’t melt either. Kulcha? These are new to me too, they originate from the Punjab and are like small Naan (an Indian bread).

Shopping for ingredients was a little fun, I popped over to the nearest asian area to track down some paneer and curry leaves. I tend to make paneer myself (it’s dead easy), but I wanted to minimise my cooking time. In the shop I visited, I ended up finding some Welsh Paneer! I couldn’t find any curry leaves though so I asked the guy at the till, after which he pulled out a bag from under the till. Maybe it’s the asian equivalent of tofu in Chinese shops? When I got home I was a little bermused by the episode, and unsure if ‘curry leaves’ had another meaning. Looks like curry leaves though, I also noticed he didn’t charge for them!

Leek and Paneer stuffed Kulcha

Ingredients

Kulcha dough

  • 5 oz wholemeal flour
  • 5 oz plain flour
  • 2 oz cottage cheese
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 2 oz butter
  • water

Kulcha filling

  • 2 small leeks (or 1 large), finely sliced
  • 1 green chilli
  • 3 oz paneer, grated
  • salt

Egg curry

  • 4 eggs, hard boiled, shelled
  • 1 large onion, sliced into long strips
  • 2 1/2 tsp corriander powder
  • 1 tsp chilli powder
  • 1/2 tsp tumeric
  • 1/2 tsp garam masala
  • 1/2 tsp mustard seeds
  • handful of curry leaves
  • 2 tsp tomato puree
  • 400 ml coconut milk

Leek and Paneer stuffed Kulcha

Method

  1. Start with the dough. Mix all ingredients together until you’ve got a dough. Leave covered at room temperature for 1 hour.
  2. Lightly fry the leeks, this will bring out their flavour. Once translucent, take off the heat and mix with other ingredients.
  3. The dough will provide 4 kulchas. Divide the mixture into 8ths and mould into circles ~4″ diameter (beer mat size). Top with kulcha stuffing and cover with another piece, pressing edges together and removing any air inside.
  4. Slowly cook the kulcha at a low heat in a lightly buttered pan until golden.
  5. Mix the corriander powder, tumeric and chilli powder with water into a smooth paste.
  6. Dry fry mustard seeds and curry leaves for a minute. Drop a dash of oil and add the onions. When transparent add the tomato puree. Cook for a minute and add the paste from before.
  7. Add the eggs for a minute and mix to absorb the colours/flavours. Finally, add the coconut milk, allow to simmer for 10 minutes. 2 minutes before the end add the garam masala.

Egg Curry with Leek and Paneer Kulcha

Verdict

I served it up with half a portion of rice each with the kulchas on the side. The curry was pretty nice but I’ve still got a bit of tweaking before it’s as good as the stuff in Kerala. I might slice the eggs in half to absorb more flavour. The kulchas turned out fairly well too but I think it would have worked better if I’d stuck to my initial idea of stuffed parathas which would have been a bit lighter. A lot of recipes for Indian bread mention using a Tava.

7 Responses to “ITB: Egg Curry with Leek and Paneer Kulcha”

  1. on 11 Apr 2009 at 17:19goodshoeday

    This looks really great. I’ve made egg curry using the recipe in 50 Great Curries of India (by Camellia Panjabi) and I also LOVE paneer. Will definitely be trying this out. And creative use of the ITB ingredients. :)

  2. on 12 Apr 2009 at 0:36Joanne

    Looks really interesting. I like the idea of “egg curry”. I think that may have triggered the urge to experiment. Good post.

  3. on 12 Apr 2009 at 8:35matt

    Experimenting is always good, just as long as you have something edible to fall back on. I’d be interesting to see how this version of egg curry compares to Camellia Panjabi’s and how they vary. This one was good but it still could do with some refining.

    I have to confess to not being a huge paneer fan – 6 weeks in India with it for every other meal ruined our relationship. This was my first time since when I’ve eaten it. Yesterday however Jenny made a lovely paneer recipe from Atul Kutcher’s book, we’ll try posting it up shortly.

  4. on 14 Apr 2009 at 17:26goodshoeday

    I’ll look out Camellia Panjabis recipe for you and post it up.
    I’ve never actually been to india (i know, i know) and as you don’t always see paneer here to buy or on menus at i still can’t get enough of it.
    Must look out for the Welsh paneer – or maybe try making some myself.

  5. on 15 Apr 2009 at 14:45matt

    Great, it’ll look forward to giving it a try.

    To be honest I didn’t notice anything special with Welsh paneer! Paneer seems fairly standard to me. It’s an ingredient I used to quite like, but really needs to be used in the right way to make it nice – i’d argue the same for tofu.

    Definitely try making some though, it’s really easy and tastes just as good if not better.

  6. on 18 Apr 2009 at 15:02goodshoeday

    Hi Matt
    found the recipe – its pretty similar to yours i think – incls some different spices and omits some you have – its from Chettinad.
    For 3 you need/do:
    6 hard boiled eggs, peeled and halved
    Blend these next things to a paste with 2 tbsp water:
    3 tsp coriander powder
    1.5 tsp chilli powder
    1 tsp fennel seeds
    1 tsp cumin seeds
    1/2 tsp turmeric powder
    1/2 in piece ginger
    2 garlic cloves
    Then fry following for 10sec in 2 tbsp oil:
    1/2 tsp fenugreek seeds
    1/2 tsp fennel seeds
    2 in cinnamon stick
    Then add:
    8oz (!) chopped onion and fry till lightly coloured
    Add the spice paste you made and cook for 7 minutes (how precise!)
    Add 8 oz finely chopped tomatoes and cook for 2-3 mins
    Add 3 cups of water and simmer for 20 mins
    Add 200ml coconut milk and bring to boil then add juice of half a lime
    Put in the eggs.
    Serve
    Hope it helps you refine your remembered recipe.

  7. on 29 Apr 2009 at 9:51matt

    Thanks goodshoeday. I gave it a go. I preferred it to my original one, but Jenny thought mine edged it. The extra onions definitely add some extra sweetness which I liked. I also tried coconut cream instead of coconut milk. This was slightly more tomato-y than the original.

    Camellia Punjabi's Egg Curry

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