A question about perhaps a different twist on potato salad...

judy-mass

Well-known member
Has anyone ever had or made a potato salad with an Indian-flavored dressing?

It was a rather convoluted thought train that brought me to this question. I bought a 5 pound bag of potatoes, so that I could make Steve 2's fantastic potato-chive cakes. Since I'll be cooking potatoes, I figured I might as well cook them all, then I would have the raw (or in this case, cooked) materials for Indian potato dishes. Since it's hot out and this is the official beginning of the grilling/eating outdoors season (at least in the northeast), the thought process then ran toward cold potato dishes.

So, I could wing it, with a yogurt dressing seasoned with all the usual suspects found in curries, or I could ask first and see if anyone else has tried this.

 
I've never tried it but it sounds delicious. Maybe you could test it....

with just a portion of the potatoes, then if it's as good as it sounds increase the amount.

 
I do Maddhur Jaffrey's samosa filling as a side dish, we like it so much. I could certainly

see myself eating it cold. (but I will eat potatoes any way they're available except raw)

It has peas in it and main flavour is cumin. Not exactly a 'dressing', but a seasoning.

 
I took your advise......

and found the samosa filling recipe. I made it and chilled it. I then added a half container of Fage non-fat yogurt to the mix. It was excellent! It went beautifully with chicken breast that I had marinated in a vindaloo paste, then grilled.
Thank you so much for the suggestion. I love Madhur Jaffrey's recipes, but for some reason, just spaced on checking them out.

Rats! I thought I could edit my egregious booboo in the title...silly me! I wanted to say advice!

 
REC: Maddhur Jaffrey's Samosas

I picked this up at another site instead of typing it. How handy this is.

Maddhur herself, says the pastry is too tedious. I agree. It's the filling I love.

For the pastry:

2 c flour
1/2 ts salt
4 tb oil
4 tb water

For the stuffing:

4 5 md potatoes, boiled in their
jackets and allowed to cool
4 tb oil
1 md onion, peeled and finely
chopped
1 c (175 g) shelled peas
1 tb finely grated peeled
fresh ginger
1 fresh hot green chilli,
finely
chopped
3 tb very finey chope fresh
green coriander (cilantro)
3 tb water
1 1/2 ts salt
1 ts ground coriander seeds
1 ts garam masala
1 ts ground roasted cumin seeds
1/4 ts cayenne pepper
2 tb lemon juice
oil for deep frying

Samosa Recipe from Madhur Jaffrey's "Indian Cooking"

Sift the flour and salt into a bowl. Add the 4 tablespoons on oil and rub it in with your fingers until the mixture resembles
coarse breadcrumbs. Slowly add about 4 tablespoons water -- or a tiny bit more -- and gather the dough into a stiff ball.

Empty the ball out on to clean work surface. Knead the dough for about 10 minutes or until it is smooth. Make a ball. Rub the ball with about 1/4 teaspoon oil and slip it into a plastic bag. Set aside for 30 minutes or longer.

Make the stuffing. Peel the potatoes and cut them into 1/4 inch dice. Heat 4 tablespoons oil in a large frying pan over a medium flame. When hot, put in the onion. Stir and fry until brown at the edges. Add the peas, ginger, green chilli, fresh coriander (cilantro), and 3 tablespoons water. Cover, lower heat and
simmer until peas are cooked. Stir every now and then and add a little more wat. er if the frying pan seems to dry out.

Add the diced potatoes, salt, coriander seeds, garam masala,
roasted cumin, cayenne, and lemon juice. Stir to mix. Cook on low heat for 3-4 minutes, stirring gently as you do so. Check balance of salt and lemon juice. You may want more of both. Turn off the heat and allow the mixture to cool. More? Knead the pastry dough again and divide it into eight balls. Keep 7
covered while you work with the eight. Roll this ball out into a 7 inch (18 cm) round. Cut it into half with a sharp, pointed knife. Pick up one half and form a cone, making a 1/4 inch wide (5 mm), overlapping seam. Glue this seam together with a little water. Fill the cone with about 2 1/2 tablespoons of the potato mixture. Close the top of the cone by sticking the open edges together with a little water. Again, your seam should be about 1/4 inch (5 mm) wide. Press the top seam down with the prongs of a fork or flute it with your fingers. Make 7 more samosas.

Heat about 1 1/2 to 2 inches (4-5 cm) of oil for deep frying over a medium-low flame. You may use a small, deep, frying pan for this or an Indian karhai. When the oil is medium hot, put in as many samosas as the pan will hold in a single layer. Fry slowly, turning the samosas frequently until they are golden brown and crisp. Drain on paper towel and serve hot, warm, or at room
temperature.

 
Thanks for this, Marg; I think these can also be made with whole-wheat flour. Anyone know for sure?

 
Well, I actually used the filling for the lentil samosas/sambussas

that was why I suggested the soup idea. I loved the filling, and the pastry was just the messenger. I thought perhaps the filling of the potato would adapt to a soup also. I was so addicted to her lentil ones, that it was my regular Sunday night dinner on the way home from the market.

 
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