![]() ![]() This spicy mint chutney has a nice sour taste that comes from the tamarind, goes very well with sambar, Millet Bisi bele bath, lemon rice, idli or dosa. And please share your photos with me on Instagram, tag and #thecuriouschickpea.I learnt this mint chutney recipe from my Mom. If you make this homemade tamarind chutney, leave a comment below and rate the recipe on the recipe card. If you love pani puri, then thin out the chutney so it’s very watery to make tamarind water which gets poured into each little puri right before you bite in. Just stir some chutney into the food you’re eating, or dip roti wrapped bites into a puddle of chutney on your plate. I love love love it with any chana (chickpea) recipe, and it’s so good over potatoes. ![]() I also enjoy dolloping chutney onto my plate of any Indian meal. But tamarind chutney is also a must with aloo tikki and other Indian snack foods and small bites!Ĭheck out my cocktail chana samosa recipe and kale pakora recipe if you want to make them yourself! My favorite two foods to enjoy with tamarind chutney are samosas and pakoras. There are a lot of ways to enjoy chutney, but they’re most commonly served alongside snack foods. Because of this it’s important to taste and adjust seasonings and sugar when you make your chutney! How to use tamarind chutney? And like any fruit, sometimes it will be more tart and other times more sweet. No matter what form of tamarind you buy, the potency and strength of flavor varies a lot. Leaving behind some concentration of thick tamarind juice. However, you can also buy tamarind concentrate, and this already has the seeds and fibrous parts of the pulp removed. I recommend buying raw tamarind in one of the above mentioned forms, as you’ll get the most bang for your buck and there’s nothing like fresh homemade tamarind concentrate. ![]() You can purchase it this way with or without the seeds.īuying raw tamarind pulp makes your life easier than buying the pods, and it’s also easier to find most of the time thanks to the packaging.Īs one of the goals while making tamarind chutney is to remove the seeds, you’ve save a little bit of your own effort by getting the kind with seeds removed. You can also buy raw tamarind with the shell removed, and the sticky and fibrous pulp is sold packaged in bricks. If you buy the pods you need to remove the shell before using. The pods you can buy at the store have been aged, and you can tell because the fresh green pods turn brown as they age. Tamarind can be purchased in pods, in pulp form with the pods removed, or in concentrate. When we think of tamarind, usually we are thinking of some form of this sweet and tart pulpy fruit. However, the seeds inside the pods are covered by a sweet, sticky, tangy, tart fibrous fruit. The pods look a lot like bean pods and are indeed part of the legume family. Tamarind is a fruit that comes in seed pod from the tamarind tree. I just love the flavor of tamarind and don’t want it to compete with dates! What is tamarind? Personally I’ve always preferred the non-date sweetened tamarind chutneys, so that’s the version I make at home. ![]() Then there is tamarind-date chutney which is, you guessed it, sweetened with dates and often sugar. First, there’s “plain” tamarind chutney which sweetened with sugar or jaggery (an Indian unrefined sugar). There are two popular varieties of tamarind chutney. We would usually buy tamarind chutney, and those pre-made jars of chutney are what I was raised on. And it would always find its way onto my plate alongside subzis and dals. I loved the sweet and tart flavor combo and found it the perfect tangy complement to spicy samosas and other chaats. Growing up, tamarind chutney was my favorite of the chutneys. Homemade tamarind chutney tastes so much better than any store bought jarred version! It’s quite easy and inexpensive to make, and you can make a lot! Luckily it stores for a couple of months in the fridge or can be frozen for even longer storage. ![]()
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