Kerala Cuisines

The unusualcuisine of Kerala brings to the fore the culinary expertise of
the people of Kerala. Producing some of the tastiest foods on earth, the
people of Kerala are gourmets with a difference.
The cuisine isvery hot and spicy and offers several gastronomic opportunities.
The food is generally fresh, aromatic and flavoured. Keralites are mostly
fish-and-rice eating people.
The land andthe food are rich with coconut, though one
can't imagine Kerala
food without chilies, curry leaf, mustard seed, tamarind and asafoetida.
Just a pinchful oftamarind can substitute tomatoes, but there is no real
substitute for curry leaf. Since time immemorial, coconut has been an integral
part of the cuisine of Kerala.
These people put togood use whatever the land offers and the result is a
marvellous cuisine that is simple yet palate tickling. They relish equally
a dish as simple as 'kanji' (rice gruel) or as extravagant as the 'sadya'
(feast).
Sadya
Sadya is the elaboratedish, which is a totally extravagant affair. Avial,
an all time favourite, is a happy blend of vegetables, coconut paste and
green chillies. Avial's seasoning is a spoonful of fresh coconut oil and
a sprinkling of raw curry leaves, stirred in immediately after the dish
is taken off the stove.

'Kottucurry' is madeout of cubed potatoes, onions and green chillies cooked
in coconut milk with plenty of red chilli. 'Olan', a bland dish of pumpkin
and red grams is prepared by cooking it in thin gravy of coconut milk.
Desserts
The rich and irresistibledesserts form an essential part
of the meals. These
are served midway through the meals.
Payasam is a thick fluid dishof brown molasses, coconut milk and spices,
garnished with cashewnuts and raisins. There could be a succession of payasams,
such as the lentil payasam and the jackfruit payasam, Bengal gram payasam
and so on, though 'Adapradhaman', a rich payasam with thin rice wafers,
is arguably the ultimate delicacy.
'Palppayasam', made withsugar, ghee and spices, brewed in creamy white milk
is regarded as the last word in sweet dishes. This is served with a golden
yellow sweet pancake known as 'boli'.
The Tangy Rasam
The hot Rasam, served aftera delectable array of sweets, is a tangy deviation
from the symphony of tastes and is poured on another serving of rice. The
famous British 'Mulligatawny Soup' is said to have derived its flavour from
Rasam.
Rasam is a mixture of chillyand pepper corns powders boiled in diluted tamarind
juice. The pulissery is seasoned buttermilk with turmeric powder and green
chillies. 'Moru' or plain sour buttermilk comes salted and with chopped
green chillies and ginger.
Appam
Appam is the soft pancakemade from toddy fermented rice batter, with a soft
spongy middle, which is laced with crispy edges. It is generally consumed
with either vegetable or chicken or mutton stew, thoroughly mellowed with
thick coconut milk and garnished with curry leaves.
Puttu
A type of steam cake, 'Puttu' is madefrom rice flour and steamed in long
hollow bamboo or metal cylinders. Depending on the taste preference, Puttu
can be had with steamed bananas and sugar or with a spicy curry made from
gram or chickpeas.
Tapioca And Fish Curry
A sumptuous, mouthwateringdelicacy, it's a not- to- be-missed combination
of 'Kappa' and 'Meen curry'. With natural flavours erupting out of it liberally,
the fish curry is made with garlic paste, onions and red chillies and seasoned
with mustard seeds and curry leaves.
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