I love making Mujadara. So a 2 am decision for me was to make this dish with whatever I had on hand.
I got the book
What to Eat When You Can't Eat Anything by Chupi and Luke Sweetnam a long time ago. Nine years ago to be exact. However, I never really tried any of the recipes. I do this a lot with various recipe books. I love to read them like novels.
When it comes to looking for a recipe, I don't look in the cookbooks I have, I look online. So, this is a two part effort on my part to (1) catalog all the recipes I've tried in my collection and (2) document my experimentation that I have with them. As the book is copyrighted, I am only going to link to the book and write down the things I did that I substituted and the results.
I doubled the recipe because I was making it in the rice cooker and had a lb of lentils. This as you will see, was a mistake....
Step 1: Prepare the Ingredients
Kitchiri: (Page 108)
So, this recipe I had most of it- the tumeric, cumin, cardamom, fennel seed (I know right, who has that?!), salt, pepper, and bay leaves.
I didn't have black mustard or coriander. I looked online and it said that you could substitute coriander with more cumin and the black mustard with more tumeric. So I did.
I placed everything in a container.
I also chopped one large onion and stored it in the fridge.
I had 1 lb of lentils so I used 3 cups of brown rice. I rinsed both and let drip dry over night.
Chapati: (Page 160)
For this, the recipe is so simple, I decided to use up my ground oats for half of the flour.
I mixed it together, divided it and placed it in the fridge for later.
Step 2: Cooking
Kitchiri:
I added all the ingredients to my rice cooker with enough water to cover it about an inch. And set it to the "whole grain" setting of my rice cooker. I use a
Hamilton Beach rice cooker.
It looked a little dry to me when I checked on it nearing the end of cooking so I added more liquid.
Chapati:
I rolled this out between some plastic wrap (as suggested in the recipe). This allowed me to get it pretty thin. It turned out to be a pretty good little bread. On it's own it is lacking some seasoning. The fact that the main dish it is accompanying is fairly spiced, that's a good thing.
I found that it cooked better the thinner I made it and also let it cook on low in the pan.
Step 3: Results
I tried eating the Kitchiri and it was pretty bitter and very dry. I couldn't figure it out what went wrong since this was pretty successful cooking method for Mujadara. So I posted it on a local recipe group I'm in and got many suggestions. I also looked up some YouTube videos on how to make it to see where I had gone wrong. (Besides not actually following the recipe.) Here is what I identified:
- It needs more moisture. This dish is more of a soup/porridge. The consistency was too dry meaning there was not enough liquid. Based on the cooking method, doubling this was a mistake since there was no possible way to put more liquid in the rice cooker.
- It is missing important ingredients. The spices I lacked actually were some of the most important spices to complete the dish.
I separated the amount of food into about 12 portions. The original recipe says that one recipe makes 4 servings.
Suggestions I received to fix the dish: (highlighted ones I used or combined with other suggestions)
- Add more salt
- Add ghee/butter/oil
- Add more tomatoes/tomato sauce
- Add lime juice (or other acid) and some salt
- Add some hot peppers (thai chili peppers were suggested)
- Add a little sugar
- Add dry mustard/mustard
- Add add yogurt/garlic yogurt sauce (greek yogurt + garlic + salt and pepper)
- Make fried rice out of it (adding additional vegetables to it)
- Add coriander (or sub for celery salt)
- Fry some onions, tomato and add chicken bouillon or chicken broth
Experiment 1:
- I took one serving and added:
- Tomato soup (one can and one can of water) (for moisture and balance flavoring)
- A dash of yellow mustard (to attempt to make it more like the original recipe)
- A little white vinegar (to help balance the flavors)
- I cooked this for a while until the grains opened and the liquid reduced. This tasted phenomenal!
Experiment 2:
- I added:
- Water and Chicken broth (I let it cook down twice) (for moisture and added flavor)
- A dash of yellow mustard
- A few dashes of coriander (I bought some)
- A dash of cayenne
- A splash of lemon juice
- Salt and Pepper
- Dried Parsley
- Butter
- I cooked this for a while until the grains opened and the water reduced. This tasted much more traditional and I really enjoyed it. With this one, I made the garlic yogurt sauce and used it to dip the Chapati in while enjoying this one. (Sorry, no photos of the Chapati.)
Experiment 3:
- I added:
- Water and Chicken broth
- A dash of yellow mustard
- A few dashes of coriander
- A splash of vinegar
- Salt and Pepper
- Butter
- An 8 oz can of green chilies (New Mexican Hatch chilies)
- I cooked this until the grains opened and liquid reduced. This was good, but not as good as experiment 2. Somehow I think the green chilies threw off the spices.
I plan to try and use it as a fried rice concoction and also I know of a recipe where they use tomato sauce to poach eggs in, so I thought that would also be a cool experiment. If I end up trying either of these, I will update this post.
YouTube Video References:
Secondary recipe Reference: (I looked at a few of them, but this was one I could remember reading)
Note: I do not make any money of any of the links in this post. I don't know how to do that yet.