Feeling hot?
Chill yourself with this “Cool Drink”….piping hot Moong Dal Rasam! Ideal Soup
for summer. Hailed as the healthiest among dals, these small, split, flat,
yellow coloured beans used in the rasam are quick to cook, easy to digest, low
in calories, high in fibre, rich in nutrients, packed with protein and helps
shed weight. This “Friend for All” cooked moong dal makes a healthy friend with
people very young and old, as also the sick and ailing.
Dish Type: South
Indian Vegetarian Stew/Soup
Preparation Time: 5 min
Cooking time: 30 min
Serves: 5
persons
Ingredients
For pressure cooking:
Moong dal 75 gms
Water 500 ml
Turmeric
powder A pinch
Ghee A drop
Tomato 1 no.
For grinding:
Cumin seeds ½ tsp
Ginger (grated) ½” piece
Green chilly 1 no. (small size)
Curry leaves 1 sprig
Coriander
leaves 1 tsp
Coriander
sticks 2 or 3 nos. (if they are tender)
While boiling
Water 500 ml
Salt to
taste 1 tbsp (approx.)
Ground
chutney (quantity generated while grinding)
For seasoning:
Ghee 1
tsp
Cumin seeds ¼
tsp
Pepper corns ¼ tsp
Green chilly 1 no. small size and slit
For flavour and garnishing
Lime juice (extracted from 1 lime) and coriander
leaves
Directions
Wash moong dal
with water, drain and keep aside.
Wash tomato,
ginger, curry leaves and coriander leaves in salt water. Drain and keep aside.
Cook dal in
a pressure cooker in low flame along with water, turmeric powder and a dash of
ghee. When the dal is half cooked, add chopped tomato pieces and continue
cooking the dal. Switch off the burner after 2 whistles. Let the pressure in
the cooker subside.
While dal is getting cooked….you
can do grinding.
For this, chop
ginger after peeling its skin. Grind all ingredients listed under “For grinding” using a few spoonfuls of
water.
Add this
ground chutney, water and salt to the cooked dal and boil it for 5 to 10 min. on
low flame. Watch the gentle green coloured rasam glowing while boiling with the
jeera-ginger-pepper combine for 5 to 10 min. Towards the end add lime juice and
switch off the burner. The awesome aroma from this nutritious rasam rings a
bell… it’s time for seasoning.
Heat ghee in
a small skillet. Put cumin seeds. When they crackle put pepper corns and slit green
chilly. Switch off the flame. Immediately pour it on to the boiling rasam.
Garnish it
with thoroughly washed and chopped fresh coriander leaves.
Moong Dal Rasam
is now ready.
Serve hot
with steamed rice, idli or use it as Bonda Soup, a popular combo of South
India.
Tete - a - Tete:
Quantity of water, salt and spices
can be altered to suit the consistency and taste that you desire.
Moong Dal Rasam is also known as
Hesaru Bele Saaru or Pesaru Pappu Charu
Moong dal is used for preparing a
variety of dishes like rasam, dal, pongal (khichdi), curry, vada, payasam (kheer),
besan laadu, halwa, kosambari (salad), soups, spicy parathas and even in many
rice preparations.
While purchasing moong dal, make sure
it is yellow in colour and free of moisture or insects. This can be known by
checking for lumps, if any.
Moong dal can be stored at room
temperature in air tight container for a few months.
Recipe Contributor: Smt. Saraswathi
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