(serves 2)Rice – 1 cup
Bittergourd – 8, about 6 inches long
Turmeric powder – 1 tsp, divided
Tamarind paste – 1 tbsp, divided
Mustard seeds – 1 tsp
Curry leaves – a few
Jaggery – 1 to 2 tsp
Salt
OilSpice Mixture Urad dal – 1 tbsp
Bengal gram – 1 tbsp
Coriander seeds – 1 tbsp
Dried red chillies – 6 to 8
Cardamom – 1
Clove – 1
Cinnamon – ½ inch pieceMethodCook rice with 3 cups of water and ¼ tsp of turmeric powder. Adding turmeric powder gives a golden hue to the finished recipe, which may otherwise be a dull brown. The rice grains should be separate after cooking. Fluff and cool. Cut the bittergourd into half moon rings. If the seeds are very tough and mature, scrape and discard. Otherwise retain the seeds; they add a mild crunch to the rice. In a wide, deep skillet, roast the ingredients for the spice mixture in a tsp of oil. Cool and grind to a fine powder. In the same skillet, boil bittergourd in 2 cups of water along with salt, turmeric powder and ½ tbsp of tamarind paste. When the gourd has turned soft (but not mushy), drain and discard the liquid. Return the skillet back to heat. In a tbsp of oil, splutter mustard seeds and roast curry leaves. Add the cooked bittergourd, along with ½ tsp of turmeric powder, jaggery and rest of the tamarind paste. On a medium fire, gently roast the gourd. When they start to caramelize, add the spice powder, rice and salt. Mix thoroughly and heat through. If the rice seem very dry, drizzle a tsp of oil. Check for seasoning and serve hot with raita and chips.
Pavakkai sadam with cucumber+tomato+cilantro raita
wow.. bittergourd rice. Sounds interesting. I will try this soon.
ReplyDeleteLooks exotic. Amma makes a milder version of this sans the spices. The way the bittergourd pieces get cooked in simply pan roasting they turn to be an absolute delight in the mildly tangy rice. I have it in my blog. This looks like a bolder sister of the same which I would love to try. The pics with contrasting colors are catchy enough to inspire :)
ReplyDeleteThis is one vegetable i hate but your rice is making me drool.
ReplyDeleteDont know any recipes other than pitlai and fries,thaks for this awesome recipe!
ReplyDeleteHey what a coincidence..I too posted a bitter gourd recipe today..Do chk my blog when u get time...
ReplyDeleteThats a lovely idea of converting into rice.
One recipe definitely bookmarked to try, you betcha. Gorgeous as usual photos, Suganya! :)
ReplyDeleteLooks superb!! awesome pics!!
ReplyDeleteHave bookmarked!!
you are making me say yummm for pavakkai Sug! Only after I came here did I start eating pavakkai, never went anywhere close to it as a kid. I enjoy it as chips now, since its hardly bitter then, and anything crispy is gooood :) This might be the next step for me (and a giant leap for my tastebuds...? :D blame NPR)
ReplyDeleteI have never ever heard of bitter gourd rice! I love bittergourd (tho only one in the family) .. should make this treat for myself.
ReplyDeletethe pics as always are beautiful... i love bittergourd.. i can eat any preparation of it. i must try this one.
ReplyDeletevery interesting! i will give this a try!
ReplyDeletehi,
ReplyDeleteThe spiced karela rice seems very interesting, I've never had bittergourd this way ever :) The recipe has the itching to try out effect ;)so shall try this one the next time I pick up karelas :)
The click is brilliant!
Keep rocking!
Thanks
I don't know bitter gourd at all....herb or veg???The rice looks fragrant and delicious!!!!
ReplyDeleteLooks good. Although I eat bittergourd, I am not a big fan of it. But this bittergourd recipe might taste better with rice then as it is.
ReplyDeleteI made the masala pavakkai curry that Amma makes and mixed it with the left over rice. It was for my quick fix lunch I made for myself.
ReplyDeleteShould try it for my family next time.
This is a new n interesting dish. Am gonna try it soon.
ReplyDeleteThis is unique! I usually make chips with pavakkai - soak it in butter milk, then toss it with rice flour, turmeric and chili powder and either bake or fry the chips. This is such a great way to change up the routine bittergourd recipes!
ReplyDeleteI dont know if it will be too many flavors added , but i'd like to give it a try with kalonji and saunf with the cinnamon . Its my favorite veggie !
ReplyDeleteNever tried this combo...looks yummylicious.....
ReplyDeleteI have never made bittergourd rice. This one is must to try in my list, now. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteNow this is cool...very interesting indeed...wonderful recipe...a sure try for me
ReplyDeleteLooks gorgeous but I somehow cant tolerate bitter gourd, have tried many times, its just too bitter for me :(
ReplyDeleteWho knew ! Defanitely makes me want to try it. Photos are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteI love pavakkai (and I'm the only one here) but never heard of pavakkai saadam before. Shall make this on those days when I have to cook only for myself. :)
ReplyDeleteI am not familiar with much recipe using bittergourd. This rice looks delicious, will try and surprise my FIL.
ReplyDeleteI have bought my first bitter gourd from local Indian restaurant here in Brookfield, WI and am ready to try this interesting recipe this weekend. But I do not know which kind of rice to use...would brown basmati be good? Or white basmati or jasmine or.....??? I dabble in wonderful Indian recipes but my husband is not a fan, so I too cook Indian for myself! What fun I have with this..I come from a Polish/Lithuanian family background. Thank you for your easy to follow recipes and GREAT pics!
ReplyDeleteHey Suganya,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the good idea.. I tried at home and it came out good. Got a welcome from my hubby too for this dish. But it was a little too much heat coming from the red chillies which my stomach couldn't bear. For people who are not that ardent fan of hot and spicy food, my suggestion would be to put 4-5 chillies. This dish worth trying.
Wouldn't have dreamed of making bitter gourd rice-- sounds just wonderful, though. Desi loves bitter gourd so gotta try this the next time.
ReplyDeleteVeggie Belly, soaking gourd in buttermilk sounds great. I will try that :).
ReplyDeleteJoan, I have used Basmati rice here. But you can use any long grain rice.
Jayashree Arun, Thanks for trying the recipe. I am sorry it was spicy for you. I guess its the red chillies. The ones I use are milder.
wow ur pavakkai sadam is vey interesting and sounds tasty. I have made lot of other dishes with pavakkai but not rice. I am going to makeit. You can visit my bog and view my recipes and give ur comments
ReplyDeleteI am not sure if I am too late here.. but I am absolutely happy that I am here finally. :) You have a mind blowing blog and I have totally fallen for it. :) Absolutely phenomenal photography. Super cool presentation. you really rock. keep it going. I would be here very often in fact. :)
ReplyDeleteDo take a peep into my blogs sometime.
I love the way you make food come alive in your pictures! Pavakkai in rice is totally new. A must try!
ReplyDeleteI love pavakkai in any form, the more bitter the better - this looks like such a nice fuss free recipe
ReplyDeleteThanks for that..I have seen those in the supermarket but didn't really know what to do with them.
ReplyDeleteThis is my first time in your blog, you have a really really lovely blog.., with so many beautiful recipes, never made a pavakka rice, thanks for the idea, lovely clicks too..,
ReplyDelete