Orange Peel is popularly used in many cuisines, and South Indian cuisine is no exception. We make a sweet, tangy and slightly bitter sauce with it (also called as pachidi), and use the dried peel powder in flavorings. My mom recently experimented by making a Kuzhambu (a tangy and spicy gravy) with orange peel and she said the dish tasted really good and unique.
So, upon her successful experiment, I took down her recipe and tried it. True to her word, it truly is unique tasting, for who has tried orange flavored kuzhambu? It is incredibly flavorful if you are a fan of oranges. Both my husband and I loved the kuzhambu. I must say, there was no hint of bitterness despite me not removing the white pith from the orange peel. I think stewing it in tamarind (and some jaggery/brown sugar) eliminated the bitterness. It was spicy and orangey with a trace of lingering sweetness! Highly recommended.
The recipe is very similar to a standard Vatha Kuzhambu, with just a few tweaks and additions.
Ingredients (serves 4):
So, upon her successful experiment, I took down her recipe and tried it. True to her word, it truly is unique tasting, for who has tried orange flavored kuzhambu? It is incredibly flavorful if you are a fan of oranges. Both my husband and I loved the kuzhambu. I must say, there was no hint of bitterness despite me not removing the white pith from the orange peel. I think stewing it in tamarind (and some jaggery/brown sugar) eliminated the bitterness. It was spicy and orangey with a trace of lingering sweetness! Highly recommended.
The recipe is very similar to a standard Vatha Kuzhambu, with just a few tweaks and additions.
Ingredients (serves 4):
- About 2 inch ball of tamarind (depending on how tart the tamarind is; 2" is usually sufficient).
- the peel of 1 orange - cut into pieces (comes to 3/4 cup)
- 1 tablespoon olive oil / vegetable oil
- 1 teaspoon black mustard seeds
- 1 teaspoon bengal gram dhal / kadala paruppu / channa dhal
- 1/2 teaspoon fenugreek seeds
- 1 tablespoon ghee / clarified butter (optional)
- 2 teaspoons jaggery / brown sugar
- 1 dried red chilli (do not add if you want it mildly spiced)
- 2 - 2.5 teaspoons sambar powder
- 1 teaspoon turmeric powder
- few curry leaves
- 1 tablespoon rice flour/rice powder (sometimes besan is used instead of rice flour)
- 1/8 teaspoon hing / asafoetida
- 1 teaspoon salt (or as needed)
Preparation:
- Soak the tamarind in 2 cups of hot water for 20 minutes. Squeeze the juice out of the pulp and drain the tamarind extract. Repeat the process by adding 1 more cup of lukewarm water to the remaining pulp and extract more juice. Repeat a third time if you think the pulp can be juiced more. Discard the pulp.
- Heat oil in a medium-size saucepan. When hot, splutter mustard seeds, and then add fenugreek seeds, hing, gram dhal and curry leaves. Fry for a few seconds.
- Add the orange peel and saute on medium heat for 5 minutes.
- Add turmeric powder and sambar powder and fry the spices for a couple of minutes.
- Add the extracted tamarind juice, an additional 1 cup of water and salt, and let the whole thing boil on medium heat (uncovered) for 35-40 minutes until the mixture reduces in quantity and becomes concentrated. Add more water (if needed) and if you think it tastes too tart.
- Add jaggery/brown sugar (to balance the tartness)
- Mix rice flour in 1.5-2 tablespoons water and mix well. Whisk into the kuzhambu to thicken it. Reduce the heat, and simmer the kuzhambu on low heat for 5-10 minutes until it thickens. Add more rice-flour-paste to thicken the kuzhambu more (if needed).
- Remove from heat and mix a dollop of ghee (optional but recommended)
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