Wednesday, July 06, 2016

Chingrir Bora -- Shrimp Fritters




It was a hot, hot day today. Temperature soared to the 90s. There was not a speck of rain anywhere.

It was also the day of Ratha Yatra. The day in the month of Ashada, when the monsoons have arrived in the plains of Odissa and Bengal, and the day on which the deities of Lord Jagannatha, Balaram and Subhadra are taken to their aunt's house in a regal chariot.

My girls don't know much about Ratha Yatra. I must have told them sometime but they don't remember. I don't try either. It doesn't make sense any more.

I would rather they take to heart from Tagore's poem which was as apt in the times that he wrote it as it is now.

"Ratha Yatra Lokaranyo Maha Dumdham (The Ratha Yatra prgresses amidst throngs of people with much jubilation)
Bhaktera Lutaye Pothe Korichhe Pronam (The devotees bow down and pay their respect)

Poth bhabe ami dev ( As people bow down on the street while the Ratha is pulled, the road thinks he is the Supreme God) ,
Rath bhabe ami ,( The chariot pulled on Ratha Yatra thinks he is the Supreme God)
Murti bhabe ami dev ( The wooden idol on the chariot preens and thinks he is the Supreme God),
Haansen Ontorjami ( The Supreme Power merely smiles at this ignorance)"
-- Rabindranath Tagore


There was one aspect of Rath that I don't want to miss though. Papor Bhaja and Telebhaja, fried in the hot oil, celebrating Nature and the rains.

Though there was no rain and it was really too hot for frying, I did make some chingrir bora today. Ideally this bora or fritters is made with the very very tiny shrimp called "ghusho chingri". You can mash those with hand or make a paste on the shil-nora. I would never get that so settled for the medium sized shrimp which I chopped and then put in the mixie to make a paste.




Soak 1/2 cup of red Masoor Dal in water for half an hour.

Wash and clean 10-12 medium sized shrimp. If you have the smaller ones use a few more. In my case , I only had to defrost the shrimp.

Chop the shrimp in small pieces.

In the blender add
the soaked lentils
the chopped shrimp
3-4 green chili
sprinkle of water
and make a smooth paste.

Add salt to taste to this paste.

Add
2-3 tbsp of chopped onion
2 green chillies finely chopped
Chopped dhonepata/coriander leaves
1/2 tsp of Nigella seeds

Beat the lentil paste with a fork till everything is well mixed up.





Heat Mustard oil in a Kadhai or Frying Pan

Once the oil is hot, take a tsp of oil from the kadhai and add it to the batter. Give it a good mix.

Once the oil is ready which you will know by putting in a small drop of the batter and seeing it bubble and rise to top, add small scoops of batter in the hot oil. Keep the heat at high and in a minute you will see the batter turning solid. Gently flip and let the other side cook. Reduce the heat to a medium-high(between med and high). In another minute turn it around again. The outside will be a golden brown by now. It will take approx. 3 minutes in all once the oil is well heated.

Remove the "chingri bora" with a slotted spoon and drain on a paper towel.

Serve as a snack with tea or have it with rice and dal.

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13 comments:

  1. Good one enjoyed reading though the lines from Tagore's Bhaktibhajon are not correct.Also probably you meant Lord Krishna ,Shubhadra and Balaram? :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ohh, I wrote Jagganath right :-(? Correct korchi.
      The couplet I wrote, what I remembered. Can you post the correct lines please? Thanks You.

      Delete
    2. "রথযাত্রা, লোকারণ্য, মহা ধুমধাম,
      ভক্তেরা লুটায়ে পথে করিছে প্রণাম।
      পথ ভাবে আমি দেব রথ ভাবে আমি,
      মূর্তি ভাবে আমি দেব—হাসে অন্তর্যামী। "

      Delete
    3. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  2. It is Lord Jagganath, another form of Lord Krishna. And the lines also seem quite correct! Good post Bongmom! I never had chingrir bora with masoor dal.

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  3. This looks yummy and I like the angle of Papad bhaja and these bada (s) . These also look like maccher dimer bora

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  4. I love the poem. Just brought back some good memories from my childhood. I have tasted Chingri Bora once way back prepared by a family friend. I will try to make it soon for my family. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  5. banabo...eibhabe khaini kakhono

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  6. Hello Bong Mom! There's something about Bengali cuisine that makes it so alluring! I'm definitely going to make this one.

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  7. looks delicious, a perfect weekend snack with some chilled beer to wipe off the month end pressure, last time I tried the chicken chaap the way you have said and it was awesome.
    As I love my own customization I will spice it up with coriander powder and some garam masala, I prefer Shalimar Chef Spices over the rest. Will definitely keep you posted about the end result.

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  8. Beautiful Sandipa di :) the Couplets from Tagore are only too apt :D

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  9. Can you pls. post egg tarka dhaba style ?

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  10. I tried this at home and really liked it a lot. Thanks for sharing the recipe.

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Thanks for your Comments. I hope you will be nice and not Spam.