female and male flowers of pumpkin |
I have never eaten pumpkin flowers earlier though I have heard that all parts of a pumpkin plant is edible, may be except the roots. So I started searching for a recipe for pumpkin flowers and came up with a lot of deep fried ones. The flower petals looked so delicate deep frying them sounded so brutal. So I went in for my own simple recipe.
I collected 16 flowers and they were quite a handful. I chopped them up and then the quantity looked even more. But it went inside the pan and started heating up and started shrinking and leaving water. By the time I managed to evaporate all the water and get it into the consistency I wanted, it was just a very small bowlful. Since it was only Shyam and I for lunch that day, we each had enough to taste the flowers properly.
When I started cooking I was expecting the taste of the rest of the ingredients to make up the taste of the dish. But I was pleasantly surprised to find a delicious flavour added by the pumpkin flower to the dish.
Pumpkin flower recipe
Coconut oil - 1tsp
Mustard seeds - 1/2 tsp
Curry leaf - 1 sprig
Red Chilly - 4 to 5
Onion - 1 medium sized
Ginger - 1/2 inch piece, made to paste or finely chopped
Turmeric powder - 1/4 tsp
Chilly powder - 1 tsp
Coriander powder - 1tsp
Pumpkin flower - 16* (only petals, cut into to 1cm wide strips)
Salt - 1/2 tsp or to taste
Grated coconut - 1tbsp (optional)
Heat the coconut oil and add the mustard seeds. Once it finish spluttering, add the curry leaf and then the red chillies. Fry till the red chillies are starting to brown, add ginger. Add the onion, fry till the they turn translucent. Add all the powders and fry for a minute. Add the pumpkin flowers, it will turn very watery once the flowers start cooking. Stir to mix and leave it in low flame for the water to evaporate, stirring occasionally. Once it reaches the required dryness add the salt. This is important since the volume reduces tremendously, if you add the salt earlier it could turn to be more than needed. Sprinkle the grated coconut over and serve hot with steaming hot rice. I sprinkled the coconut only for my photography session, but that gave a nice crunch to the dish.
*The female flowers are bigger than the male flowers. I had 14 male and 2 female flowers. If you have many female flowers you count extra 2 female flower for 3 male flowers.
No pumpkin flowers? What the heck, call me up and come over on a weekend. If the pumpkin flowers are still there, I will make it for you :)
No pumpkin flowers? What the heck, call me up and come over on a weekend. If the pumpkin flowers are still there, I will make it for you :)
Wow ....yummy.
ReplyDeleteIn the ingredients chart, the counts very for female & male flowers....that's interesting!!!!
ReplyDeleteFrom: www.sriramnivas.com
Amit,Seema, Thanks :)
ReplyDeleteSriram, the size difference in significant :)
seems delicious and would love to try it!
ReplyDeleteExcellent recipe. very healthy.
ReplyDeleteu r in invited to participate in my blog's first ongoing event.do read the terms and participate for sure.
http://dashamiscollection.blogspot.com/2011/12/announcing-1st-event-on-my-blog.html
"I caught sight of those flowers and said 'let's eat them'." -> ROFL.. :)
ReplyDeleteI sense it wouls taste exotic with a little helping of steamed cooked and shallow fried banana stem.
ReplyDeleteThanks Deepak, you should try it sometime.
ReplyDeleteShweta, I will send in my entry.
Vinay, LOL.
Sree, I have never eaten banana stem. Are you talking about the banana core (pindi)? I will try it, I have a lot of banana plants around.
what a wonderful post. so much good information packed into 3 paragraphs!
ReplyDeleteThanks Gayatri :)
ReplyDeleteNever thought that the humble pumpkin flowers would have made an exotic dish.
ReplyDeleteMalini, That is the right word, Exotic :)
ReplyDelete