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Julie Sahni’s Matar Paneer Recipe Is An Enduring Classic

julie-sahni’s-matar-paneer-recipe-is-an-enduring-classic

Published in 1980, Julie Sahni’s Classic Indian Cooking was responsible for introducing many Americans to Indian cooking. At over 500 pages, it’s a testament to Sahni’s thoroughness, care, and tenacity: She famously tested its recipes for seven years before allowing the book to be published.

Over four decades later, Sahni’s legendary work is still inspiring home cooks and chefs alike, and for good reason: along with its prodigious collection of recipes, the book is stuffed full of facts about Indian cooking and history, and prefaced by an exhaustive guide to spices, kitchen techniques, and tools.

Staff writer Jaya Saxena is one of the book’s many fans; it was Sahni’s matar paneer that made her confident about cooking Indian food. She shares her love of the recipe with senior editor Jesse Sparks as part of his new The One Recipe podcast for The Splendid Table.

You can listen to Jaya’s interview on The One Recipe wherever you listen to podcasts, and you can make the matar paneer yourself. A richly satisfying vehicle for tomatoes and green peas, it’s the stuff that both dinner and podcasts are made of.

Green Peas and Indian Cheese in Fragrant Tomato Sauce Recipe

Serves 6

Ingredients:

1 cup Indian cheese (paneer) made with 8 cups milk and cut into ½ by ½ by ½-inch pieces (you can also use store-bought)
12 tablespoons usli ghee, or Indian vegetable shortening, or light vegetable oil
2 cups finely chopped onions
1 teaspoon finely chopped garlic
2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh ginger root
2 teaspoons ground coriander
1 teaspoon turmeric
¼-½ teaspoon each red and black pepper
1 teaspoon paprika
2 cups finely chopped or pureed fresh ripe tomatoes, or 1½ cups canned tomatoes with their juice, chopped
1½ cups shelled fresh green peas, or 1 (10-ounce) package frozen peas, defrosted
2 teaspoons kosher salt
2 teaspoons garam masala
4 tablespoons finely chopped fresh coriander leaves (or substitute 2 tablespoons dry coriander leaves)

Instructions:

Step 1: Spread the paneer pieces on a piece of waxed paper and leave them to dry slightly for ½ hour.

Step 2: Heat 3 tablespoons of the ghee over medium heat in a large heavy-bottomed pan, preferably one with a non-stick interior. When the ghee is hot, add the cheese pieces. Keep a saucepan lid or spatter screen handy, since the moisture from the cheese may be released explosively, causing tiny particles of cheese to fly all over. Dusting the paneer pieces with a little flour prevents splattering. Fry the cheese, turning and tossing often to prevent sticking and burning, until lightly seared (about 5 minutes.) Transfer the pieces to a bowl. (The paneer should be fried in batches so that there is ample room in the pan for turning them without fear of their breaking.)

Step 3: Add the remaining ghee to the pan,

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Written by Nicole

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