Shoba's Indian Cooking Class
Last Saturday, four friends and I made the trek out to Glenview (quite possibly the only time I've ventured into the suburbs without getting lost, also the only time that I've let my boyfriend do the driving. Any relation between the two is purely coincidental) for our first foray into Indian cooking.
I'm an avid home cook, but for various reasons Indian cooking has always seemed mysteriously complex and more work than it was worth, especially with Devon a mere 5 minute drive from home. When I've tried to find recipes for the dishes I enjoy online, I inevitably come up with 30 versions, sometimes with wildly differing ingredients. Having no idea which one to begin with, I give up. Clearly, Indian cuisine is not only highly regional, it's local and personal as well: recipes vary from region to region, family to family, person to person. The dishes can be manipulated in many different ways - if you're very familiar with what you're working with. Shoba's class, while not challenging from a technique perspective, went a long way towards de-mystifying basic Indian cooking in an American kitchen.
In the weeks before the cooking class, Shoba and I arranged a menu (I'd chosen dishes from the other classes she offers that sounded particularly good). It included:
Chicken Tandoori: Chicken leg quarters marinated in spices and yogurt and baked in oven.
Chicken Makhani: Boneless chicken pieces cooked with spices in a thick yogurt and sour cream sauce.
Dum Aloo(Spicy potatoes): Baby potatoes boiled and fried and cooked in creamy spicy sauce.
Bagaara Baingan: Baby eggplant cooked whole with spicy ground masala into a thick curry.
Jeera Rice: Basmati rice cooked with mixed vegetables and cumin
Jalebis: Petite pretzel shaped loops fried to a golden crisp and soaked in syrup.
When we arrived at Shoba's home, the large (and immaculate) kitchen was already laid out with much of the prep work done. Spices were measured neatly, chicken was chopped, onions minced, etc. We were served a freshly-made savory lassi, and she had several Indian snacks out, including fish cakes and a ground lamb wrap. We eagerly devoured them.
Over the next several hours, we prepared the dishes, simmering the "butter" chicken (we actually used yogurt & sour cream), frying the potatoes, learning about the spices. Overall the lesson learned was: it's not that hard. If you can mince onions and boil potatoes and measure spices, you can make Indian food. The recipes Shoba used are not complicated, they don't have 30 different ingredients that you'll have to go out and buy just to use them once or twice. In fact, they're so easy that I left thinking about how easy it would be to prepare them as quick weeknight fixes.
After all of the dishes were done, we all sat down to a formal lunch in the dining room. Shoba had pre-prepared the tandoori chicken since it requires marinating overnight, but otherwise these were the dishes that we'd just prepared. Everything was delicious & fresh - and relatively healthy, as we skipped ghee in favor of sour cream and yogurt in most dishes.
Three hours after we arrived, we packed up leftovers in the tupperware we'd been instructed to bring - more than enough to last the five of us a couple days. As my friend Mark said, it was worth every penny ($45).
So am I now completely confident in my Indian cooking skills? Well, not entirely. I tried again last night to look up a recipe for Malai Kofta and was daunted by the variations out there. But while I may not stray from the recipes we used in this class, I'm eager to take another one and expand my (small) Indian repertoire.
Shoba's Indian Cooking Class
2110 Warwick Lane, Glenview
Prices range from $40-50 (I think)
847-657-9226
shoba_havalad@yahoo.com