A couple of days ago when I set out to make lunch I was wondering what to prepare. It had been a while since I had tried out a new meat recipe and to be honest I have become a little lazy to hunt for anything new and generally like to stick to my tried and tested collection of recipes. When it’s beef or mutton I only like to make ‘sukka’ out of them as it is fast and simple but then when I saw my collection of beef recipes I decided that it was about time I added a new recipe there. Here’s what I currently have on the blog under the ‘beef’ category (of course, the mutton recipe collection has some recipes that can be made with either mutton (goat meat or lamb) or beef)
Beef Chilli Fry *(Mangalorean)
Beef Sukka *(Mangalorean)
Beef or Mutton Devil *(Mangalorean)
Mangalorean Meatball Curry (With Coconut) *(Mangalorean)
Tongue Curry *(Goan/East India/Bombay Style)
Beef Fry *(Kerala Style)
Pepper Beef *(South Indian-Chinese Fusion Style)
Simple Meat Stew *(Mangalorean)
So I started to make a dish on my own. Added a bit of this and a bit of that and decided to make something with a hint of green, more like a green masala base. However, as I started to prepare the masala, more ideas popped into my head and I ended up making something totally out of the box. Some ingredients were fried before being ground and that added a whole dimension and depth of flavours to this dish. I can vouch for the fact that this dish can be made with mutton and chicken too and can be served with any carb you please – plain white rice, boiled rice, pulao, neer dosa, dosa, idli, sanna, chapathi, poori (yes!), cous cous (yes, yes!), kuboos (and why not?!), ragi muddhe (steamed finger millet balls) and maybe even corn tortillas! See! The possibilities are endless!
After the dish was made I hurriedly plated it and styled it. The Dubai summers have set in and it is getting harder by the day to shoot outdoors (in my balcony). Such a pity because the light is so beautiful during the summer but the heat is just too much. Anyway, I made mini dosas (using store bought dosa batter) to go along with this curry and the whole taste experience was marvellous. Lip smackin’ good I’d say. Sorry, I am praising my own tail, but it’s not every day that I hit the jackpot. The number of flops I have had when I’ve gone on a recipe creation rampage isn’t even funny. I really pity my family who has borne the brunt of it because I rarely feed a dish to the garbage bin you see 🙂 I have a whole compilation of pictures of dishes that failed miserably. Anyway, let’s not talk negative on this beautiful Thursday. A post is waiting to be posted and the weekend is waiting to be enjoyed. What are your plans for the weekend? Mine are to work with my son on his school project, watch a movie or two, buy and wrap a birthday gift, clean the house and prep up for another long and gruelling school week ahead. So before I bid you goodbye for the weekend, here’s my recipe for today. Hope you enjoy it. If you do try this recipe (or any other) click a picture and post it on your Instagram or Facebook and use the hashtag #ruchikrandhap so that I get notified. I’d love to see and hear how you enjoyed the dish!
Beef (or Mutton) Pepper Curry
A classic Mangalorean style meat dish that can be made with mutton or beef tastes wonderful with piping hot rice or chapathis
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Ingredients
- 1 kg beef or mutton on the bone, cut into medium sized pieces
- 2 medium-big onions, thinly sliced
- 1 tomato, sliced
- 1-2 medium sized potatoes, peeled and quartered (optional)
- salt to taste
- oil or ghee for shallow frying
- For the masala:
- 1-1/2 tablespoons coriander seeds
- 2 teaspoons black peppercorns
- 1/2 teaspoon turmeric powder
- 2-3 cloves
- 1/2 inch stick of cinnamon
- 1 inch piece fresh ginger
- 4 fat cloves of garlic, with skin
- 1-2 small green chillies, spicy variety, de-seed if you wish
- 2 medium sized onions, roughly chopped
To be fried and ground (optional step see notes):
- 2 tablespoons grated coconut
- 1 medium sized tomato, roughly chopped
- 1 teaspoon black gram dal (urad dal)
- 4-5 curry leaves
- a few drops of oil
Instructions
- Wash the meat and place it on a colander to drain and then transfer to a bowl.
- On a heavy based skillet, fry the urad dal, curry leaves and coconut till you get a nice aroma. Add the chopped tomatoes and fry for another minute or so. Remove onto a plate and let it cool.
- Grind the dry spices (coriander, peppercorns, turmeric, cinnamon, cloves) mentioned under 'For the masala' to a fine powder. Add the ginger, garlic, green chilli, onions and the fried coconut-tomato mixture and grind everything to a fine paste. Marinate the meat with this masala and salt to taste and keep aside for 10-15 minutes. Rinse the grinding jar with 1/2 cup of water and reserve it too.
- Heat oil or ghee in a pressure cooker and fry the sliced onions till golden brown. Add the marinated meat, sliced tomato and fry for about 1-2 minutes. Then add the reserved masala water and another 1 or 1-1/2 cups of water and mix everything well.
- Cover the pressure cooker, place the weight (whistle) and cook on full heat for 4-5 whistles. Then reduce the heat completely to sim and cook for another 8-10 minutes. Remove from heat and let the cooker cool down a bit till the whistle loosens up. Open and check if the meat is tender, if not, cook it further for another 1-2 whistles.
- If you wish to add potatoes you can add them now and cook the curry on a medium heat till the potatoes are tender. Adjust
- Garnish with fresh coriander and serve with dosa, plain paratha, idli, chapathi, sanna, rice or pulao.
Notes
1. If you are running short of time you may skip the roasting process (as mentioned under 'To be fried before being ground'), however doing this imparts a great flavour to the curry.
Disclaimer
The nutritional values are only indicative.
Tried this recipe?Please leave a comment & rate the recipe below or share a photo on Instagram and tag me @ruchikrandhap
Coral crue says
This makes for a very ineresting recipe, it looks like the ginger chicken curry I used to eat at Woodside hotel in Mangalore, that maybe a tad darker than this but I never found a recipe to that and, hence, so interested in trying this out. Looks lovely!
Connie D'Souza says
Hi Shireen,
Tried it out and was an instant hit with everyone at home. Thanks and keep them coming.
Celine says
Excellent recipe, instant hit with family and friends
Shireen Sequeira says
Thank you so much for the wonderful feedback! If possible, pls do rate the recipe (out of the 5 stars), thank you!
Dianna says
Hi Shireen tried out this recipe today with beef. Turned out excellent. Loved the flavours.
Shireen Sequeira says
Hi Dianna,
Thank you so much for your lovely feedback 🙂 So happy to hear that you enjoyed the beef curry!
Anita says
Pepper Curry Mutton!!! Loved it!
Thank you for the recipe Shireen♥️
Shireen Sequeira says
So glad to hear that Anita! You are most welcome!
Merril DSouza says
Thanks for the recipe, it turned out well
Shireen Sequeira says
Hi Merril,
So happy to hear that! Thanks for the feedback!
Teena Fernandes says
Tried this recipe today. Turned out good.
Shireen Sequeira says
Thank you so much for the feedback Teena!
Averyl says
Tried this recipe today and it came so well.so flavorful. Thank you for the recipe
Shireen Sequeira says
Thank you so much for the great feedback Averyl!
Belmeira says
Shireen how come your curry is red color? nothing red mentioned in the recipe please repy
Shireen Sequeira says
The masala has red tomatoes in it. Plus you need to cook the meat with tomatoes. Besides this, the meat changes colour too as you fry it
Belmeira says
Every body says tried? Red chillies not there? Shireen how come your curry is red color then? nothing red mentioned in the recipe please reply. Thanks
Shireen Sequeira says
The masala has red tomatoes in it. Plus you need to cook the meat with tomatoes. Besides this, the meat changes colour too as you fry it. Please give the recipe a try and I hope you can see that the curry turns out the same colour as mine