Sunday, July 22, 2012

Healthy hogging

Ramzan is here and with it comes the season of Iftaar parties and deep-fried goodies. But this year, Moeena Halim urges you to turn a blind eye to all things unhealthy. Here are four different Iftaar options that will be far nicer to your body

 

Come Ramzan and the streets are dotted with kebab stalls, people frying samosas, bhajiyas and so many more goodies. Deep fried and dripping with oil, these aren’t exactly healthy options for your Iftaar (the meal after sunset, with which Muslims break their fast).

“But not every Muslim eats unhealthy,” clarifies Dr Zubeda Tumbi, PhD Clinical Nutrition, who has been keeping rozas (the fasts during the month of Ramzan) for the past 23 years. Busting another myth, Tumbi says that Ramzan isn’t about limiting your daily meals to two. Most Muslims eat three meals even during Ramzan — sehri (the meal that is eaten before dawn), Iftaar and dinner.

“Sehri is the most important meal, it takes you through the day. Iftaar can be light, with dates and fruits and then dinner — a regular meal of dal chawal or the like,” explains Tumbi. The point of fasting during Ramzan is to learn to empathise with the poor, explains Tumbi. You’re supposed to live as modestly as possible during the month and have meagre meals. “The idea is also to teach oneself discipline, self-restraint, to cleanse your body and to learn to control your emotions,” she says.

‘Haleem is the healthiesT option’
“There’s nothing healthier than Haleem,” says Bilkees Latif, a Hyderabadi food connoisseur, who is also the daughter of the late Nawab Ali Yavar Jung. “Apart from Haleem, Muslims in Hyderabad also have a dish of cooked dry savoury dal with chopped onions and lime juice and kachaloo, which is a mixture of chopped fruit sprinkled with salt and pepper — both very nutritious foods,” she says. She offers the traditional recipe of Haleem — cooked the Hyderabadi way, which is a porridge-like wheat and lamb preparation. “I don’t usually make it this way. I just cook the meat as a korma and then add it to the wheat.” Haleem is a staple during Ramzan.

Hyderabadi Haleem
1Ingredients:

300g chicken, cut into chunks
100g boiled kabuli chana (chick peas)
1 large onion, sliced
Salt, to taste
300g basmati rice
3 tbsp butter
2 pieces bay leaves
6 pieces black pepper, whole
Healthy pinch of saffron soaked in 1 tbs broth
1 small carrot cut into sticks
20g dark raisin
20g blanched pistachio, whole
20g blanched almonds
15g fried onion
5g black cumin, whole

Method:
>> Soak wheat in water for one hour and drain
>> Cut lamb into pieces
>> Heat ghee and fry onions till they turn brown. Remove from ghee and keep aside
>> In the same ghee, fry cloves, cardamom and cinnamon for a minute
>> Add ginger and garlic and fry together. Add lamb and saute for 50 minutes or till lamb and wheat are soft, adding water as required. This can be done in a large pressure cooker for 30-35 minutes.
>> Cook till the water evaporates. When the meat and wheat are soft, mash them to get a porridge-like consistency
>> Add salt and a little water if it is too dry. Simmer for five minutes
>> Garnish with sprigs of mint, fried onions and slices of lime
‘Chanas make for a power-packed option’
According to Arsalans’s Executive Chef, Sarafat Ali, chana makes for an obvious healthy option during Ramzan. “Chana is great for digestion and is a must before you break your fast. Apart from chana, dry fruits like khajoor are also important. Both fresh and dry fruits give you a burst of energy,” says Ali. For the chef, Sehri is usually a light meal – milk, biscuits, sevaiyan. So it is important that his meal at Iftaar provides him with the necessary nutrition.” He suggests the Shahi Bagh Chaat — a simple, quick to make chaat, which is a power-packed meal in itself.

Shahi Bagh Chat
1Ingredients:

1/2 kg broken wheat (dalia)
1/2 kg boneless lamb
1/2 cup ghee
2 onions
6 cloves
6 cardamoms
2 sticks cinnamon (1” each)
1 tsp ginger paste
1 tsp garlic paste
1 tbsp coriander powder (dry roasted)
1 tsp caraway seeds (ground)
Red chilly powder to taste
3 green chillies (ground)
Water
Salt to taste
for garnishing:
A few sprigs of mint leaves
2 limes (sliced)


Method:
>> Add all the ingredients, tomatoes, green chillies, coriander, chat masala powder and lemon juice and mix well
>> Garnish with coriander leaves and chutney
>> Top it off with raisins and cashewnuts
A Yemeni iftaar
“Suffut was introduced to the Dawoodi Bohra community by their Yemeni forefathers. This dish is predominantly prepared by the Bohri’s from Surat,” says Lamiya Amiruddin, a catering and food technology graduate of Kamala Nehru Polytechnic for Women, Hyderabad. Amiruddin, now a homemaker, loves to cook — she is quite the expert when it comes to Bohri foods. She suggests Suffut as an healthy Iftaar option. “Traditionally made from lentil pancakes, yogurt, mince and a whole bunch of vegetables, Suffut is definitely a healthy option,” says Amiruddin. “It doesn’t involve deep frying either,” she adds. Although the original Yemeni recipe consisted of lentil pancakes, here it is substituted by dosas.

Suffut
1Ingredients:

3 sada dosas
1 large tub dahi
300g mutton or chicken mince meat
1 green chilli chopped (optional)
Half tsp ginger garlic paste
2 cucumbers grated
1 large carrot grated
Half a bunch spring onions, finely chopped
100g French beans, finely diced and boiled
1 small beetroot, boiled and grated (optional)
100g boiled peas (optional)
1 tomato, finely sliced (optional)
1 level tsp mustard powder steeped for 15minutes in a tsp of warm water and beaten
Half tsp sugar
Salt to taste
Method:
>> Rub the ginger garlic paste on washed mince meat and boil along with the green chilli
>> Save the soup of boiled mince meat. Beat dahi along with mustard paste, sugar, and salt. Lay one dosa on the serving dish, soak the dosa with some soup
>> Spread some seasoned dahi on the soup-soaked dosa. Cover the dosa with the portion of mince meat and liberally sprinkle chopped spring onion and grated cucumber
>> Place the second dosa on top and repeat the same steps
>> Put the final dosa on top and soak again with soup and dahi
>> Cover the whole dosa with all the prepared vegetables and remaining mince in any preferred pattern to make the dish attractive
>> To add an Indian twist to this dish, you can spread a layer of spicy green chutney on the dosa before putting dahi
>> Bread can be used as a substitute for dosas
Kabuli chana, different avatar
Kabuli Chana is very commonly eaten during Ramzan, says Chef Mujeeb Qureshi, Executive Chef at Veda Palladium.Lower Parel. Agreeing with Chef Sarafat, he feels that it is an essential addition to your food during the holy month of fasting. His Kabuli Chana concoction is poles apart from Chef Sarafat’s, however. “I have combined rice, chana, chicken and a whole lot of dry fruits — which make it extremely healthy,” says Qureshi. This is also low on masalas, which must be avoided during Ramzan, says Qureshi. “Since the stomach is empty all day long, consuming spicy foods is a bad idea during Iftaar.”

Murg Kabuli Pulao
1Ingredients:

300g chicken (cut into chunks)
100g boiled kabuli chana (chick peas)
1 large onion, sliced
Salt, to taste
300g basmati rice
3 tbsp butter
2 pieces bay leaves
6 pcs black pepper whole
Pinch of saffron soaked in 1 tbsp broth
1 small carrot, chopped
into sticks
20g dark raisin
20g blanched pistachio whole
20g blanched almond
15g fried onion
5g black cumin whole
Method:
>> Place carrot, almond, pistachio, raisin and chicken pieces, onions and hot water in a large pot. Boil it for 10 to 15 minutes
>> Add salt to taste
>> Soak the Basmati rice in water for 30 minutes
>> Remove chicken, reserving stock and discard cooked onions
>> TIn a deep pan, add butter, black cumin, black pepper, and bay leaf, stir for 30 seconds then add chicken and fried onion
>> Stir for a minute. Add the dry fruit, carrot, and stock water
>>Cook all of them till boiling point then add soaked rice with Kabuli chana, cover the lid and let it cook for 15 minutes
>> Check the consistency, add saffron water and cover the lid
>> Cook for 15 to 20 minutes
>> Garnish with coriander leaves. Serve hot
An ideal Iftaar
“Every fast must be opened with a khajoor (date),” says Dr Zubeda Tumbi. Apart from that, fresh fruits such as watermelons, papaya, peach, pear should be eaten. Lots of fluids need to be taken, such as lime juice, coconut water, iced tea, milk in the form of fruit milkshakes.


The third course must include something savoury. However, fried foods must be avoided, as they are bad for the liver. Ragda, moong or chana chaat are good options. Mixed sprouts or pineapple chaat is great too.

Sehri should be sustaining, adds Tumbi. “Always include cereals, either roti or bhakri or raagi porridge.” Milk, she says, is a must too — it gives you your dose of calcium and Vitamin A. Nuts and a cup of tea (especially green tea) will make it a highly nutritious meal. 

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Monsoon magic in Goa


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A dark shadow creeps across the sky until it's almost as black as night. The waves get choppier and choppier until they lash against the shore in anger. The water is chilly on your skin. When the dogs sense the deluge coming, they flee out of sight. In the distance, where the beach shack is shut, the palm trees sway wildly. Then the rain descends, instantly torrential, drowning all other sounds. It gets in your eyes and ears, soaking your swimsuit to the skin. Sea and sky merge into one angry crash of water. Goa in the monsoon - the loveliest place on earth.
When you tire of the sea, you can drive through the state, north to south or south to north, through sleepy little villages dotted with wine shops and streetside bars and restaurants, past paddy fields and dense forests of palm trees. The lush foliage makes the entire state, apart from a few small towns, look like countryside. The rain keeps pouring, forming swirling mists around the peaks of the Western Ghats that form a shadowy backdrop to everything. Aunties in loose, short dresses sit inside fast food shacks, selling beef chilly and Goan sausage with bread.
What can you say about Goa without sounding like a travel brochure? I just spent six days there in the middle of the monsoon season when tourism is at its lowest ebb and the sea at its highest. Initially, I had planned to rent a service apartment, a concept that's growing in popularity in the tourism-dependent state. People from Bombay, Delhi, and overseas buy condos in Goa that serve as holiday homes when they want to visit. But most of the time they're rented out to tourists.
Unfortunately, in the off season, the condos we were going to rent turned out to be quite poorly equipped, so we drove around looking for a hotel, and finally landed up at the exact same place I'd stayed at four years ago, on my last visit to Goa. The Royal Orchid Galaxy at Uttorda was, back then, a fairly quiet, small resort on the beach with few frills. Now, I was stunned to see the transformation, and reminded of a short story by EM Forster, "The Eternal Moment", where a character returns to a hotel in an Alpine town which used to be unspoilt but has since been changed utterly by fame. Except that the Royal Orchid has become even prettier. Its new swankiness is subdued and charming. Of course the tariffs have doubled. The whole change reminded me that even south Goa won't remain unspoilt forever. These days, nearly every tourist I meet seems to prefer the south to the overcrowded north.
On one of the days we drove around the southernmost parts of the state, the region that borders Karnataka. Our car was ferried across a small river, but once on the other side, we were completely lost. It was about as different from the northern towns of Panjim and Calangute as it can get. No people for miles, no cell phone signal, and no traffic. Just winding, hilly roads flanked by thick coconut groves, glistening paddy fields, and muddy ponds filled with rainwater. In the distance stood the blue-grey hills. And every now and then, without any warning, the car would turn a bend and below us we'd catch a sudden shocking glimpse of the silver sea. The local people in the villages around spoke almost no Hindi or English, only Kannada. From the coconut trees hang clusters of green coconuts, and when you drive with the windows rolled down, occasionally a strong whiff of coconut oil floats up. It's funny how the scent of coconut oil in Indian cities elsewhere evokes associations of cheap hair oil. But in the Goan countryside, all I could think of was delicious prawn curry.
On the other hand, north Goa feels like a different country. Even the gas station attendants speak fluent English. In some ways, used to the huge influx of Western tourists, perhaps, Goa is perhaps the most liberal part of India. You can wear the skimpiest clothes without anyone staring. Drinking and driving also doesn't seem to be a big deal, which is a good thing in Goa! The small towns around Panjim are a lot more lively than the south but can feel very crowded even in the off season. I prefer the quiet, deserted beaches of the south, like Uttorda, but I did drive up to Panjim a couple of times to see the energy of the city. This is the only Goan city that feels urban, compared to say Colva or Margao. Old Panjim is quaint and charming with its heritage houses and pretty churches and strong Portuguese influence.
Needless to say, I ate tons of Goan food. Much of it is very spicy but, unlike the Andhra cuisine I mentioned in my last blog post, Goan cuisine is also a little sweet and tangy. Coconut and vinegar are big ingredients. We ate fried kingfisher and ladyfish, fresh lobster and several Goan curries such as Balchao, Xacuti, Cafriel, and Vindaloo. Goan pork is very fatty and a little smelly. Of all the dishes, my favourite is the basic prawn or fish curry which smells strongly coconutty. For dessert, you've got to have the layered coconut milk cake, the pudding with the prettiest name in the world - Bibingka. It's ideally served warm, with a side of vanilla ice cream.
Goa is the only place in India where port wine is produced. When I was seven years old, I went on my first vacation to Goa with my parents. We lived in Bombay then and sailed by ship. I remember sleeping outdoors on the deck. In Goa, my parents found that a bottle of Vinicola port cost exactly the same as a bottle of Thums Up - four rupees. My father poured me some port at dinner and said, "You may as well drink this instead of the cola." It was my taste of anything remotely alcoholic, though Goan port has very little alcohol content and varies from mildly sweet to very sweet. It's easy to drink a bottle at a time.
I have to confess that port wine is no longer my drink of choice in Goa unlike when I was seven. Over the years, Goan fenny, fermented from both coconut and cashew, has grown on me more and more. I no longer find cashew fenny smelly like many people do. Drunk with Sprite or Limca, it's quite refreshing and also quite potent.
In the monsoon, with very few tourists around, especially on the weekdays, the beach resorts are magical. Uttorda beach by our hotel felt like a private beach. When the rain came down in sheets, there was no one there but us. The bigger beach shacks were open and are really fun places to eat. My favourite is Johncy in Benaulim. They put tables out on the beach so you can eat while watching the waves crash on the shore. The more popular Martin's Corner has live Goan music at night and is quite crowded even in the off season. In peak season, I can't imagine what Goa must be like. Quite frankly, I'm not eager to find out. You can rest assured that my next visit there will also be in the monsoon.
In the midst of my summer in crowded Indian cities, these six days without Wi-Fi on my laptop or a strong cell phone signal, were almost like a dream. You can never really be sure you were there. But long after you've left, somewhere far away, surrounded by city noises, a sudden scent of coconut oil or an unexpectedly cool breeze has the power to transport you to an idyllic place, a cool, green place where mountains and forests meet the sea and everything is covered in rain.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Fake sugars won’t help you lose weight

Published: Wednesday, Jul 11, 2012, 18:02 IST
Place: NEW YORK | Agency: ANI

If you think sprinkling that packet of Equal or Splenda over foods or beverages may help you shed extra pounds, then you may be wrong.
A new statement by the American Heart Association and the American Diabetes Association has claimed that replacing regular sugar with artificial sweeteners won’t always make you thin.
The study behind it says that substituting fake sweeteners into your diet can help you reduce your intake of calories and sugar, both major culprits of obesity.
But there is ‘limited and inconclusive’ evidence that artificial sweeteners help consumers lose weight in the long run, New York Daily News reported.
Those small bags of Nutrasweet and Truvia “are not magic bullets” against extra body-baggage, said Christopher Gardner, the main author of the study
Artificial sweeteners only work when consumers don’t “overcompensate.” Which basically means: don’t throw away all those precious calories you’ve saved by drinking a diet soda only to eat a chocolate-chip cookie and a chili-cheese dog
People do this more often than you’d think, and the study said it happens more often with foods containing artifical sugar than with beverages
For years, websites across the Internet have criticised America’s range of fake sweeteners, going so far as to claim that they can in fact cause obesity because of the chemical changes they produce in the body.
“The sweeteners that people use to lose weight are actually causing them to not only gain weight, but to make weight loss efforts extremely difficult,” the website MomsWhoThink.com argues.
The Sugar Association’s “Truth About Splenda” page urges viewers to “take action to inform your family and friends about the realities concerning the chlorinated artificial sweetener Splenda.
And warnings about the dangers of the chemical Aspartame in artificial sweeteners can be found across YouTube, where users like Dr Nordquist have uploaded videos claiming that “there are over 92 different health side-effects associated with aspartame consumption, killing over 300,000 people every year.”

Friday, July 6, 2012

Almond oil helps fight obesity, diabetes

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Almond oil helps fight obesity, diabetes
Almond oil helps fight obesity, diabetes (Thinkstock photos/Getty Images)
Researchers, including one of Indian origin, have found that a future weapon in the battle against obesity and diabetes could come in the form of an oil derived from the seeds of wild almond trees.

According to researchers at Missouri University of Science and Technology, the key to the oil's potential lies in its ability to affect certain microorganisms living in our bellies.

In the study, the researchers reported that adding sterculic oil to the diets of obese laboratory mice increased their sensitivity to insulin. This was due to the oil's effect on three types of microorganisms that live in the guts of the mice.

As a result, the researchers saw a "statistically significant improvement in glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity in the obese mice," Shreya Ghosh, a Ph.D. student in environmental engineering at Missouri S and T, said.

The sterculic oil had no adverse affects on lean mice fed the same diet.

Sterculic oil is extracted from the seeds of the wild almond tree known as Sterculia foetida.

The research by Ghosh and her advisor, Dr. Daniel Oerther, builds upon previous studies conducted at the University of Missouri-Columbia. In those studies, sterculic oil was found to suppress the bodily enzyme stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1).

SCD1 is associated with insulin resistance, a condition that can lead to diabetes and obesity.

Other studies have shown that obese mice deficient in the hormone leptin have a different composition of "gut microbiota" than lean mice do.

Leptin helps regulate metabolism, and a deficiency of the hormone can contribute to obesity, says Oerther, the John and Susan Mathes Chair of Environmental Engineering at Missouri S and T.

In the Missouri S and T study, a diet supplemented by sterculic oil also correlated with lower levels of three types of gut microbiota - Actinobacteria, Bacilli and Erysipelotrichia - in the obese mice.

It isn't clear, however, whether the lower levels of those microbiota led to the improvement of glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity among the obese mice, Oerther says.

To perform her experiments, Ghosh studied 28 male mice - 14 of them obese and 14 normal, and each of them five weeks old at the beginning of the study.

She separated the mice into four groups and for nine weeks, fed a standard diet to one group of obese mice and one group of non-obese mice.

Over the same period, she fed the same diet, supplemented with 0.5 per cent of sterculic oil, to one group of obese mice and one group of non-obese mice. Ghosh recorded the weights, food consumption and glucose levels of the mice during the nine-week period.

After the nine weeks, researchers conducted a DNA analysis of the gut microbiota at King Abdullah Institute of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia.

The results confirmed correlations between the diet, improved glucose tolerance and groups of microbes. Even though the mice fed a diet with sterculic oil did not experience weight loss, both Ghosh and Oerther believe their findings could lead to new insights into controlling diabetes and weight gain.

The study was presented at the American Society for Microbiology's general meeting in San Francisco.

Living la dolce vita

The 'mango' imported from Italy might taste a little like guava, but you won't mind too much, given the variety of tantalising options at this new yoghurt shop in Bandra

 

Not big fans of yoghurt, stopping by an eatery that deals primarily in desserts made from the dairy product with ‘friendly bacteria’ didn’t seem like an alluring proposition. We liked the cool, white interiors of Dolcement Italia, complete with wooden chairs and tables painted white. After comfortably seating ourselves, we got down to business.

The Banana Split is served with yoghurt and hazelnut sauce, but could do with a little more jazzing up
The menu offers a variety of options that would leave anyone with a sweet tooth spoilt for choice. We started with a mini dessert called the Monte Rosa (Rs 55). It’s delicious strawberry crust filled with yoghurt inside a waffle cone left us wanting more.  Since finishing the mini dessert didn’t take us long, we quickly moved on to our next option: Mango Gelato with Frozen Yoghurt Splash (Rs 90), followed by the Golosone Choco Lollipop (Rs 70). The ‘mango’ in the Mango Gelato tasted more like guava — could it be because the ‘mango’ is actually imported from Italy? It tasted good, so we didn’t mind too much.

The Blueberry Muffin served with a scoop of frozen yoghurt made for great combo
The Golosone Choco tasted good, but there were certain ‘practical’ problems to eating it: The chocolate crust of the round lollipop was difficult to bite into. In the end, we lost our enthusiasm to finish what was on our plates, even though it tasted good. Our last orders for the day was the Banana Split (Rs 100) and the Blueberry Muffin (Rs 130). The Blueberry Muffin was soft, and carried just the right hint of sweetness.
Time to split
The Banana Split served with yoghurt and hazelnut sauce, however, seemed to be missing something — perhaps  a sprinkling of nuts or a little extra ‘something’ would have helped make the dish even more interesting.  For now though, Dolcemente Italia is still the answer to most, if not all, our sweet desires.