I’ve been to Goa 68.7 times. Okay fine, I’ve lost the count. But the first time I went to Goa was 11 years back. We were 7 or 8 months into our marriage, a getaway was must, pockets were shallow and Goa was kind. Ever since Goa visits have been on an average of 3 times a year, sometimes more, never less. No two trips have been the same, each one as memorable as the other. We go for the beach, beer and food, oh yes, but we go there MORE for the people we leave behind. We miss them. Our friends, comrades, our extended family. Our sins and secrets are safe with them. Like R says, it’s our combined baabul. How true!
No trip to Goa is complete without a visit to the bustling Mapusa market. Friday is market day! Apart from Choriz, you can find the best and choicest local seasonal produce konkan has to offer, here at the market. This time of the year, haldi chi paana (turmeric leaves), neer phanas (breadfruit, and the best substitute for fish, trust me!) are in season. Even as you drive along NH17, you’ll find vendors selling these at every 3 kms. You cannot escape, I did not want to. I picked up my Mapusa loot on my second last day in Goa and hoped it would stay fresh till I reached back home, and hell yes, it did!
The very next day I whipped up a Konkani fare in my kitchen- Kaju chi usal (kaju curry), neer fansa che kaap (rava fried breadfruit slices) and patoli (rice flour batter with coconut jaggery filling steamed in a turmeric leaf.) It was quite a hit.
Tender cashews and neer phanas are almost impossible to find here in Mumbai, but turmeric leaves are an easy find, therefore putting down Patoli recipe for your reckoning..
Patole must’ve been an invention of a very lazy grandma of Konkani origin who’d care less for shaping intricate ukdiche modak (rice flour dumplings with coconut and jaggery filling offered to Lord Ganesha as a prasad). Lazy, but ingenious nevertheless! Patole is an easy Modak hack, but with absolutely no compromise in taste or visual appeal. Infact I dare say, it tastes uniquely awesome, a tad more than the traditional modaks, because of the flavour and aroma turmeric leaves lends to them. I’m all for hacks, ALWAYS! 🙂
For the covering:
8-10 turmeric leaves
1.5 cups rice flour
salt to taste
water
desi ghee to grease the leaves
For the filling:
1.5 cup fresh coconut, grated
1 cup jaggery, grated
1 tsp cardamom, powdered
a pinch of saffron
half a cup full-fat milk
Here’s how I made it-
1) For the filling, in a thick bottom wok or kadhai mix together grated coconut, jaggery and milk on a low flame. Keep stirring till jaggery is well incorporated and milk completely reduced and absorbed in the coconut. Add cardamom and saffron in the end, give it a quick stir, take it off the heat and let it cool completely. This should take about 15 minutes.
2) Sort torn turmeric leaves from intact ones. Torn ones come handy as dish liners. Wash, pat dry and remove stems of turmeric leaves. Keep them aside.
3) Add a pinch of salt to the rice flour and add water just enough to make a thick paste, mind you, the paste should not be runny.
4) Prepare the steamer on the side.
5) Line the pan in which you are to steam with turmeric leaves, this ensures that your patole does not stick to the pan.
6) Take a turmeric leaf, if it is too big then you could divide it into two, not along the stem, but along the width. Dot the leaf with desi ghee. Then spread the rice flour batter on the leaf with the back of a spoon as thinly as possible without leaving any gap. Then spoon the coconut jaggery filling on one half of the leaf and gently fold the other half of the leaf over this. (ref to the pictures).
7) Place the prepared leaf into the lined pan and once you’ve filled the pan, steam it for 8-10 minutes.
8) Serve pipping hot, unfold the leaf and top it with a dollop of ghee.
The fragrance of the turmeric leaf fills up the house and sets the tone for the festive season.
Pictorial Step by Step
Thumbs up for the pictorial description. In South the same dish is made using banana leaves. It tastes awesome. Will surely try dis 1.
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Nice description. In Mangalore this is primarily made during August. The one’s made by Mom do not include milk, ghee or saffron, but patole’s do taste awesome in any form 🙂
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Hey… I used the same recipe n made modak out of it.. turned awesome… thnx a ton for d lovely recipe… 😊
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