Online Business

A spicy mouthful

Chef Simon Tress takes the best of German and Indian cuisines. - Bengal on my plate - The wholegrain truth - Scoop for the soul - Gained in translation - Heinz and a can of beer - Adding beer to batter Garam masala,” chef Simon Tress stresses, with a wave of his hand, “and curry powder are two things that I love about Indian cooking.” In India for a few days from Germany, he’s laid out an impressive menu for the day — starting with an appetiser that’s quite a mouthful — feta-orange garam masala-lemongrass honey-eggplant caviar-beetroot white radish-old balsamico. The finished dish, we find, is surprisingly basic and simple. The familiar and affable garam masala, however, quite easily overpowers everything else on the plate, but then that’s part of Tress’s agenda. “I believe in making a well-balanced meal, not just in quality and quantity but also in taste, so adding a bit of spice — in this case, garam masala — is my way of intensifying the otherwise subdued taste of the dish,” he says. Tress, who grew up in Stuttgart, southern Germany, is taking his visit to India as an opportunity to experiment with Indian and German cuisine. He’s had an exciting few days meeting other chefs from hotels across Delhi and working out preparations suitable to the Indian palate. At a stylish kitchen at the Miele showroom, a premium German domestic appliance brand that has recently launched its operations in India, Tress seems quite at home. Flashing an easy smile every few minutes, he’s patiently laying the base for preparing the main course with his brother, Chef Christian, by his side to assist him. The main course is quite a mouthful too — “I’m going to make saddle of lamb with shitake and bread on a pea and mint puree, and fried polenta and garlic with tomato on the side,” he says, but hastens to add that a recipe like this can be easily prepared at home, too. “I ensure that most of my cooking is always quick and simple, and well-balanced.” Tress is only 26 years old, he admits shyly, but cooking is in his blood, with a family business of hotels and restaurants back home in Germany. “I’m glad I could make it to India though, because I have done a lot of cooking with Indian spices there but it’s amazing to use masalas fresh from the market here,” he says. Spiking some of the cold German preparations is an old habit of his, for Tress likes to provoke the palate with spices, “to get a good, intensive flavour so that the food reaches the halfway mark — a taste of both Indian and German cuisine”, he adds. But German cuisine isn’t popular the way French and Italian is in India, I tell him, and he ruefully agrees. “Our food is associated mainly with potatoes and subdued flavours. But from where I come, Stuttgart, we use a lot of cereals, fresh vegetables and meat. In my cooking at my restaurant, I try and create at least three layers in every preparation to make the taste interesting,” he says. Next up, he plans to open an “organic fast food chain” in Berlin, and hopes to popularise German food all over the world with visits such as this one.[----------] FAVOURITE RECIPE Saddle of Lamb with Shiitake and bread on Pea and Mint puree, served with Fried Polenta 240 gm saddle of lamb 1 toasted bread 50 gm breast of turkey 80 gm cream 80 gm shiitake mushrooms Salt, pepper, juniper to taste For fried polenta: 125 gm polenta (semolina of maize flour) 500 ml milk 2 eggs Salt, pepper, nutmeg, butter to taste For pea and mint puree: 400 gm peas 100 gm butter Mint Salt, pepper to taste For tomato preserve: 2 tomatoes 50 gm butter Salt Dice breast of turkey, add cream and blend it in a mixer. Add shiitake mushrooms and salt. Cut the bread into thin slices, and arrange it on cling film. Spread turkey paste onto the slices. After adding salt, pepper and juniper onto the saddle of lamb, wrap it carefully into the bread. Then, remove the cling foil. Finally roll the log in foil, seal it thoroughly, and put it into the oven at 150° C. Bake for 15 minutes. For the polenta, bring the milk to a boil in a saucepan, then stir the semolina thoroughly in the hot milk. Season with salt, pepper and nutmeg. Once lukewarm, add eggs and pour the mash into an oven dish. Seal the oven dish with the foil. Fill a saucepan with sufficient water, place it in the oven, and let the oven dish simmer at 90° C in water for approximately 35 minutes. Let the polenta cool down and cut it into desired shape. Then fry the pieces golden in butter. For the pea and mint puree, blanch peas in boiling water, then blend in the mixer. Stir butter into the mash and heat it for five minutes at 70° C. Add mint at your own pleasure, and season with pepper and salt. For tomato preserve, dice the tomatoes, then lightly fry it in butter and salt. To serve, spread a portion of mint-pea puree in the centre of a plate and place the lamb with shiitake mushrooms and bread on it. Add a dash of tomato preserve and a piece each of fried polenta on either side.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Hyd court bars Maytas from loans on land collateral
In a major setback to cash-strapped infrastructure company Maytas Properties, promoted by former Satyam Computer founder B Ramalinga Raju’s family, a local court has passed an order barring it from using land as collateral for loans.
Popular Articles

Govt extends NELP VIII bid date by two months
The government has extended by two months the last date of bidding for the nation"s largest ever auction of oil and gas blocks to October 12.

Samsung eyes 30% share in CDMA market
Samsung India Electronics (SIE) is eyeing a 30 per cent market share in the CDMA handset space, which is expected to be around 16 million units next year, said Hendrick Lee, vice president – hand held products division, SIE.