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"I always wonder why people are not comfortable with Indian food," frets Richa Hingle. "It's so delicious." It's richly spiced, deeply nuanced, and above all, slow. "Indian food is about slow and patient."
In America, though, we like things fast -- fast pace, fast cars, fast food. Hingle, born in India and living in Seattle, has been working the tricky balance between new and fast and slow and traditional, and making it vegan, too. First came her blog Vegan Richa, which she began 2009 (tagline: Eating plants till we photosynthesize). Now there's her book "Vegan Richa's Indian Kitchen." Hingle goes beyond the curries at your local Indian takeaway. "The common problem is they do the same dishes, with heavy cream and ghee [Indian clarified butter] and never explore India's regional cuisine, based on vegetables and different spices." Hingle, a Northern Indian with Punjab parents, grew up in Central India and she knows the difference. She presents her country's vast array of regional recipes but speeded up and simplified for busy Americans. Confused about curry? Hingle demystifies. "Curry can mean anything. It's a loose term for anything saucy or spicy." She'll save you steps on traditional Indian recipes, substituting vegetables and beans you can find here for those more common in India. "I don't even know the names of some of the vegetables -- I've eaten them but you won't find them here, they're so local and seasonal." She does urge you to use the fresh herbs, spices and seeds that provide authentic Indian flavor. "Do not use curry powder." Back home, Hingle would sometimes help her mother in the kitchen, but her creations were a little too freewheeling and fusiony for her father. When she came to America for her master's degree in computer software engineering, she ate her share of frozen Indian meals or pizza but "I found McDonald's or other burgers too greasy and unhealthy," she says. "I started cooking." Hingle became vegan as she recovered from illness and after she and her husband adopted their Pomeranian, Chewie. The change happened gradually (we don't do everything fast in America) but it was easy. "Indian food is easily veganized," she says. "Most of the meals are not dependent on cheese or ghee or milk. The sauce is what gives it the flavor." The exception are Indian desserts. "They're very dairycentric" says Hingle, who's authored an e-book on the Indian sweets she loves. To make them vegan, "you completely change the main ingredient, the processes applied to it. You have to find a new way of coming up with the same flavors you like." She'll keep reworking a recipe until she feels it hits the flavors and textures of the traditional version. Hingle spent years trying nail the vegan rasmalai recipe in her new book. "That's spongy cheese balls in creamy sauce." Perhaps not a great description but an Indian favorite and a must-have at holidays like Diwali. "It's food everybody makes. You have to serve exactly like your mom and grandmom used to make -- and everybody has to like it." It's been over decade since Hingle visited her home, but she still speaks of it fondly. "Everybody starts cooking in the morning and planning for lunch and dinner, sometimes two or three days in advance. There's something happening in the kitchen all the time." The lessons she learned in her mother's kitchen are as fresh the herbs she cooks with. "We do a lot by smell. Keep the nose around the kitchen to see the spices are not burning. Be patient with the food and know what's going on. You have to be present in the kitchen." So for someone bridging the old ways and the new, what dish tastes like home? A fast version of a slow-cooked favorite. ''Dal [bean curry or soup] with saabzi -- a dried vegetable side," she says. "That's the perfect meal." Photo by Richa Hingle -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |