177 ml (¾ cup) of dried desiccated coconut ground to a paste
10 ml (2 teaspoons) ground ginger
10 ml (2 teaspoons) ground garlic
2 finely chopped green chilies
2 whole green chilies
5 ml (1 teaspoon) red chili powder
12.5 ml (1½ teaspoons) ground cumin powder
2.5 ml (½ teaspoon) turmeric powder
12.5 ml (1½ teaspoons) salt
355 ml (¾ cup) tomato puree
2 large tomatoes cut into 3 pieces each
2 raw green mangoes peeled and finely chopped or ground
177 ml (¾ cup) fresh coriander leaves (cilantro), finely chopped
10 scraped moringa drumsticks cut into 10 cm (4-inch) pieces
15 ml (1 tablespoon) jaggery (dark brown sugar), or as needed
1 pound (500 grams) fresh firm fish like salmon, surmai or cod, haddock or halibut
Fresh lemon juice, optional
Cooked basmati rice, for serving
Preparation
1. For the dal (lentils): In a stock pot combine the toor dal, masoor dal, turmeric, salt, and 1 liter (4 cups) of water. Bring to a boil and cook the dal over medium heat for 40 minutes, adding additional water as needed. Add the butter and mash or process the lentils until thickened but still liquid. Set aside and keep warm.
2. For the fish patia: Heat the oil and fry the onions till golden brown. Add the ground coconut, stirring constantly, until the coconut is very light pink. Immediately add ginger and garlic and cook for 1 minute.
3. Add chopped chilies, whole chilies, chili powder, cumin, turmeric and salt. Cook for a minute and add the tomato puree, tomatoes, mangoes, and coriander leaves (cilantro). Add the drumsticks and 710 ml (3 cups) water, and bring to a boil. Cover and cook for about 1 hour on a medium flame.
4. Check the drumsticks are cooked through (easily splitting open) and then add the jaggery, mixing well. Add the fish for the last 15 minutes, removing from heat as soon as it is cooked through. The patia should have a slightly thick consistency, spicy and slightly sweet and sour. Season with more jaggery or a bit of lemon juice if desired. Serve accompanied by dal and basmati rice.
Born and raised in Karachi, with London, Toronto and Dubai all part of her life, Niloufer has travelled extensively. Passionate about culture through its cuisine she enjoys all cuisines of the world. Self taught, her experience through the years has driven her to write a blog NiloufersKitchen.com and publish two Parsi cookbooks – receiving 3 awards. She strongly believes that while we are identified by race, religion and colour, we share the tightest bonding through food. Her umpteen zoom demos through this pandemic have picked up momentum worldwide making #revivinganancientcuisine one recipe at a time her priority. Niloufer runs regular cookery lessons via Zoom.