| Serves | 4 to 6 |
I don’t have my grandmother’s exact recipe. I never asked her, being too young at the time to know better. But the recipe here is a good approximation (as Jimmy Durante, the American comedian, used to say, “Da nose knows”) and utterly delicious.
| 2 | Tbsp. olive oil or other vegetable oil | |
| 1 | tsp. whole cumin seeds | |
| 1½ | lb. (8 cups) medium-sized cauliflower florets, cut so each floret has a stem | |
| 1¾ | cups grated fresh tomatoes | |
| 1 | piece of fresh ginger, one inch square, peeled and grated to a pulp on the finest part of a grater or Microplane | |
| 2 | fresh hot green chiles, cut into slim rounds (see Note) | |
| ¼ | tsp. cayenne pepper | |
| ¼ | tsp. ground turmeric | |
| 1 | Tbsp. ground coriander | |
| ¾ | tsp. salt, or to taste | |
| ¼ | cup chopped fresh cilantro | |
| 3 | Tbsp. heavy cream | |
| ¼ | cup coarsely grated sharp Cheddar cheese |
Do not use jalapeño or serrano chiles for Indian dishes; they have the wrong texture and flavor. Green bird’s-eye chiles or any long, slim, thin-skinned variety, such as cayenne, are ideal. If you can’t find them, use 1/2 to 3/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper instead of 1/4 teaspoon.
This content is from the book Climbing the Mango Trees by Madhur Jaffrey.