Anjum Anand's Holi Recipes: Seekh Kebab Wraps, Apricot Pavlova And Sharbat Kulfi

Anjum Anand's Favourite Holi Recipes
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Food plays a central role in Holi, the Hindu festival of colours that marks the start of spring.

TV chef Anjum Anand has created three delicious recipes for you to enjoy during the annual festivities, and they're so tasty that we bet you'll be making them again and again as spring rolls into summer.

Serves: 6

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Normally seekh kebabs are made with lamb mince. This protein packed version is equally delicious and satisfying enough to make a healthy, light meal. I know it is odd to see cheese in Indian food but it really helps to add some umami flavour and bind the kebabs together. You can also lightly fry them in a non-stick frying pan (with or without skewers) in which case you don’t need to brush with butter.

To make the recipe healthier you can leave out the butter and eating them with the yoghurt, but they will taste a bit dry.

Ingredients

11/2 tbsp vegetable oil

1 medium red onion, half finely chopped and half finely sliced (for the wrap)

2 tsp ginger, finely chopped

2 cloves garlic, finely chopped

400g can chickpeas, drained and rinsed

1-2 tsp finely chopped green chillies, to taste

3 tbsp finely chopped red pepper

20g grated cheddar cheese

1 tsp cumin

1 tsp garam masala

1 tsp dried mango powder (or serve with lemon wedges)

3 tbsp breadcrumbs

Salt and 1/8th tsp freshly ground black pepper (or to taste)

2 small fistfuls of chopped fresh coriander

1 rounded tbsp butter, soft or melted

Large skewers, soaking in water as you cook

To serve

6 tortillas or thin flatbreads

8-10 iceberg lettuce leaves,

Small fistful of chopped mint leaves

Small fistful of coriander leaves

½ lemon 2

50g thick Greek yoghurt

Method:

1. Mash or blend the chickpeas until they are a coarse puree.

2. Heat the vegetable oil in a small non-stick frying pan and add the chopped onion and some salt; cook until soft and then golden. Add the ginger, garlic and chilli and stir fry over a gentle flame for 1 minute or until the garlic is just cooked. Add the cumin and garam masala with a splash of water and cook out until there is no moisture left in the pan and you can see the mixture frying in the oil. Add this to the mashed chickpeas, along with the fresh coriander, dried mango powder, cheese, red pepper and breadcrumbs. Mix well, taste and adjust the seasoning to taste. Leave to cool.

3. Meanwhile, stir the handful of chopped mint and coriander into the yoghurt along with salt and pepper to taste. Marinate the sliced onions in a good squeeze of the lemon juice.

4. Roughly portion the kebab mix into six and with slightly oiled hands, form the seekh kebabs around the skewers, you can make these round or slightly flattened. Preheat your grill setting on your oven. Put the skewers on oiled foil and place about 4” away from the hot grill. Cook for 10 minutes, carefully turning halfway, or until browned on both sides.

5. Place the breads in foil in the oven to heat through for the last 3-4 minutes before the kebabs come out. Brush the cooked kebabs with the butter (they will be dry and quickly absorb the fat).

6. Quickly ease the kebabs off the sticks and place straight on the breads, top with the onions, lettuce and yoghurt, wrap and serve.

Serves 6

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Ingredients

4 egg whites (medium-large)

250g caster sugar plus 1 tsp for cream

½ tsp white wine vinegar

9 fresh apricots

Large pinch saffron

2 large pinches dried rose petals or rose essence to taste

1 cup sugar

2 cups water

300g double cream

4 tbsp proper Greek Yoghurt (it should be very thick)

6 tbsp coarsely ground pistachios plus a good handful for garnish

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 200C. Place greaseproof paper on your baking tray. I like to put a little oil underneath so that it stays in place as you spoon the pavlova on to it.

2. Place the whites (with no traces of yolks) into a clean whisking bowl and whisk until the eggs reach soft peaks. Add the sugar all at once and continue whisking until the sugar has dissolved and the meringue is glossy. Add the vinegar and after a few more beats add the coarsely ground pistachios and stir them in by hand.

3. Form 6 equal sized small round meringues on the baking sheet. I like them rounded and quite natural looking. Place in the oven, turn the temperature right down to 120C. Bake for 80 minutes and remove from the oven. Set aside. This can be made a day in advance.

4. Half the apricots and remove the stone.

5. Meanwhile, bring the water and sugar to boil in a medium-sized saucepan. Once the sugar has dissolved, add the saffron and rose petals. Simmer for a few minutes and add the apricots. Poach until they are soft, around 4-6 minutes. Take off the heat and leave to cool in the syrup.

6. When you are ready to eat, whisk the cream and extra sugar until it just holds its form. Stir in the yoghurt.

7. Spoon over the meringues and top each with three halves of the apricots and a little syrup over the top. Sprinkle over the remaining pistachios and serve.

Serves 4

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Sharbats were flavoured sweet and sour drinks that were cooling and refreshing as well as zingy. This take on kulfi takes the flavours of a sharbat but made in a quick and easy way, more like a light gelato.

Ingredients:

5 oranges, juiced (around 400ml)

120g caster sugar

Rind of 2 oranges

3 tsp cornflour

800ml milk

½ tsp cardamom powder

Pinch of salt

2 tbs crème fraiche or double cream (optional)

Handful of chopped pistachios

Method:

1. Combine the orange juice and 3 tbsp of the sugar in a small saucepan. Stir over medium heat until the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil, and cook, uncovered, over medium heat for 10-15 minutes or until reduced to a sticky syrup, there will only be around 80ml left. Leave to cool.

2. Pour 50ml of the milk into a small bowl and stir in the cornflour. Stir until dissolved. Pour the rest of the milk into a large, thick-bottomed pot with the sugar, pinch of salt, cardamom and orange rind and bring to a boil, stir often and make sure you scrape the base so the milk does not catch and burn. Simmer, stirring often until the milk reduces to 500ml. Pour in the cornflour as you stir and cook, stirring as it comes back to the boil and thickens, around 5-7 minutes. It should be like custard. Take straight off the heat and leave to cool.

3. Stir in the orange syrup and mix well. Add the crème fraiche or cream if using, along with the pistachios and pour into a freezer proof container, cover and chill. Then place in the freezer until frozen, around 3 hours. Take out and blend the whole thing to make it smooth, then replace in the freezer for another few hours or until frozen. Alternatively, churn in an ice-cream maker until done.

4. Allow to soften for 10-15 minutes before serving.

More of Anjam's recipes can be found on http://www.anjumanand.co.uk/.

Celebrating Holi 2015
(01 of14)
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Indian revellers dance as during Holi celebrations in Hyderabad on March 5, 2015. Holi, also called the Festival of Colours, is a popular Hindu spring festival observed in India at the end of the winter season on the last full moon day of the lunar month. (credit:NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
(02 of14)
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Nepalese revellers with painted faces gather in celebration of the Holi festival in Kathmandu on March 5, 2015. The Holi festival of colours is a riotous celebration of the coming of spring and falls on the day of the full moon in March every year. (credit:PRAKASH MATHEMA/AFP/Getty Images)
(03 of14)
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Indian revellers play with color during Holi celebrations in Hyderabad on March 5, 2015. (credit:NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
(04 of14)
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Indian children, smeared with gulal-coloured powder, smile at the camera during Holi celebrations on March 4, 2015 in New Delhi, India. Festival of colours, fun and frolic Holi bridges the social gap and renew sweet relationships. It is also called Fagun, Vasant Utsav or spring festival as it falls on Phalgun Purnima which comes in February end or early March. (credit:Raj K Raj/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
(05 of14)
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Students of Devi Ahilya Vishwavidyalaya celebrate the festival Holi on March 4, 2015 in Indore, India. Festival of colors, fun and frolic Holi bridges the social gap and renew sweet relationships. (credit:Shankar Mourya/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
(06 of14)
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Indian revellers dance as water is sprayed during Holi celebrations in Hyderabad on March 5, 2015. (credit:NOAH SEELAM/AFP/Getty Images)
(07 of14)
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An Indian child buying a water gun from roadside vendors ahead of the occasion of Holi festival on March 4, 2015 in New Delhi, India. Festival of colours, fun and frolic Holi bridges the social gap and renew sweet relationships. It is also called Fagun, Vasant Utsav or spring festival as it falls on Phalgun Purnima which comes in February end or early March. (credit:Raj K Raj/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
(08 of14)
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Indian women tie sacred thread and offer milk and water as they worship around a pile of wood on the eve of Holi or 'festival of colours' in New Delhi on March 5, 2015. Celebrations begin from the eve of Holi with the ritual of Holika Dahan. Holika Dahan, or the burning of demon Holika, is the vital ritual during Holi festival. On the night before Holi, people collect wooden logs and waste materials like broken furniture, clothes, etcetera from their homes, gather it together to burn Holika and this bonfire epitomizes the victory of good over evil. (credit:PRAKASH SINGH/AFP/Getty Images)
(09 of14)
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A man covered his face of gulal (coloured powders). Youth of Kolkata busy celebrating Holi along with other parts of country. Holi, the festival of colors, is one of the biggest Hindu holidays celebrated across India. (credit:Saikat Paul/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
(10 of14)
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An Indian Hindu devotee from Barsana prostrates amid colors as he prays at the Nandagram temple, famous for Lord Krishna and his brother Balram, during Lathmar holi festival, in Nandgaon, India, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2015. (credit:AP Photo/Saurabh Das)
(11 of14)
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Indian Hindu women from Nandgaon village beat the shield of a man from Barsana during Lathmar festival celebrations in Nandgaon, India, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2015. During Lathmar Holi the women of Nandgaon, the hometown of Krishna, beat the men from Barsana, the legendary hometown of Radha, consort of Hindu God Krishna, with wooden sticks in response to their teasing as they depart the town. (credit:AP Photo/Saurabh Das)
(12 of14)
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A Hindu widow lies on a sludgy ground filled with a mixture of colored powder, water and flower petals during celebrations to mark Holi, the Hindu festival of colors, at the Meera Sahabhagini Widow Ashram in Vrindavan, India, Tuesday, March 3, 2015. After their husband's deaths many of the women in the ashrams have been banished by their families, for supposedly bringing bad luck, while some move voluntarily to and around the town where devotees believe Lord Krishna was born. (credit:AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
(13 of14)
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Indian Hindu widows dance with Bindeshwar Pathak, founder of non-governmental organization Sulabh International, as they celebrate Holi at the Meera Sahabhagini Widow Ashram in Vrindavan, India, Tuesday, March 3, 2015. The widows, many of whom at times have lived desperate lives in the streets of the temple town, celebrated the Hindu festival of colors at the ashram. (credit:AP Photo/Tsering Topgyal)
(14 of14)
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Indian Hindu devotees smeared with colors, sing songs at the Nandagram temple famous for Lord Krishna and his brother Balram, during Lathmar holi festival, in Nandgaon, India, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2015. (credit:AP Photo/Saurabh Das)