I came across this recipe on an FB food group, somewhere in 2014 or 2015. The recipe belongs to Sudeshna Bhattacharya. While I searched high and low for the original recipe on that group, I was unable to find it. I am very sure, though, that the recipe belongs to Sudeshna coz when I saved it on a Word document, I’d made a note of it. I usually (99.9%) do that, to ensure I give credit where due.
I have no frikkin’ clue how I missed posting this recipe. The photographs are old, clicked on the first Note phone released by Samsang. They were clicked at the time when I had cooked this. They aren’t the best pics but, trust me when I say, the recipe is a keeper. I say this, coz had the recipe not turned out right, I would have deleted it from my recipe folder immediately. It was kept safe, that means… you can give this a try and expect excellent results. 😉
Ingredients:
400 grams mushrooms, washed and halved
250 grams baby potatoes
6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 large onions, chopped
2 green chilies, finely chopped
1 teaspoon smoked paprika powder
½ teaspoon lemon pepper powder
3 tablespoons olive oil
6 sprigs coriander leaves, chopped
3 spring onions, chopped
Salt to taste
Method:
- Boil the baby potatoes. Peel and halve. Keep aside.
- Heat oil, add garlic, onions, green chilies, and sauté till onions turn translucent.
- Add smoked paprika powder, lemon pepper powder and sauté for a few seconds.
- Add the halved mushrooms. Cook on high heat, mix intermittently and gently, till the mushrooms are semi-cooked.
- Add the baby potatoes, mix, and cook till the juices in the pan are nearly dry.
- Add salt, as needed. Cook for a few minutes more until the juices in the pan are dry.
- Add the spring onions, give it a mix and immediately take the pan off the stove. Serve!
- Feel free to adjust the green chilies to your liking.
- If lemon pepper powder isn’t available to you feel free to use a bit of lemon zest and black pepper powder to make up for the ready spice blend.
- If paprika isn’t available, substitute it with Deghi Lal Mirch powder or Kashmiri Chili Powder.
- While this is a dry preparation, if you prefer the dish to be a tad moist, take it off the flame a bit sooner.
- As mentioned at the onset, the original recipe belongs to Sudeshna Bhattacharya. The photographs, though, belong to my blog, Kenzy’s Kitchen Korner. You may share the direct blog-link of the recipe/s but do NOT publish my recipes, and/or my photographs, on any blogsite or website without my explicit consent or attempt to pass off my recipe/s as your own. You will be held accountable for plagiarism.
Some more photographs: