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The Best Budget Dinner, According to Cookbook Author Priya Krishna

If Priya's mom, Ritu Krishna, makes this every night, we want to make it every night.

May  6, 2019
Photo by James Ransom

Welcome to Recipe Off-Roading, where the recipe isn’t in charge—you are. In this series of articles, we’re celebrating how cooks take liberties in the kitchen, whether that’s substituting an ingredient, adapting a technique, or doubling the salt (because you’re wild like that). So buckle up and let’s go for a ride.


In her just-released cookbook, Indian-ish, Priya Krishna writes: “It’s almost a rite of passage for Indian kids to hate eating dal when they are younger, and then to eventually realize as adults that it is truly the superior soup.”

“Did that happen to you?” I asked her over the phone last week.

“Oh yeah, 100 percent,” she said. “But now it’s all I eat.”

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Top Comment:
“I just through this Dal together in my Instapot after work. Had some red lentils and zucchini on hand I chopped and threw in the pot. While it cooked I made some rice, made the chhonk with ground cumin (couldn’t find the seeds) and sautéed some red onion. When I threw it all in a bow and topped with the yogurt and lime I was in heaven. It was so delicious and satisfying. Ate two bowlfuls I am filleD to the brim but can’t wait to experiment with different lentils and toppings. Thanks for sharing!”
— keli
Comment

To adult Priya, dal—a spiced soup made with dried split peas or lentils—is the perfect weeknight meal. It’s nourishing, quick to come together, and ready to be off-roaded in a million and one ways.

When she was growing up, Priya’s mother Ritu Krishna made dal every day. The dish always had a place at their family’s dinner table, usually to go with rice or roti, sabzi (sautéed vegetables), and kachumber (salad), though it was rarely the same two days in a row.

“She riffed on dal a lot,” Priya remembers.

Some of Ritu’s go-tos? Khichdi, “this wonderful lentil and rice porridge,” was a big one. Or she would add spinach. Or tomatoes. Or caramelized onions.

“She came up with every little trick to make the dal look and taste different,” Priya said, “and still my sister and I complained.”

It wasn’t until years later that Priya’s opinion changed. “I moved to New York City, wasn’t making a lot of money, and realized: Dal is really cheap to make.”

So she emailed her mom—whose from-scratch recipes she eventually cataloged into Indian-ish—and set out to master the dish she avoided for years. “As I got better at it, I started figuring out ways to make it taste really good,” she said.

A few game changers: a squeeze of fresh lime juice, a creamy dollop of yogurt, and chhonk, which Priya refers to in Indian-ish as “the greatest Indian cooking technique ever.” Essentially, you heat up some ghee, add spices (such as cumin seeds, dried red chiles, and asafetida), and pour this toasty, buttery mixture over the finished dal.

Many of Priya’s variations echo Ritu’s, like tomatoes, spinach, or caramelized onions. Another current favorite is adding cubed zucchini, which, she said, “gets super soft and creamy. It’s really mind-boggling what happens when you put zucchini into dal.”

Depending on which type of dal you start with—say, masoor dal (pink lentils) or urad dal (white lentils)—the cook time will vary. To Priya, this as the perfect opportunity to mix and match vegetables, and find your own mind-boggling favorite.

Here is a handy guide from Indian-ish to get you started. Bonus points for chhonk.

"A Beginner's Guide to Making Dal" is excerpted from Indian-ish © 2019 by Priya Krishna with Ritu Krishna. Photography © 2019 by Mackenzie Kelley. Reproduced by permission of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.

How would you make dal your own? Share ideas for ingredient combos in the comments!
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Emma was the food editor at Food52. She created the award-winning column, Big Little Recipes, and turned it into a cookbook in 2021. These days, she's a senior editor at Bon Appétit, leading digital cooking coverage. Say hello on Instagram at @emmalaperruque.

7 Comments

keli September 15, 2020
I just through this Dal together in my Instapot after work. Had some red lentils and zucchini on hand I chopped and threw in the pot. While it cooked I made some rice, made the chhonk with ground cumin (couldn’t find the seeds) and sautéed some red onion. When I threw it all in a bow and topped with the yogurt and lime I was in heaven. It was so delicious and satisfying. Ate two bowlfuls I am filleD to the brim but can’t wait to experiment with different lentils and toppings. Thanks for sharing!
 
Carol May 27, 2020
The Chhonk MADE the dish. Confession: I tried to riff on the first try, toasting the spices before adding the ghee. Mistake! I can still hardly walk into the kitchen without my eyes tearing up. However.... not only my extremely food-conservative husband, but my skeptical 16-year-old son, loved it along with me and our more adventurous daughter. Big win.
 
Annada R. May 9, 2019
Hi Emma, Priya Krishna is so right. "Chhonk," also called "tadka" is the greatest Indian cooking technique, the very foundation of all Indian cooking.
Another super interesting thing about "chhonk" is that it becomes a mean vinaigrette. Add it on top of diced vegetables of your choice, along with salt, cumin powder and lime juice and you have a salad with an Indian twist. Throw in some peanut powder for a creamy base and protein punch.
 
Noreen F. May 8, 2019
I have Indian-ish at home right now. Looking forward to browsing and deciding which recipes to try!
 
kimmiebeck May 7, 2019
This looks so delicious. I would love to know how to make the dressing.
 
kimmiebeck May 7, 2019
I like the video but the music is annoying.
 
Madeline F. May 6, 2019
I love many of your recipes, but don’t know how to print them. I use an iPhone. Thank you for your assistance. Thank you very much!

Madeline Fenster
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