Ingredients
Method
Prep ahead:
- Set the toor dal to boil in enough water to cook. (An alternative is to make a toor dal for some other purpose with extra water, and use only the water for this rasam). Retain the cooked dal and water. Do not drain. Set aside.
- Clean the greens by removing most thorny stalks and stems, and any larger thorns on the leaves. The smaller ones are ok.
- Put these on an amikkal or other grinding stone/mortar and pestle, along with the green chilli. If you don’t have a grinding stone, you can also use a small blender or food processor – but don’t grind these to a fine paste. We’re looking for a coarse pounding or semi-coarse paste.
- Set the greens paste aside.
- In the same stone, add the garlic cloves and pound these with the skins on, again roughly. Set aside.
- Once again in the same stone, add the tomatoes—which you can roughly chop or just squeeze and them pound by hand. The idea is to soften them and make a mush, but not to lose all texture by making a paste.
- Incorporate the red chillies but don’t worry if these are not thoroughly blended in, and set aside.
Make the rasam:
- In a large, heavy-bottomed pan or eeya chombu, heat the sesame oil.
- When the oil is almost to smoking point, add the dry seasonings and allow them to splutter and crackle
- Follow immediately with the hing/katti perungayam and crushed garlic, and fry for less than a minute. Don’t allow this to burn.
- Next, add the thoothuvalai keerai-chilli paste. Fry this well for a minute or two. Add a bit of water if needed to keep from burning.
- Add the crushed tomato mixture and stir well.
- Whether you used a stone or a mixer jar, there’ll be residue there which you can clean out with drinking water – and pour into this pan now.
- Add turmeric, extracted tamarind water, cooked undrained toor dal along and salt plus extra water to dilute (to about 1 litre).
- Simmer until the raw tamarind smell dissipates and check for salt. You can add the jaggery now, too, if you’re using it.
- Serve hot with rice, or as a soup.