Houston Chronicle

A relatively easy at-home corn mint chaat

-

As we said our final goodbye to Indika, the restaurant I opened in 2001, this past week, I was reminiscin­g about Corn Mint Chaat, a popular summer salad.

Renditions of street food from India, with magical combinatio­ns of fresh vegetables and aromatic herb-infused sweet, spicy and savory chutneys with crunchy tidbits in almost any form — and sometimes turned on its head into a salad — bring on tastes that make most of us transplant­s from India swoon. One of the unusual flavors common to chaat is black salt, a sulfurous salt native to India. It smells funky (imagine boiled egg aroma), appears pink but turns blackish when it hits food or water and is absolutely delicious on chaats.

Over the years, I have experiment­ed with dozens of chaat combinatio­ns — from using potato or tortilla chips for crunch to grilled kale and basil leaves for herbs — but making one is no easy task. However, here is a take on the corn mint chaat that may be relatively easy to execute at home.

Anita Jaisinghan­i is the chef-owner of Pondicheri restaurant in Houston. Her website is india1948.com. Contact her at anita@pondicheri.com.

 ?? James Lenhart / Contributo­r ?? Corn Mint Chaat benefits from the unusual flavor of black salt.
James Lenhart / Contributo­r Corn Mint Chaat benefits from the unusual flavor of black salt.
 ??  ?? ANITA JAISINGHAN­I
ANITA JAISINGHAN­I

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States