Lasooni Dal Palak (Garlic flavoured spinach and lentil soup)
Prep Time: 10 mins
Cooking Time: 25-30 mins
Recipe Level: Easy/Beginner
Spice Level: Low to Medium
Serves: 4-6 People
Shelf Life: Best served fresh, but can be refrigerated for upto 2 days
Serving Suggestion: Serve it hot with roti or with rice
Ingredients:
1 cup Toor Dal/Split Pigeon Peas
2 tightly packed cups Spinach, washed and chopped
1 medium Onion or 4-5 Shallots, peeled and thinly sliced
2 medium Tomatoes, finely chopped
1 – 1½ inch Ginger, peeled and finely chopped or grated
1-2 Green Chillies, slit (Adjust as per taste)
1-2 tsp Jaggery (Optional, but recommended. Adjust as per taste)
¼ cup Fresh Coriander Leaves, finely chopped
½ Lime, extract the juice (Adjust as per taste)
Salt to taste
Spices Used:
1 tsp Haldi/Turmeric Powder
½ tsp Red Chilli Powder
For Tadka/Tempering:
6-7 large cloves of Garlic, peeled and thinly sliced
1 tsp Raai/Mustard Seeds
1 tsp Jeera/Cumin Seeds
1-2 Dry Red Chilli, cut into two pieces
¼ tsp Hing/Asafoetida
2 sprigs of Curry Leaves
2 tbsp Ghee or Oil
Method:
Preparation:
- Wash the toor dal 4-5 times or until the water turns clear. Add about 4-5 cups of water and pressure cook on medium flame for 3-4 whistles, about 15 minutes. Let the pressure release completely before opening the lid.
- While the dal is getting cooked, peel and slice the large garlic cloves into thin slices. Peel and grate or finely chop the ginger. Slice green chillies and keep them aside until needed.
- Peel and thinly slice the onions or shallots. Wash and chop the tomatoes into small pieces. Finely chop the coriander leaves and keep them aside.
- Wash the spinach leaves. Stack 6-8 leaves and roll them into tight cigars. Chop them into thin pieces with a help of a sharp knife. Keep them aside until needed.
Proceed to cook:
- Heat 1 tbsp oil or ghee in a pan on medium flame. Once hot, add thinly sliced garlic and fry them until they turn golden brown. Remove the fried garlic and keep it aside.
- Add 1 tbsp oil or ghee to the same pan and add mustard seeds, cumin seeds, dry red chillies. Fry them until the mustard seeds start to pop and splutter, about 30 seconds. Next add hing and curry leaves and fry them for couple of seconds.
- Next add finely chopped ginger and slit green chillies and fry them for about half a minute. Add turmeric powder and red chilli powder and mix them well before adding sliced onions.
- Sauté the onions until it turns golden brown on the edges, about 3 minutes, on medium flame.
- Add chopped tomatoes, jaggery and about ½ tsp of salt. Mix them well and sauté until the tomatoes turn pulpy and releases their juice, about 4-5 minutes.
- Next add chopped spinach and saute for 2-3 minutes. Mash the cooked toor dal and add it to pan. Add ¾ th of fried garlic slices, salt to taste and mix them well.
- If you find the dal too thick, add about ½-1 cup of water to get the required consistency. Increase the heat to medium to high and bring it to boil.
- Adjust the seasoning and reduce the heat to low. Let the dal simmer for 4-5 minutes.
- Finally add finely chopped coriander leaves and lime juice and turn off the heat. Cover and let it rest for 10-15 minutes for the flavours to blend well.
- Serve this delicious and hearty Lassoni Dal Palak garnished with remaining fried garlic slices with roti, naan or with rice. You can serve it on its own as a hearty soup as well. Enjoy!
Sia’s Notes:
- You can skip the spinach or replace it with other greens like fenugreek leaves, spring greens, amaranth etc.
- You can use just a toor dal/split pigeon peas or a combination of lentils like moong dal, massor (red lentils) dal etc.
- I personally favour using ghee for tempering the spices, but you can replace it with oil to suit vegan diet.
- We like our Lassoni Dal Palak to be bit thick with soup like consistency. You can thin it down by adjusting the amount of water to suit your taste.
- You can serve it hot with some hot phulka or roties or simply serve it with some rice topped with dollop of ghee. I like to eat it on its own as like a bowl of soup.
I love lentils! They're so filling and so good for you! That dal looks awesome!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Liz! Dal tops my list of comfort food :)
DeleteI like the look of this dish. The colors are amazing and love the garnish!
ReplyDeleteThanks Julia! Spices not only makes the dish more flavourful but alsos make a beautiful garnish :)
DeleteThis looks so hearty. Love a good dal palak any day. I am so going to miss palak once summer hits India. Love the ghee tadka on top.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I have got couple of packs of spinach seeds along with amaranth and fenugreek to grow my own greens this summer! This way I can enjoy the greens all through the year.
DeleteI adore dal (I am never sure of the correct spelling?). Your version looks fiery and comforting! Just what I would love.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Thanh! It can be spelled dal or daal :)
DeleteThis soup looks so healthful and packed with flavor! ...not to mention absolutely gorgeous! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sarah! It's hearty and comforting as well as being extremely healthy :)
DeleteOooh. This looks divine. We actually spell it Dhal in Trinidad (not sure how that derivative came about. But I do know we do a plain straight one and I love these additions to this. I def have to try this. Thanks for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteThank you :) What's in name... A dal by any other name would taste as good ;) (Asking forgiveness to Shakespeare)
DeleteMy parents have just come back from India and said it was super hot for too! This dal looks so good, love your photo's, always so beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThank you Pretty! I will gladly swap for the heat in India to never ending winter here :)
DeleteSuch a gorgeous soup! I love all that color and spice! I actually prefer winter, but we have barely had one this year :/ Usually we get a few inches of snow each winter, but haven't had much at all this year.
ReplyDeleteThank you! It is a quite flavourful dish as it is colourful. I love cold winters but this year it has taken a toll me as it's been such a bleak one so far with no sunshine! The weather has been really funny this year, throwing few surprises :)
DeleteOMG!!! I love lentil soup and you've added gorgeous spinach! Looks just lovely!!
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot :) Lentils on their own is packed with nutrition, but adding spinach makes it a powerhouse of nutrition and also very delicious.
DeleteClimate change is happening for sure, in the east coast of the US we have had an unusually warm January and an unusually cold March. Like you Sia even am eagerly waiting for spring and warm weather :)
ReplyDeleteThe lassoni dal palak looks scrumptious.
Looks like we have to wait little longer for the spring to arrive here in my neck of woods, Shilpa! Just when the temperatures hit two digits, we are back to square one with gusty winds and non-stop cold showers! But flowers are blooming, trees have new leaves and I am just hopeful :)
DeleteI made this dish this evening and it's splendid. Great depth of flavour, warming and very tasty. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteReally glad to hear that. Thank you 😊🙏🏼
DeleteThanks, this is very, very good! :)
ReplyDelete