Home » Side dish, fish

Bhapa Chingri

27 July 2009 2,803 views 8 Comments

Follow me on Twitter. Add me as a friend on Facebook . Visit my Flickr photostream.

Doc: You shouldn’t eat Fish, it’ll cause you acidity.

Bong Patient: No problem S(a)ir, I’ll take an antacid afterwards

-          A joke on a typical Bong’s love for fish

Well, you can’t keep off a Bengali from fish for too long, can you? After the series on Breakfast with Egg, it time to go back to Fish. Chingri Bhaape is on the platter today.

Grinding of the spices to a paste just before preparing the dish is a typical of the Bengali recipes. We prefer the freshly prepared spices more than the preserved dry spice powder. Even while preparing Chingri Bhaape, I used a paste of mustard seeds (aka shorshe, sorshe, sarshe).

Chingri Bhape with steamed rice

Chingri Bhape with steamed rice

Chingri Bhaape is an authentic Bangali recipe, and had been prepared in every household since ages. It is enjoyed best with warm white rice. The pungent taste of mustard paste makes the sarshe chingri bhaapa even more appealing. Hilsa is also used similarly to prepare ilish bhapa.

Preparation time: 10 mins

Cooking time: 5 – 8mins

Serves: 4

Ingredients:

  • Tiger Prawns (Chingri Maach): ½ kg, cleaned and deveined
  • Mustard seed (Sarse): 5 tablespoons, ground with 1 tablespoon water to make a paste
  • Turmeric powder (Halud guro): ½ teaspoon
  • Mustard oil (Sarser tel): 3 tablespoon
  • Green chili (Kacha Lanka):  5 – 6
  • Salt to taste

Preparation:

  • In a heat proof bowl, that has a lid (better to use a steel tiffin box) put all the ingredients together  and mix well
  • Close the lid and put it in a double boiler (bain marie) to cook for 5 minutes, check if the prawns have become tender, else cook for sometime more till the prawns are tender
  • Take it out and serve with warm rice

Hot Tips – Cut the back of the prawn with a knife and take out the dorsal vein completely. It is the main cause of food poisoning due to prawns.

Alternative cooking – Along with the above ingredients mentioned you can also put in two tablespoons of freshly desiccated coconut. You can also cook it in a pressure cooker. Lace the steel box inside a pressure cooker and fill it with one-inch of water and wait till the first whistle.

Bhapa Chingri

Bhapa Chingri

Double boiler-If you don’t own a double boiler, here’s a workaround. Just place the box in a deep pan and fill the pan with water upto a little below the lid of the box.

Further Readings-Shorshe Chingri Bhapa, Chingrir Malaikari

Sending this recipe to Indrani of Appyayan for hosting the first event on her blog, Spotlight: Fish.

Fish-logo

If you like this post, please consider linking to it or sharing it with others. I’ll love to hear your comments too. You can also Subscribe to BengaliCuisine by Email, or Subscribe in a reader

Blog Widget by LinkWithin

8 Comments »

  • Lakshmi Venkatesh said:

    Bhapa Chingri (Prawns) are looking soft and nice. My son enjoys eating non-veg.

    [Reply]

    Sudeshna Banerjee Reply:

    Hi Lakshmi,
    Thanks for dropping by. I hope your son likes this preparation too. You can lessen the amount of mustard paste when you prepare it for your son.

    [Reply]

  • Cook like a Bong » Blog Archive » July Roundup at BengaliCuisine said:

    [...] Bhapa Chingri: An easy, but stylish, fish recipe. Stylish, because it delivers best taste when cooked in a Double Boiler. Technically, Chingri (Prawn) isn’t a fish [it is an insect], yet it is called Chingri (Chingdi) Machh. [...]

  • Muhamad said:

    I’m salivating. :-)

    Have you heard of something called “baro bakhorer pathar shira”, meaning, “twelve herbs’ soup”?

    [Reply]

    Sudeshna Banerjee Reply:

    Muhamad,
    I really don’t have any idea about this. If you have the recipe, please do share it with me, you can even send me the recipe along with a photo of the recipe to make a guest post in our blog.

    [Reply]

    Muhamad Reply:

    Hi, Sudeshna,

    I don’t have any idea either. :-) I live in the UK, and I’ve got scant memories of my mum making it. My mum said she’ll send some pics along with the recipe.

    Wow, a guest post, that would be great. Thanks.

    [Reply]

    Sudeshna Banerjee Reply:

    Hi Muhamad,

    Yeah sure you can have a guest post here in my blog. I would just love that. Please do let me know when you are ready with the recipe.

  • Chanchra | Cook like a Bong said:

    [...] for hosting the first event on her blog, Spotlight: Fish. Along with this I am also sending Bhapa Chingri and Macher Dimer Vada to the same [...]

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.

CommentLuv Enabled