- Kedgeree
Kedgeree (or occasionally kitcherie, kitchari or kitchiri) is a dish consisting of flaked
fish (usually smokedhaddock ), boiledrice , eggs andbutter . The dish originated from Scotland and was taken to India by Scottish troops during the British Raj, where it was adapted and adopted as part of Indian cuisine. [ [www.scottishrecipes.co.uk/kedgeree.htm] ] The dish then returned to the wider UK having been popular amongst the British colonials inIndia hence was introduced to theUnited Kingdom as abreakfast dish in Victorian times, part of the then fashionableAnglo-Indian cuisine . [ cite web|url=http://www.deliaonline.com/recipes/buttery-kedgeree,1284,RC.html |title=Buttery Kedgeree |accessdate=2008-03-10 |last=Smith |first=Delia |work=Delia Smith’s Complete Cookery Course ] However The National Trust for Scotland's book The Scottish Kitchen by Christopher Trotter has traced the origins for the kedgeree recipe to books by the Malcolms dating back to the year 1790.During the Raj, fish was often served for colonial breakfasts so that fish caught in the early morning could be eaten while it was still fresh. It is rarely eaten for breakfast now, but is still a popular dish.
Most recipes now contain
curry powder (or justturmeric ) andcoriander leaves (cilantro). Sometimes cream oryogurt are stirred into the rice after cooking to make the dish richer. Early recipes however do not usually have these more recent innovations, usingparsley instead.The name is derived from an Indian dish (
khichdi inHindi ; also known as Pongal in Tamil) made from rice,lentil s,onions and spices. Vegetarian and vegan versions of kedgeree exist, based far more closely on the original khichdi recipes using rice and either masoordal (red lentils) or moong dal (green lentils).References
* Curries and Bugles, A Memoir and Cookbook of the British Raj, Jennifer Brennan ISBN 962-593-818-4
External links
* [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cookbook:Kedgeree Recipe in the Wikibooks Cookbook]
* [http://www.mediterrasian.com/delicious_recipes_kedgeree.htm Another kedgeree recipe (with photo)]
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