Aloo Paratha

Aloo Paratha

Whole-wheat (atta) flour is mixed with salt and just enough warm water to make a soft dough; rests for 20 minutes. Potatoes boil whole, peel hot, mash with cumin, garam masala, ginger, green chilli, amchoor and coriander. The dough divides into balls. Each ball flattens into a small disc; a heaped spoon of potato sits in the middle; the dough pleats up around the filling and pinches closed; flattens again carefully; rolls out gently to a 20 cm disc. Each cooks on a hot tawa or non-stick pan with ghee, 2 minutes per side, until crispy and gold.

Sides 1 hour 25 minutes Serves4
Coconut Rice

Coconut Rice

Coconut rice represents the intersection of technique and flavor in Indian cooking. The tempering of mustard and cumin seeds in hot oil releases their volatile aromatics, which then permeate the rice as it cooks. Curry leaves contribute herbaceous depth without overwhelming the dish. Coconut cream adds richness and subtle sweetness, creating a rice that's inherently interesting yet supportive of spiced dishes. The final resting period is crucial, steam completes the cooking while the flavors meld. This rice should taste aromatic with individual grains remaining separate.

Sides 5 minutes Serves600
Completo

Completo

The Chilean street hot dog and the proper night-out food after a few drinks in any city in the country. You start with a long soft frankfurter roll, poach the frankfurter in barely-simmering water for five minutes, dice tomato fine and salt it to draw out the water, and mash avocado with lime and salt to a thick paste. The build is bottom-up: split roll, frankfurter, diced tomato, sauerkraut, a heroic layer of smashed avocado, mayonnaise piped generously over the top, a squiggle of mustard if you like. Wrap in paper, hand it over, eat with both hands while walking down a Santiago street.

Sides 25 minutes Serves4
Elote

Elote

Fresh sweetcorn ears are husked (or partially husked, with the leaves pulled back as a handle). Grilled over hot charcoal (or a smoking-hot griddle, or under a domestic grill / broiler) for 8-12 minutes, turning, until charred in patches and bright yellow at the kernels. While the corn grills, a sauce of Mexican crema (or sour cream + lime juice), mayonnaise, a small splash of milk and a clove of crushed garlic whisks together. The hot grilled corn is brushed all over with the sauce, then rolled in finely crumbled cotija cheese (or a Tajín-cotija mix), dusted with chilli powder and chopped coriander, served with a lime wedge.*

Sides 22 minutes Serves4
Ensaladang Talong (Grilled Eggplant Salad)

Ensaladang Talong (Grilled Eggplant Salad)

Long Asian aubergines char directly over a gas flame or hot grill until blackened all over and totally soft inside (poke through to test, no resistance). Cool for 10 minutes; peel away the charred skin (it slips off if cooked enough). Tear the flesh into 5 cm strips. Dress with diced tomato, thin-sliced red onion, fish sauce, white-cane vinegar and calamansi juice. Rest for 5 minutes to let the eggplant absorb the dressing. Serve room temperature.

Sides 27 minutes Serves4
Green Curry BBQ Aubergine

Green Curry BBQ Aubergine

This is a BBQ side built on the flavour profile of Thai green curry rather than a Thai curry itself. The marinade is essentially a small batch of green curry sauce reduced down until thick and clinging, then cooled and rubbed into wedges of aubergine that sit in it overnight. By morning the cut surfaces have drunk in coconut, paste, fish sauce, palm sugar, lime leaf and basil; by the time they hit the grill, the flesh has half-pickled and the surface is coated in a paste that caramelises beautifully over hot coals. The grill does the rest. Direct high heat blackens the marinade into sticky-black patches while the inside steams under its own glaze and softens to spoon-tender. Difficulty is low. The only patience involved is overnight in the fridge. Serve as a centrepiece on a BBQ platter alongside grilled meats, or as a vegetarian main with sticky rice, a wedge of lime and a scatter of Thai basil. It is rich, smoky, gently sweet, salty and herbaceous all at once, with the unmistakable green-curry note running through every bite.

Sides 37 minutes Serves4
Grilled Corn on the Cob

Grilled Corn on the Cob

Grilled corn on the cob is the unofficial flag of an American summer cookout. Whether it appears alongside ribs in Kansas City, brisket in central Texas, or burgers on a Midwestern back porch, the technique is essentially the same: husk the cob, lay it directly over hot coals or a hard gas flame, and turn it until the kernels darken and pop with sugar caramelisation. The flavour is straightforward but layered. Heat converts the corn's starches and sugars into something almost popcorn-like in aroma, while a slick of garlic butter melts into every crevice and a squeeze of lime cuts cleanly through the richness. Difficulty is low, but the line between perfectly grilled and overcooked is narrow, since corn can dry out quickly once the kernels begin to wrinkle. The trick is high direct heat for a short time, and constant turning so each side picks up colour without burning through. American corn culture has always borrowed generously from its neighbours, and any conversation about grilled corn eventually circles to elote, the Mexican street-food version slathered in mayo, cotija, chilli, and lime. The recipe here keeps to the cleaner butter-and-chive backyard style, but elote is just a brush away in the notes. Serve hot, straight off the grill, with extra butter and napkins, because nobody eats this neatly and nobody minds.

Sides 22 minutes Serves6
← Prev Page 1 of 2 Next →