Saturday, 11 March 2017

Ema Datshi bhutan national dish recipe

                                     

Ema datshi is one of the more exotic Himalayan dishes beloved by Tibetans, who sometimes call it churu, or “rotten cheese” soup. The name ema datshi itself is Bhutanese, where it is considered the national dish, and refers to “chili” and “cheese.” 

Ema datshi can be eaten with rice, or scooped up with pieces of a very unusual traditional Tibetan dish called senkong, a mound of steamed and boiled millet flour (Tibetan: kongtsam, like Kongbo tsampa) used to scoop up the ema datshi. Eating the soup this way is common among the Doeba people of Western Tibet and the Moemba people of Arunachal Pradesh in India. 
This recipe packs a powerful flavor and is not for the faint of heart, combining mega-hot spiciness with a strong stickiness from the molded cheese. Tibetans joke that if you cook churu, your neighbors all know what’s for dinner.
In this version of the soup, we use beef and potato, though it is also common in the Tibetan borderlands to use a pork and labu (Asian radish) combination. You can also make a vegetarian version of the ema datshi recipe by using wood ear mushrooms (or almost any kind of mushroom) and ping (crystal noodles) instead of the beef. Just throw the ping in near the end so that they won’t melt down too much in the soup. 
Serves about 6 people*
Ingredients:
1/3 pound of Blue cheese (We used English Stilton and Italian Gorgonzola cheeses) In Bomdilla, this cheese would be cow or dri (female yak) cheese bought from nomads who sell it either fresh or dried. Back in the day, the cheese would actually be rotten, but folks would not get sick from it.
6 medium red potatoes (Irish potatoes fall apart too easily when we cook the soup)
2.5 pounds of beef (We used beef top round. You can use any kind of beef basically except ground)*
10 spicy chilis (We used jalapeno, but would use maybe 6 for a hotter Mexican chili.)
8 cloves garlic
3 medium tomatoes (We used Roma)
10 green onions (green part only)
2-3 TBS salt
Optional, but tasty: 1 TSP emma or yerma (Sichuan pepper)
Optional, for color: 4 slices of a yellow-orange cheese, like a cheddar, or as Loden la used, American cheese.
Optional, butter.*


Preparation:
Wash the potatoes and slice into fairly thin rounds, set aside. (Don’t put in pot yet)
Do all the following and put into one big pot:
Wash chili peppers. Slice off the stems and slice once, lengthwise
Wash tomatoes and slice lengthwise
Peel garlics and smash the cloves with the side of a large knife blade
Slice beef into bite-sized pieces
Wash green onions, remove the white part, cut greens into long pieces
Leave the emma whole, and rub all of it together between your palms
Crumble all the cheese into the pot
Cover all the ingredients in the pot with water, just covered.


Cooking:
Heat the pot on high, stirring everything  together.
Stir occasionally, and after about 20 minutes, turn the heat down to medium
About five minutes later, add your sliced potatoes. (You can turn the heat up a few minutes, then revert to medium)
Add salt to taste at this point
The ema datshi will be done cooking after 30-35 minutes total. Just before it’s done, you can optionally add some slices of a colored-cheese, like cheddar, on top, to deepen the color of the soup.
You’re done!
Serve with either rice or senkong (see recipe below). If you serve with rice, the ema datshi and rice are traditionally served separately. Note that this soup is correctly quite thin. That’s how Tibetans love it!



Senkong Recipe*

Recipe by dorje gurung from anup kitchen:
To be used with the ema datshi recipe above, for about 6 people.
Finding the flour for this recipe can be a little challenging, though you have a few options. The basic ingredient Dorje la used is a gray-colored, millet flour, which in India is called ragi flour (also called finger millet, red millet or red teff) or bajri flour (pearl millet). These are all apparently gluten free :-) Dorje la bought some Santos brand ragi flour.  You might try plain millet flour, but the ones we’ve seen are not the right color for a traditional version of this recipe.

                                                                        

Ingredients:
Ragi or Bajri flour (types of millet flour)

Water
That’s it!


Preparation and Cooking
In a large pan or cast-iron skillet, bring 1.5 to 2 inches of water to a boil.
Slowly drizzle in the millet flour into heaps, creating 4 piles around the pan.
At first don’t stir the senkong, just let it boil for 4-5 minutes.
After 4-5 minutes, separate the parts into large chunks while still boiling. (Dorje  used a wooden spatula)
The senkong will be floating on the surface of the water at this point.
About 3 minutes later, start splitting up the larger pieces further, and begin to gently stir and turn the mixture, and then turn down the heat to very low.
After a minute on very low heat, turn off the heat, and keep gently stirring. Your goal is to mix in the flour totally. At this point, you have no piles left.
Finally, divide your senkong into 4-5 large pieces.
Serve with ema datshi/churu. Serve the large pieces on the table. People will take a fistful of senkong in their hands, then pinch off a small piece, and flatten it with their thumbs to form a little scoop for the ema datshi soup. (See the end of the video for this process.)
Enjoy! How many people do you know who have had the courage to cook a Tibetan recipe of a Bhutanese national dish, with a side of boiled millet? You rock!* If you are using pork and labu instead of beef and potatoes, use the same amount of fatty squares of pork (pagsha) with skin, and Asian radish in about the same amount as the potatoes, maybe one or two medium labus.
** You can add a little butter if you want even more flavor. If Tibetans see soup without some oil on top, they feel it doesn’t look good, like it’s too much like water (chu lag lag). This is changing in exile, but the older Tibetans from Tibet ate tons of butter. 

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