The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ broke his fast with dates and water and so it is a
Sunnah that Muslims follow. This is based on a Hadith that states, “The
Messenger of Allah ﷺ would break the fast with fresh dates before
performing Salat. kanji was in india and muslim women even in Kerala wear
thali in black Book is bent to convert KR IRS 29324

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: 'gopala krishnan' via iyer123 <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 29 Mar 2024 at 01:36
Subject: [iyer123] All about kanji that is consumed for Ramzan in South
India-FORWARD
To: Patty Thatha <[email protected]>, Kerala Iyer <
[email protected]>, Iyer <[email protected]>


*All about kanji that is consumed for Ramzan in South India-FORWARD*

*Home chefs share their own takes on nonbu kanji, the gruel that is eaten
when breaking fast during Ramzan in South India*

*March 28, 2024 04:00 pm | Updated 04:22 pm IST Nahla Nainar*

*The delicious dishes prepared for evening iftar and pre-dawn suhour meals
during the Islamic month of Ramzan have become a subject of food tourism,
especially on social media, where kebabs, samosas, rolls and a myriad other
fried snacks rule the roost, alongside sugary milkshakes and juices.*

*But crowning it all, quietly, is the nonbu kanji, a mushy porridge that is
prepared fresh every day in Muslim households and mosques across southern
India.*

*Consumed only during iftar, when the day’s fast comes to an end, nonbu
kanji is comfort food for the abstaining soul, aromatic like biryani, but
without the grease and curried aesthetics of the rice dish. It is
considered to be easier to digest after long hours of abstinence from food
and water.*

*The kanji’s variants include the Arab gruel ‘harees’, and, closer home,
the Hyderabadi ‘haleem’ and ‘khichra’. All these recipes involve slow
cooking wheat and lentils with butter and seasoned mutton, beef or poultry
to a mash.*

*The nonbu kanji’s warm and fuzzy presence on the iftar table makes it the
perfect foil for accompaniments like samosas, pakodas, mint chutney, or
pickles.*

*A Ramzan staple*

* “No matter how many dishes one makes, the nonbu kanji remains a staple of
the iftar menu. In South India, where it is regularly prepared in
neighbourhood mosques as well as homes during Ramzan, each street can have
its own distinctive style and flavour,” says Hazena Sayed, a food blogger
from Tirunelveli who has documented 300 traditional recipes of the Ravuther
Muslim community, and runs the sautefrynbake.com <http://sautefrynbake.com>
website.*

* “My knowledge of cooking is a blend of my mother’s recipes, with a link
to her Keralite heritage, and my mother-in-law’s Tamil style of food
preparation,” says Hazena, who grew up in Coimbatore.*

*Her fondest memory is of ‘jeeraga kanji’, made by her grandmother, with
the porridge of samba rice and moong dal thickened using ground coconut
paste towards the end. With the delicate seasoning of ‘jeeragam’ (cumin),
the kanji would once make for a sumptuous start to iftar, she recalls.*

* “The use of ingredients depends on the region. Kanji is made with coconut
milk extract rather than paste in the coastal town of Kayalpattinam, which
we have picked up in Tirunelveli too, whereas in some of the interior
towns, kanji is tempered with mint leaves flash-fried in hot ghee. Coconut
and fresh mint are essential to the kanji flavour profile,” she says.*

*Chutneys are a must. “Brinjal is boiled or char-grilled, and then mashed
with spices into a paste. We also use boiled yam and colocasia, or shallots
and dried red chillies to make chutneys,” says Hazena.*

*Among her own spins to the kanji, are a version that uses oats and cabbage
instead of rice, and the kaima urundai kanji where mincemeat balls are
cooked in coconut milk before they are added to the basmati rice gruel.*

*Easy to share*

* “Ramzan is not just about feasting. It is more about sharing our food
with the less privileged, and a dish like nonbu kanji is the ideal example
of this,” says Zulfia Syed, an engineer-turned-YouTuber who creates
culinary content from Tirunelveli and the United Arab Emirates through her
channel Zulfia’s Recipes.*

*“It is not easy to make a small serving, because a cup of rice cooked as
kanji can feed at least eight people. Since the quantity can be scaled up,
nonbu kanji is best for mass catering during Ramzan, especially in mosques.
The pressure cooker has made it easier for home cooks to make kanji at home
in smaller measures. Caterers usually prepare the gruel over firewood
stoves and leave it on ‘dum’ (heat compress) for a few hours before serving
it t. This gives a different taste to the final dish,” she says.*

*Kanji can be a meal in itself, which is why Zulfia advises home cooks to
be sparing with the measurements when making it at home. “A small family of
four needs only a few heaped tablespoons of rice and lentils to make a
generous serving,” she says.*

* “The fragrance of nonbu kanji announces to the world that something
special is being cooked. The biryani-like aroma tantalises people living
next door, even though it is just a simple gruel that is being prepared. We
add carrots and beans to the rice mixture, to make it more nutritious and
suitable for our vegetarian friends,” says Ayesha Begum, a Tiruchi-based
homemaker.*

*My note- I watched a news item about Nombu kanji in Malayalamanorama news
channel day before yesterday, preparing in very large vessels in
Malappuram, Kerala every day during ramzan. It can be consumed by all
communities attending and offered FREE. Actually the cooks are from
Coimbatore, bringing  all the required items from Coimbatore. *

*This forward is from an article appeared in Yahoo opening page today. *

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