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Thoran - Coconut Vegetable Stir-Fry

Thoran - Coconut Vegetable Stir-Fry

Thoran is the everyday vegetable dish of South India. It's not a saucy curry but a "dry" stir-fry that lets the vegetable shine. The method stays the same whether you use carrots, cabbage or green beans.

15 min
Preparation
10 min
Cooking
4
Servings
Easy
Difficulty

Ingredients

  • Grated carrots, shredded cabbage, or very finely cut green beans: 500g
  • Grated coconut (dry or fresh): 3 to 4 tablespoons
  • Turmeric: 1/2 teaspoon Kerala Turmeric Powder
  • Chilli (optional): 1 pinch
  • Oil (coconut or rapeseed): 1 tablespoon
  • Black mustard seeds: 1/2 teaspoon Mustard seeds
  • Finely sliced shallot: 1 small
  • Curry leaves (if available): 8 to 10 leaves

Instructions

  1. 1
    Awakening the spices (tadka): heat the oil in a pan. Add the mustard seeds. As soon as they crackle, add the shallot and curry leaves. Let them brown for 1 minute.
  2. 2
    Stir-fry the vegetables: add your vegetables (carrots, cabbage or beans). Salt and add the turmeric. Stir well so the fragrant oil coats every piece.
  3. 3
    Steam cooking: add 2 tablespoons of water (no more!), cover and cook over low heat for 4 to 6 minutes. The vegetable should be tender but still slightly crunchy (al dente).
  4. 4
    Finishing touch: add the coconut. Stir uncovered for 2 minutes so it absorbs the heat and any residual moisture evaporates. Serve hot.

Tips

Variations and combinations: carrot-bean duo (250 g of each, beans cut into tiny rounds), shredded white or red cabbage thoran (the mildest version, loved by children), beetroot (vivid red, sweet and earthy), spinach (1-minute cook, add coconut almost immediately), broccoli cut into tiny florets (a kid-friendly way to eat it). Express version: a ready-made soup or wok vegetable mix works too. The cut is key: the smaller or finer the vegetable, the more present the coconut flavour will be. No moisture: Thoran should be "dry". If water remains in the pan at the end, raise the heat briefly without the lid. Replacing curry leaves: if unavailable, don't substitute with bay (too different). Instead, add a little lime zest at the end for a fresh citrus note. The oil: virgin coconut oil is ideal for authenticity, but neutral rapeseed or sunflower oil works perfectly too.

Accompaniments

This dish will combine well with the following products.

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