Eating your heart out at Leh - II

The Teemok




Teemok is a steamed bread eaten with either with mutton or vegetable curry.The best Teemok in town is definitely at The Tibetan Wok, at Leh main market. I got a quick recipe for the bread from the chef. Knead all- purpose flour, with a little baking soda with warm water, with some corriander leafs and bring it to a parantha consistency. Roll it out and fold it as if to fold a paper fan and shape it in this nice bundle. Now steam it for twenty minutes and serve hot with the curry.

For the curry slice vegetables such as cabbage, carrots, spinach, spring onions. In the wok add some white oil, add some crushed garlic and ginger, saute for a minute. Add the vegetables stir fry for couple of minutes add water or vegetable stock and bring it to boil. Add soya sauce, vinegar and a dash of salt n pepper. Let it just cook through in high heat without over boiling the vegetables. Keep it just tender.

For the meat sauce boil the meat first and slice it in small chunks, cook similarly to that of the vegetable curry only replacing normal soya for dark soya sauce and also add sliced tomatoes for the gravy's thickness. Adding corn flour as a thickener is absolutely optional.

Light and yummy Teemok is ready to eat! Don't ever miss it if you are in Leh. Remember The Tibetan Wok is the place to go for!

Comments

Srobona RC said…
I am damning you for ur culinary adventure. I have had to curtail my international food fiesta owing to guest in the house. Last exotic thing i cooked was Chicken Tagliatelle in Pineapple & wine sauce ...yum yum
nishikutumbo said…
can't wait to have some of these delicious bites ... hope the recipe was noted down with some urgency of purpose? ;P
illusions said…
Yes Nishikutumbo it has been, now I await your arrival in Delhi to test. And Meeaaooowww! that can hardly be an excuse for not sharing the recipe with your devoted readers :-) Please oblige and write a post on the same at least.
Running Shoes said…
You better cook this next week, otherwise bhalo hobe na... i am salivating and hyperventilating all at the same time...
I wonder why I did not read this earlier. First time reading this. Have not been to Tibetan Wok. Or have I? I do not recall. But have been to eat at your place. And I certainly recall that. I am sure you can make it as good read better. So get your ingredients ready coz it won't be long before we pop in to try out your recipe.
illusions said…
Can do, can do and shall do:-D
Atanu said…
are you gonna prepapre this all, then am getting my tickets to delhi this weeknd.....to hog on and feel like in Leh
illusions said…
Not this weekend, am working, but next weekend there is a high possibility :-D
Unknown said…
I find Tibetan Buddhism very hypocritical at times.

1. Vajrayana ritualized everything - the very thing Buddha tried to avoid
2. Some Buddhist states (eg. Bhutan) won't allow killing of animals, but have no qualms eating meat, which is imported from India.
3. Almost all Tibetan buddhists are non-veg. There goes Buddha's teachings of ahimsa.
Mirage said…
yummy.... pls khawas... :)Like the look of the bread... & with mutton it would be...lip-smaking i am sure...
illusions said…
Dear WH, thanks for sharing yoru thoughts! Although you are right in your critique, but the large Budhhist population in rural India is largely vegetarian just like any other rural population in India. In Leh too I found a huge number of vegetarian restaurants and saw local people prefer vegetarian over non-veg. Anyone with any available pice of land grow their own food conforming to the ways of slow food culture vis-a-vis junk food. It is more for the visiting tourists rather than the locals Buddhist and Islamic population in Ladakh. So it cannot be blamed on Buddhism or it's schools. If you just believe in what Buddha preached 3000 years ago that is enough, but what can you do where Bamiyan Buddha is destroyed? Why does even a statue of Buddha after so many years can pose a threat to the extremists, have you ever asked that question? Because "Peace, Compassion and love for humanity" are more powerful than the barrels and bores of any gun that has been invented ever. I think we should be more sensitive towards the doctrines of 8 fold path before we generalise on Buddhism.

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