Ande ki Kari (Eggs in Spicy Tomato Sauce)

- Total Time
- 1¼ hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 8large eggs, at room temperature
- 3 to 4medium-size ripe tomatoes, halved through their equators
- 3tablespoons ghee, butter, safflower oil or grapeseed oil
- 3tablespoons virgin coconut oil
- 2cups finely chopped onions
- 6garlic cloves, finely grated or minced
- 2tablespoons grated fresh ginger
- ½teaspoon cumin seeds
- 1(3-inch) cinnamon stick
- 8cardamom pods, lightly crushed with the flat side of a knife
- 2teaspoons ground coriander
- 1teaspoon ground cumin
- 1teaspoon ground turmeric
- ¼teaspoon red pepper flakes
- ¼teaspoon ground black pepper
- 2teaspoons kosher salt
- ½cup boiling water
- 1 to 2teaspoons garam masala, to taste
- 3tablespoons finely chopped cilantro
- Plain yogurt, for serving (optional)
- Cooked basmati rice or flatbread, for serving (optional)
Preparation
- Step 1
Hard-boil the eggs: Bring a large pot of water to a boil, then carefully lower eggs into water. Cook for 9 to 10 minutes, then transfer with a slotted spoon to an ice bath. Let cool, then crack and peel. Reserve.
- Step 2
Set a box grater over a bowl. Starting with their cut sides, grate the tomatoes through the large holes so tomato pulp falls into bowl. Discard skins. Measure out 2 cups tomato purée. (Save the rest for another purpose, such as adding to a vinaigrette.)
- Step 3
Heat ghee (or butter or oil) and coconut oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Stir in onions and cook until deeply golden brown, 15 to 20 minutes, stirring constantly to encourage even browning.
- Step 4
Stir in garlic, ginger and cumin seeds; cook until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Stir in cinnamon and cardamom and cook another 1 minute. Stir in coriander, cumin, turmeric, red pepper flakes and black pepper, then add tomato purée. Cook, stirring frequently, until sauce is thick and fat begins to separate, about 10 minutes. Stir in salt and boiling water. Reduce heat to medium and simmer, covered, until sauce is thick and has a satin sheen, 7 to 12 minutes. Remove from heat and let sit, covered, for another 20 minutes to let flavors meld.
- Step 5
When ready to serve, cut eggs in half lengthwise. Bring sauce back to a simmer over low heat, stir in garam masala, and gently add eggs to sauce. Simmer just long enough to heat eggs through. Top with cilantro and serve with yogurt and rice or flatbread if desired.
Private Notes
Comments
This gravy can be quite a workhorse. Instead of eggs, you can put in grilled and sliced chicken, roasted vegetables, tofu, paneer (Indian cheese) or whatever else you can imagine.
In Indian cookings, you fry the dry spices first, or what we call as chonk or phoron. You need to fry the cumin seeds, the cinnamon stick (much less than what's used here) and the cardamom lightly till fragrant, and then add the chopped onions followed by ginger and garlic. Frying the dry spices gives a much deeper flavor.
You can also modify this by a) making the tomato-onion gravy a little more liquidy, b) making more of it, c) breaking eggs into the hot gravy on the stovetop and letting them poach in the slurry, similar to shakshouka.
No need to boil eggs separately.
Agree with a prior comment that this gravy is a total workhorse! My aunt would fry the ginger, garlic and onions with ghee (insert fat of your choice here, but we are partial to ghee in our household more so than coconut oil), cool and freeze into single serving sized cubes. She would then pull one of these cubes out each time she needed to quickly make a gravy and just add in spices to bloom + tomatoes + protein/veggies of choice. Makes for an easy meal prep strategy for busy weeknights!
I've been making a similar recipe by Smita Chandra for 20+ years. The main difference is using whole eggs and how long the eggs cook in the sauce. Once the basic sauce has come together nicely the eggs simmer there for 30 mins. I add extra eggs to make delicious egg salad next day. Leftover sauce freezes well for another round of simmering boiled eggs for egg salad. Recipe calls for kasoori methi (dry fenugreek leaves) instead of cilantro, 1-2 Tbsps.
My only comment is that I made the sauce about 8 hours ahead. I reheated it and followed the recipe just as we were about to sit down for dinner. I feel like that additional time of allowing the flavors to meld really made a difference. I love that Indian food just gets better and better!
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