The Weekend Cook: Nachiket Barve
The Weekend Cook: Nachiket Barve

The designer invites us into his kitchen and shares his food memories, favourite dishes and more.


 

Fashion Designer Nachiket Barve shares his food memories, favourite dishes and more

 

 

 

My favourite dish

 

Golden Fried Prawns with a Honey Soy Dip

 

I love to cook

 

Green Thai Curry

 

Five things you’ll always find in my fridge

 

Milk, eggs, champagne, cheese and fruit

 

A childhood food memory

 

My mother feeding me cubed alphonso mangoes from our family orchards, on our terrace. That’s probably my earliest food memory.

 

I started cooking…

 

At the age of 8. I remember making an omelette for myself after school. I couldn’t light the gas and my neighbour would help me do that, since my parents were working doctors.

 

My favourite cuisines

 

Thai, Italian and Indian – I favour food that uses simple, fresh ingredients.

 

My favourite ingredient

 

Eggs. They are versatile and can be cooked in so many ways.

 

Best food destinations

 

Thailand and Singapore

 

Where I get my recipes

 

The internet, especially BBCgoodfood.com. I usually cook using my imagination rather than recipes. Jamie Oliver and Donna Hay have some great, easy stuff as well.

 

My favourite dining companion

 

My wife Surabhi, though she’s vegetarian, so we cannot share food. But we enjoy cooking together and sharing food experiences.

 

The best meal I’ve ever had

 

Varan bhat and fried prawns at home. I also relished a meal of fresh oysters on the beach in Normandy, picked up by divers and served with champagne.

 

The restaurants I love

 

Indigo Deli in Mumbai, hole-in-the-wall places in old Goa run by homemakers who cook fish, and a lot of trattorias around Florence.

 


 


 

Honey Tossed Flat Noodles

 

 

Ingredients

 

2 packets flat noodles

 

600 gms assorted vegetables (green,red, yellow bell peppers, mushrooms, baby corn, carrots, French beans, broccoli

 

Spring onions, finely chopped to garnish

 

1.5 inch cube ginger, julienned

 

10-15 cloves garlic

 

Green and dry red chillies

 

2 tsp dark soy sauce

 

1 tsp fish sauce (optional)

 

1 tbsp rice vinegar

 

2 tbsp honey

 

2 tbsp sesame oil/groundnut oil

 

1 tsp sesame seeds

 

Five spice powder

 

Freshly ground black pepper

 


 

Method

 

     

  • Take a large utensil and add about 1.5 litres of water to it.
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  • Bring it to a boil and add the flat noodles to it. Keep turning them and let them cook till done. They should be a bit firm, but not raw. Once cooked, tip the noodles into a colander/ strainer and wash with water immediately.
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  • Mix noodles with some peanut oil so that they don’t stick to each other. Put them aside.
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  • In a non-stick wok, add the oil and let it reach almost smoking point.
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  • Add the garlic and ginger and let them get a bit golden, but not burnt.
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  • Add chillies and the toughest vegetables first – French beans, carrots, broccoli and mushrooms.
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  • Stir-fry on high flame, or else they will wilt and start releasing water, which makes the noodles soggy.
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  • Now add the bell peppers and spring onion bulbs and keep stirring till they go a bit soft.
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  • Add the noodles and toss, so the vegetables mix well with them.
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  • Add the soy sauce, fish sauce, freshly ground pepper, five spice powder and vinegar in quick succession while you keep tossing the noodles.
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  • Add the honey and let the noodles caramelize a bit on the flame.
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  • Garnish with the toasted sesame seeds and spring onions.
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Easy Hacks 

 

     

  • If you’re short on time or lazy, you can reduce the tough vegetables that take long to cook and try replacing the noodles with leftover rice, to make a quick fix fried rice.
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  •  A non-vegetarian version can easily be done adding meats of choice at the beginning, cooked along with the tough veggies.
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  • Do not add salt. The soy sauce and fish sauce are salty enough.
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Nachiket’s Top 5 Tips For Men Who Cook

 

 

     

  • Don’t overcook the food. Fish, meat and veggies all lose their vitality if they are cooked for too long.
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  • Use fresh, high quality produce. That’s half the battle won.
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  • It’s all about balance. Contrast sweet with hot flavours, mix colours and textures. Cooking is not rocket science; learn the basics and then experiment.
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  • Barbecuing, stir frying and steaming are easy, no-fuss ways of cooking. You can make things healthy, fast and innovative.
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  • Invest in a few key basics. They include good knives, non-stick pans and a small pantry of sauces and condiments.
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