Ingredients:
• 750g boneless meat, cut into medium-sized cubes and washed clean
• 4, 1 inch sticks of Cinnamon
• 1 Bay Leaf
• 6 Cloves
• 4 Cardamoms
• 1/2 tbsp Cumin seeds
• 1/2 cup finely chopped Onions
• 2 tsp minced Green chillies (their seeds to be taken out before mincing)
• 1 tbsp chopped coriander
• 1/3 cup Ghee
• Salt to taste
• 1 small Onion
• 5 flakes Garlic
• 1/2 cup curds
• 1 inch piece Ginger scraped
• 3.5 tsp Coriander seeds
• 4 red dry chillies
Method:
- Grind finely small onion, garlic, ginger, coriander seeds and chillies. Mix curds in the ground pulp and keep aside.
- Heat ghee in a pan, put in the chopped onions and fry until brown and crisp. Take out with 2 slotted spoons pressing the onions in between them. When tolerably cooled crush the onions and keep aside.
- Tie the whole spices – cloves, bay leaf, cardamoms, cinnamon and cumin seeds – in a small muslin bag. Lower this bag of spices in 3 cups of boiling water in a large vessel which should be kept on fire.
- Put in the mutton cubes and the ground paste. Make the fire medium and let cook till the mutton is almost tender.
- Lift the spice bag with a tong and keep it in a bowl. When it cools, press the bag hard to take out its juice. Discard the bag and add the juice to the mutton that is cooking on the fire.
- Add chopped onions, the remaining ghee that is left over after frying the onions and salt to taste.
- Cook on medium fire until the mutton pieces are tender. Stir in between 2-3 times to prevent the masala sticking to the bottom and burning as the liquid evaporates.
- This mutton korma should not be completely dry or remain like a gravy.
- Transfer to a nice serving dish.
- Garnish with chopped coriander.
- Serve hot with parathas.
Recipe courtesy of Sify Bawarchi

