Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Food Guide to Cooking

Beef cutlet: Detailed recipe guide to Kerala's popular tea-time snack

This appetizer can be eaten as is or along with bread and follows a very simple recipe



These meaty bites are easy to make and is also best served as an evening snack
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

There's no snack table in Kerala, which is spread without featuring a few cutlets. These palm-sized fritters are deep fried and are usually made by combining meat, vegetables, or fish with other ingredients to form an oval shape. The brown, crispy exterior of the cutlet is made by dipping the cutlet in beaten egg, which is then coated with bread crumbs.

When compared to other forms of cutlets, the beef cutlet (or beef croquette, or beef fritters) are the most popular in Kerala, and is often accompanied with a salad or spicy ketchup, as sides. What's more? No meat lover has ever stopped with just one cutlet....

Preparation time: 40 minutes

Cooking time: 20 minutes

Serves: 30

Ingredients:

These are the ingredients you will need..
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

1 kg beef

500 gms potatoes

1 ½ tsp black pepper powder

2 tsp salt

½ tsp turmeric powder

250 gms onion

100 gms shallots

6 green chillies

2 tbsp ginger

3 sprigs of curry leaves

2 tbsp coriander leaves (cilantro), chopped

2 sticks of cinnamon

1 tsp fennel seeds

2 cardamom

3 cloves

250 gms bread crumbs

3 eggs

Method:

Step 1: Cut the beef in medium-sized pieces and after washing it thoroughly, strain the excess water from the beef.

Chop the beef into medium-sized pieces and wash it thoroughly
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 2: Using a pressure cooker, cook the beef with black pepper powder, turmeric powder and salt. Let it cook for about 10 to 15 minutes, till the beef is is tender. Keep it aside for cooling.

Cooking the beef in a pressure cooker, by adding salt, black pepper powder and turmeric
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 3: Cook the potatoes till it becomes soft enough to mash it. Once the potatoes are cooked, peel off the skin and then mash it nicely with a masher. Keep it aside.

Step 4: Finely chop the onions, shallots, green chillies and ginger. You can also use a chopper to speed up the process.

Step 5: Using a food processor or mixer grinder, mince the cooked beef once it has been completely cooled. 

Chop the onions, green chillies, shallots and ginger. Mince the beef and mash the potatoes
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 6: Grind cinnamon, fennel seeds, cardamom and cloves into a powder and keep it aside.

Step 7: In a kadai or any heavy-bottomed pan, add refined oil and sauté the chopped onion, shallots, green chillies, and chopped ginger – once heated – on a low flame.

Sauté the chopped onion, shallots, green chillies, and chopped ginger
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese
Advertisement

Step 8: Add salt to speed up the sautéeing process and stir it around for another 10 to 12 minutes.

Step 9: Add the minced beef into the kadai/pan and sauté the entire mix for another 3 minutes. Add the masala in and sauté for another 2 minutes.

Once sautéed, add in the minced beef
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 10: Add the mashed potatoes and chopped coriander leaves (cilantro). Mix it well with the beef and then keep it aside for cooling.

Add the mashed potatoes and the chopped coriander leaves into the kadai
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 11: Once cooled, roll the mix into small oval shapes with lightly greased palms.

Once cooled, mold the cutlet into a palm-sized oval shape
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 12: Take the eggs and beat it nicely in a bowl. Add a pinch of salt as well.

Step 13: Dip each cutlet into the beaten egg and then roll it in bread crumbs (You can also keep these cutlet patties in the fridge for up to a week).

The cutlets are now ready to be fried...
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese

Step 14: Heat oil in a pan and flash fry the cutlets till they become golden brown. Strain the excess oil out by placing it on a tissue, after frying.

You can deep-fry or shallow-fry the cutlets till they turn crispy and golden-brown in colour
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese
Advertisement

Note: You can also shallow fry the cutlets, if you don't want to use too much oil for frying. 

Step 15: Serve hot with tomato ketchup and (or) with sliced onions.

Strain the oil from the cutlets by placing them on a tissue before serving
Image Credit: Supplied/Sobha Varghese
Sobha Varghese
A home-maker based in Mumbai, Sobha runs a popular YouTube blog called ‘Sobha's Kitchenette’ that focuses on authentic and traditional Kerala recipes
Advertisement