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Ingredients being used in the preparation of a plum chutney. This is a list of notable chutney varieties. Chutney is a sauce and condiment in Indian cuisine, the cuisines of the Indian subcontinent and South Asian cuisine. It is made from a highly variable mixture of spices, vegetables, or fruit. [1]
Other prominent ingredients and combinations include coriander, capsicum, mint (coriander and mint chutneys are often called हरा hara chutney, Hindi for "green"), Tamarind or imli (often called meethi chutney, as मिठाई meethi in Hindi means "sweet"), sooth (or saunth, made with dates and ginger), coconut, onion, prune, tomato ...
A garlic chutney in South India prepared using red chili pepper. Chammanthi podi; Coriander chutney; Coconut chutney; Garlic chutney (made from fresh garlic, coconut and groundnut) Hang curd hari mirch pudina chutney (typical north Indian) Lime chutney (made from whole, unripe limes) Mango chutney (keri) chutney (made from unripe, green mangoes ...
Major Grey's Chutney is a type of chutney, reputedly created by a 19th-century British Army officer of the same name who, though likely apocryphal, [1] [2] [3] presumably lived in British India. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Its characteristic ingredients are mango , raisins , vinegar , lime juice, onion , tamarind extract (occasionally), sweetening, and spices .
Tomato chutney is a type of chutney, originating from the Indian subcontinent, prepared using tomatoes as the primary ingredient. [1] The tomatoes can be diced, mashed or pulped, and additional typical ingredients used include ginger, chilli, sugar, salt, aam papad, raisin, dates and spices and additionally onion, garlic and peanut or dal for the south Indian version. [1]
Ketchup and mustard on fries Various grades of U.S. maple syrup. A condiment is a supplemental food (such as a sauce or powder) that is added to some foods to impart a particular flavor, enhance their flavor, [1] or, in some cultures, to complement the dish, but that cannot stand alone as a dish.
Garlic chutney is used for cooking in many Indian (especially Maharashtra, [3] [10] Gujarat, Punjab, Rajasthan [11] and northern Karnataka [12]) and Pakistani homes. [4] It is often eaten with fresh, hot bhakri (a flat, unleavened roti made from flour of grains such as jowar (sorghum), bajra (pearl millet), nachni (finger millet), etc.). [3]
Green mango chutney, [1] also known as raw mango chutney, [2] is an Indian and Pakistan chutney prepared from unripe mangoes. [3] Ripe mangoes are sweet and are not used for chutneys as they are eaten raw. Green unripe mangoes are hard and sour, and they are cooked as chutneys. Mango chutneys are tangy in taste.