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One thing you should know about living in Berlin is that there is no good Indian food here. None. There are plenty of Indian restaurants, but for some reason they all serve a variation on the same strangely insipid, gloppy mixtures that hold barely any resemblance to the Indian food I ate in Boston and New York over the years. The menus present no hint that India is a huge country, with myriad regions and cuisines (wherefore art thou, masala dosas of my heart?). And forget about anything spicy. Just forget it right now.

Oh, it's sad, alright. Whenever I go to London to visit my friend Betsy, we order takeaway from the Indian joint down the street from her and it is so good, so hot and complex and delicious, that I very willingly forgo all other meals in the city just to have that Indian food again and again. And then I return to Berlin and I hear about some new Indian place that has opened up and I get my hopes up, against my better judgment, and I go and once again am presented with mango chicken or some such train wreck and I feel deeply dejected all over again.

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Luckily, a lot of Indian food isn't so hard to make at home. (Though I leave dosas and iddlies to the experts in New York.) Thanks to my father's obsession with Indian cooking, I even have a nice little collection of Indian cookbooks, full of wonderful things to eat. And anyway, it's not like I'm getting out of the house much these days. Hugo's nap schedule takes precedence over all.

I found this recipe for black lentil soup the other day when I staring at a jar of beluga lentils in my pantry and wondering how I'd use them up without a nice piece of salmon lying around to pair them with. Here you parboil the lentils with ginger and cardamom. Then you make a soup base with onions, garlic, butter and a quartet of spices, plus some canned tomatoes and stock, before adding the lentils back to the pot to simmer into a soup. It's very easy and was easily left halfway through when Hugo starting melting down, before being picked up later after he'd gone to bed. (This is often how I cook these days, in fits and starts. Just today I started a fruitcake recipe and literally abandoned it with one bowl already full of ingredients like chopped apples and puréed figs to go outside and run errands with the cranky child. Now that he's asleep, I was able to finish the job and the fruitcake's perfuming the house from the oven. It sounds irritating, but has its own satisfactions, this stop-and-go cooking.)

I added more lentils than the original recipe called for and used less butter and next time I make it, I'd probably purée half the soup, because it looks a little messy otherwise, but these are very faint criticisms. The soup is wonderfully fragrant and spicy and tastes just the way it's "supposed" to, at least to my Indian-starved palate. When you stir in the final bit of butter at the end to melt, it separates and pools at the edges of the soup. It's very nice indeed.

Rajat Parr's Black Lentil Soup
Makes 6 servings

1.5 cups black (Beluga) lentils
3 cardamom pods
One 1-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and thinly sliced, plus 2 tablespoons minced ginger
3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 large onion, finely diced
3 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon garam masala
2 quarts vegetable stock
1 cup canned crushed tomatoes
Salt to taste

1. In a pot, cover the lentils, cardamom and sliced ginger with 1 inch of water. Bring to a boil and cook over moderately high heat until the lentils start to soften, about 10 minutes. Drain the lentils and transfer to a bowl; discard the cardamom and ginger.

2. Melt 2 tablespoons of the butter in the pot. Add the onion, garlic and minced ginger and and cook over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until softened, 8 minutes. Reduce the heat to low. Add the spices and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 4 minutes.

3. Add the stock, tomatoes and lentils to the pot and bring to a boil over high heat. Simmer over moderate heat until the lentils are softened and the soup has thickened, about 1 hour. Stir in the remaining tablespoon of butter and season with salt. Ladle into bowls and serve.

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31 responses to “Rajat Parr’s Black Lentil Soup”

  1. I Can Be Jell-O Avatar

    I like the shout-out to the south indian food, being that my family is from that region. Dosas are truly the best!

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  2. Dawn Avatar

    London in the late 80s is where I originally discovered Indian food, and nothing has ever compared since. I love the idea of making my own and look forward to trying this recipe.

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  3. Victoria Avatar

    Okay, Luisa.
    In addition to the meatballs (and the rice-stuffed tomatoes and Bill Telephan’s pappa al pomodoro, and your spaghetti with a dollop of ricotta), another recipe of yours that I have made my own is your Nigel Slater chicken curry.
    Except I call it Luisa’s Raj Chicken.
    So here’s another one that looks good enough to try right away!
    I’m so glad you love the Natalie Merchant CD. I love it too.

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  4. David Avatar
    David

    What’s the name of the place in London?!

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  5. Luisa Avatar

    Victoria – HA! I love it!! Luisa’s Raj Chicken has such a ring to it!! xo
    David – oh, I have no idea. Somewhere in Putney!

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  6. Sylee Avatar

    Now, of course, I’m eager to know what you do with salmon and beluga lentils.

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  7. Patrick Wilken Avatar

    I recently moved from London to Berlin and your description of Indian food is sadly accurate. Just before we left I had great takeout with friends from a vegetarian Indian restaurant in Church St. I am getting hungry just thinking about it.
    TW: Do you know of any good Vietnamese places in Berlin? The situation for most Asian food here seems pretty grim, except perhaps Japanese.

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  8. Kay Avatar

    Traveling in India was hands down my most amazing culinary adventure to date. I would go back for the food alone!! After much dismal Indian in the states, we got incredibly lucky and found a restaurant just 30 minutes from us that almost–almost– transports us back to India. It would be wonderful to be able to make these foods at home, but have yet to really attempt it.

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  9. Amanda Avatar

    I was coming here to copy down the beet and ginger soup recipe from ages ago that I was going to try out tonight and I saw your new post… This yummy-looking, richly spiced lentil soup is something I must try my hand at! I’m such a huge fan of the simplicity of the recipes you post and the great results I (as an amateurish cook) turn out when I try them, so despite my initial intimidation by this recipe, I am going to go for it! If I hadn’t started reading this blog, I would have been petrified of attempting some of the fancy-cookbook things I have (succesfully!) made, so for that I truly thank you, Luisa~
    (off to start the soup crossing fingers)

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  10. Amanda Avatar

    So I made the beet and ginger soup (it is quick to make!)… verdict: um, not sure how I feel about it! I think I put too much ginger. I went for “heaping teaspoons”, haha, which made it quite bitter? I swear this is the only thing I messed up after trying tons of recipes from here, so it is most likely all my fault. Oh well, I am not discouraged 🙂

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  11. Sasha Avatar

    I think it is safe to say that there is no good Indian food in all of Germany. Your description stands for Munich, where I live, and most German cities I know of. Sigh.
    Thank goodness for recipes like this.

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  12. Vicki Avatar
    Vicki

    Hi Luisa, must try the lentil soup as it looks delicious. Can you recommend some Indian cookbooks? Thank you and love hearing about baby Hugo — he sounds (and looks) adorable.

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  13. Lindy Avatar
    Lindy

    Soup looks wonderful….Can I substitute red or green lentils if I can’t find black?

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  14. Zoe Avatar
    Zoe

    Now that you mention it, my best and favorite meals in NYC were Indian meals on 6th street!

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  15. Leslie Avatar

    Hi Luisa, I will agree with you about 99% of the Indian food here, but I did like a place called AmmAmma in Kreuzberg I went to recently – with my translator’s group full of picky British and American foodies. THEY HAVE DOSAS! And though it’s kind of loud and tiny, the food was pretty good and cheap. Even Deborah who considers India her “secound country” was delighted. So if you are near Urbanstr. sometime, give it a try!

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  16. Leslie Avatar

    Patrick, I know you asked Luisa but if I may answer too: for unusual Vietnamese home cooking, try my neighborhood restaurant, Waterlily (Karl-Marx-Allee). Their pho is only so-so but they have some really great interesting family recipes like eggplant-green-banana-tofu curry, betel-leaf-wrapped meatballs and sticky-rice-banana dumplings. 3Moms in Kreuzberg is another good spot, and Côcô in Mitte for bahn mi.

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  17. Luisa Avatar

    Patrick – there is a huge Vietnamese community in Berlin, so there must be good places around. But so far, I don’t have one that I can totally, whole-heartedly recommend. For good Thai, go to Dao Thai on Kantstrasse (also a good street for Chinese food at Aroma).
    Amanda – what a compliment! So glad it’s helped you. And sorry about that beet soup – that was ages ago! I don’t even really remember it… Better luck next time? 🙂
    Sasha – you know what, though? There’s a really good Indian restaurant at Bahnhof Kassel Wilhelmshöhe. I’m not even kidding. And there’s a good Indian restaurant in Frankfurt, I used to go there during the book fair. Can’t remember the name now…
    Vicki – I’ll ask my father to put his faves in a comment here!
    Lindy – you can sub green lentils without any trouble. Red ones turn to mush instantly – I’d use them for something else. (Though they make wonderful soup – they need barely a fraction of the time that this soup does.)
    Zoe – my faves were around Lexington and 28th Street. Sigh!
    Leslie – what a wonderful tip!! I will definitely try it, sounds really good. (Ahhh, there I go again, with my high hopes!!) And thanks for the Waterlily rec, sounds really interesting. I don’t know 3Moms. But I didn’t like CôCô! 😦 It was so…bland. And missing, like, half the things that banh mi’s should have. Have you tried Babanbé in Kreuzberg? The first time I went I didn’t like it, but I’ve since been back and it’s not bad.

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  18. Heena Avatar

    Hi! Glad to hear you like Indian food so much. We usually use black lentils to make dal makhani, literally translated to buttered lentils. The recipe is similar but simmered for longer and finished with cream and butter to make a rich lentil dish that you can scoop up with hot naan. Another dish you might like that comes from the same family is rajma (red bean curry). Here is a recipe adapted from my mom’s kitchen in case you’re interested: http://www.tiffintales.com/2010/05/30/indian-comfort-food-rajma-chaval-red-bean-curry-with-rice/

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  19. Lynn Holstein Avatar
    Lynn Holstein

    Happy Birthday, dear Luisa, from Tel Aviv

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  20. Verena Avatar
    Verena

    When I arrived in London, I had a temping job in a literary agency. And the woman I was sat in an office with told me, after she found out I’m German, me about her best friend. This friend was about to move from New York to Berlin where she grew up. It’s a small world.
    And yes, the state of ‘German’ Indian food is horrible. With the few odd exceptions.

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  21. Stephanie Avatar

    Oh lovely! I am always looking for simple bean soup and stew dishes for the week and we love Indian food, so — voila! A new dish to try very soon. (:

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  22. Luisa Avatar

    Heena – yes, the chef said this was his take on dal! Thank you for that link, the curry looks amazing. Going to try it soon!
    Dearest Lynn, thank you!! xoxo
    Verena – small world, indeed! Betsy told me about you 🙂

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  23. Sissy Avatar
    Sissy

    Any cookbooks by Madhur Jaffrey are excellent. An Invitation to Indian Cooking is probably her best known and named a classic by James Beard. Some people say she is the Julia Child of Indian cooking. Also Julie Sahni’s Classic Indian Cooking is a classic and excellent.

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  24. Shirin Avatar

    Just to chime in with more Vietnamese food recommendations – Jimmy Woo and and Chez Dang are both on Friedelstr. in Neukölln and have really similar, delicious Southeast Asian menus(apparently they are owned by cousins). Laotian and Vietnamese noodle soups and Cambodian curries that are a lot spicier and more complex than most of what I’ve tasted in Berlin and dishes with excellent names like ‘Revenge of the Tofu’ and ‘Siam pasta Parachuting’. 2 diamonds in the rough…
    The sandwiches at Babanbé are enormous and tasty, but my favorite Bahn Mi in Berlin so far has been at the Don Juan Center in Lichtenberg – also a few shops with good pho there!

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  25. Luisa Avatar

    Shirin – what great tips!! Thank you. Can’t wait to try them all out.
    And as for other Indian cookbook recommendations, my father loves Shehzad Husain’s An Indian Table.

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  26. Martini Avatar

    No matter what you are cooking, know that you havent cooked until you have cooked with Wusthoff Cutlery

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  27. Food storage Avatar

    Pretty Much post it is. I enjoyed very much. If you want to know about “Food Storage” please visit: http://www.efoodsdirect.com

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  28. ChristinaM Avatar

    Good dosas can be found here: http://www.qype.com/place/271533-Chandni-Berlin
    Just make sure they know you’re very serious when you ask for “scharf”.

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  29. Heide M. Avatar

    I’ll have to try this.

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  30. Berg Avatar
    Berg

    I came into December looking for the spice cookies, as i have the fruit loaf in my oven at the moment, and actually laughed out loud reading this as it was sooo true during ’09 – ’11 (whenI left). I often ate at hoai nam (http://www.hoainam.de/index.html) on Skalitzer Str. as it was just around the corner from a friends house, and i worked in mitte near two vietnamese places and hoai nam was significantly better than both of them, the pho ga i think was pretty decent and the mango lassi were soooo good not sure about authenticity with the lassi but it was yum. I once spent 1 month on a mission to find goat to make goat curry, i was laughed out of most places. Other than that there is one good curry place in berlin, but it has forever eluded me, as while at karneval der kulturen i had a real curry from a stall, forgot their name though, it was seriously good.

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  31. Heather Avatar

    I just made this and it’s wonderful. So fragrant and flavorful, with just the right amount of spice. Thank you!

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