• Yield: Serves 4

  • Time: 5 minutes prep, 10 minutes cooking, 15 minutes total


Unripe Papaya Salad with Chilies
Kacchu Papaya Nu Salade

 

This is a specialty from Surat in northwestern India. I am always drawn to the scent of a green papaya enhanced by nutty mustard seed popped in hot oil. I often make a point of strolling through certain suburban districts in Mumbai on Sunday mornings when the allure of freshly fried papdis (wide strips of hand-pushed garbanzo bean flour dough) draws me to the line of customers who patiently await their turn to buy grease-stained, newspaper-wrapped packets of papdi and plastic bags filled with this mouth-watering salad accompaniment.

 

Back at home, I serve this as an appetizer with baskets of flame-roasted or fried papads (lentil wafers). Enjoy them on hot buttered toast for a quick lunch.


Ingredients

  • 1 medium green (unripe) papaya, peeled, seeded, and thinly sliced (see note)

  • Juice of 1 large lime

  • 2 tablespoons finely chopped fresh cilantro

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 1 teaspoon sugar

  • 1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric

  • 3 to 4 fresh Thai, cayenne, or serrano chilies, slit open lengthwise

  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil

  • 1 teaspoon black mustard seed

  • 1/4 teaspoon hing (asafetida)

Instructions

 

1. In a medium bowl, combine the papaya, lime juice, cilantro, salt, sugar, turmeric, and chilies. Mix well.

 

2. In a small skillet, heat the oil over medium-high heat; add the mustard seed. When it begins to pop, cover the skillet. As soon as the seed finishes popping, add the hing and sizzle for 2 to 5 seconds. Pour the seed-oil mixture over the papaya and toss well to coat. Serve chilled or at room temperature.

 

Note: Choose a papaya that is green, firm, and unripe. Peel it with a potato peeler or a paring knife. The flesh will be light green in color (unlike the orange/red color when ripe). Slice the papaya lengthwise, and with a spoon scoop out and discard the pearl-like white seeds (which will turn a beautiful black color when ripe). Use the slicer blade attachment of a food processor to slice the papaya thin; a box grater's slicer surface will also suffice.


Adapted from The Turmeric Trail: Recipes and Memories from an Indian Childhood by Raghavan Iyer (St. Martin's Press, 2002). Copyright 2002 by Raghavan Iyer.

Raghavan Iyer is a cookbook author, writer, culinary educator, spokesperson and consultant. He is the author of several cookbooks, including The Tumeric Trail, a 2003 James Beard award finalist for Best International Cookbook. His articles have appeared in publications such as Cooking Light, Fine Cooking, Saveur, Weight Watchers Magazine, Cooking Pleasures and Gastronomica. He received the IACP's Award of Excellence for Cooking Teacher of the Year in 2004, and was a finalist for the 2005 James Beard journalism award. He is co-founder of the Asian Culinary Arts Institutes, Ltd.