Parippu — coconut milk dhal lentil curry
Red lentils melted in coconut milk, perfumed with turmeric, curry leaves, and a "temper" of onion and spices fried separately then poured over. Creamy, comforting, slightly spicy.
Red lentils melted in coconut milk, perfumed with turmeric, curry leaves, and a "temper" of onion and spices fried separately then poured over. Creamy, comforting, slightly spicy.
At home in Horagolla, the parippu was simmering from morning on the wood fire — it is the dish of the poor and the rich, and believe me, at the table of a president as well as a peasant, it is served every day. The secret, I tell you frankly, is the temper: you make the onion, mustard, and curry leaves sing in hot coconut oil, then you throw it over the lentils — that sizzle is the soul of the curry. Mix with rice at your fingertips, never with a fork, otherwise you lose the pleasure.
- •Red lentils (masoor / parippu) — one bowl (curry base)
- •Fresh coconut milk (first and second pressing) — to desired creaminess (creamy binder)
- •Fresh turmeric or powder — a pinch (color and earthiness)
- •Curry leaves — one sprig (signature aroma)
- •Red onion, garlic, green chili — to taste (temper)
- •Black mustard seeds, pandanus leaves (rampe) — a little (aromatics)
- •Coconut oil — a drizzle (frying the temper)
Parippu — coconut milk dhal lentil curry
Red lentils melted in coconut milk, perfumed with turmeric, curry leaves, and a "temper" of onion and spices fried separately then poured over. Creamy, comforting, slightly spicy.
Why this dish? Parippu is the humblest and most universal curry in Sri Lanka, present at almost every lunch, from the family estate at Horagolla to the canteens of Colombo. For Chandrika Kumaratunga, daughter of a rural family from Attanagalla who became president, it is the childhood memory dish: mild, nourishing, the same in every home on the island she governed.
At home in Horagolla, the parippu was simmering from morning on the wood fire — it is the dish of the poor and the rich, and believe me, at the table of a president as well as a peasant, it is served every day. The secret, I tell you frankly, is the temper: you make the onion, mustard, and curry leaves sing in hot coconut oil, then you throw it over the lentils — that sizzle is the soul of the curry. Mix with rice at your fingertips, never with a fork, otherwise you lose the pleasure.
Ingredients (period version)
- Red lentils (masoor / parippu) — one bowl (curry base)
- Fresh coconut milk (first and second pressing) — to desired creaminess (creamy binder)
- Fresh turmeric or powder — a pinch (color and earthiness)
- Curry leaves — one sprig (signature aroma)
- Red onion, garlic, green chili — to taste (temper)
- Black mustard seeds, pandanus leaves (rampe) — a little (aromatics)
- Coconut oil — a drizzle (frying the temper)
Ingredients
- Red lentils — 200 g (base)
- Coconut milk — 400 ml (binder)
- Ground turmeric — 1/2 tsp (color)
- Curry leaves — 10-12 leaves (aroma)
- Red onion — 1 small, sliced (temper)
- Garlic — 2 cloves (temper)
- Green chili — 1, slit (heat)
- Black mustard seeds — 1/2 tsp (temper)
- Coconut oil — 2 tbsp (frying)
- Salt — to taste (seasoning)
Method
- Rinse the lentils in clear water until it runs clear.
- Put them in a pot with turmeric, half the curry leaves, and water to cover. Cook 15-20 min until they soften.
- Add coconut milk and salt, let simmer 5 min without boiling hard (the coconut milk would curdle).
- In a small pan, heat coconut oil, pop the mustard seeds, add onion, garlic, chili, and remaining curry leaves. Fry until onion is golden.
- Pour this sizzling temper over the lentils, mix, and serve with white rice.
How it was made : In the village, coconut milk was hand-pressed every morning from grated coconut on the "hiramanaya" (a serrated metal bench grater), and the wood fire gave a slight smoky note. The first pressing, thick, was reserved for the end of cooking; the second, thinner, was used to cook the lentils.
The contemporary twist : A spoonful of parippu on a grilled toast in the morning, "dhal on toast" style — a nod between Colombo and the London breakfast.
Chandrika Kumaratunga · Charactorium