International Cuisine, Plant Based Dishes, Salad

Ndengu with Kachumbari – Combo Kenyan Meal | GF and Vegan | #FoodieMondayBlogHop

As part of the week 172 for #FoodieMondayBloghop, Mayuri suggested a unique theme of #InternationalFeast with the caveat that your dish (irrespective of cuisine / course) must come from a letter of a country that begins with the alphabet of your first name. 

So, for K I had only 5 countries – Kazakhstan, Kenya, KiribatiKuwait  & Kyrgyzstan – out of which I chose Kenya. 

I looked at some dishes and was surprised that they had a lot of similarity with Indian dishes / Condiments, and the more I looked, I was tempted to make a small Kenyan meal. The first dish I liked was Ndengu (or stewed Moong Dal Curry) bookmarked from here

I kept bookmarking dishes and looked for salads which would serve as a snack and a meal, and imagine my surprise when every google search threw up the name Kachumbari Salad. Having stayed in Mumbai long enough, I knew Kachumber to be a Gujarati Salad featuring Onions, Cukes and Tomatoes in a tangy mix. 

And again Kachumbari had the same combo, although some versions added Avocados as well. 

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Well, avocados are not in season right now (and trust me where I live, they are sold for the price of Gold through the year !, so I decided to skip it) . But there was an interesting way to use the copious amount of onions that went into this salad, so if you are intrigued so far, check out to make this yummy crunchy salad, and also some ways to incorporate them as an appetiser. 

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Sending this Combo Meal to FoodieMonday Blog Hop Week #172 themed #InternationalFeast and #MLLA hosted by Renu. 

Let’s look at the recipes one by one:

(A) Salad / Kachumbari – Vegan, GF Salad

Prep time – 10 mins , Serves – 2, Zero Cook



What you need:

Red Onion – 1 large – sliced thin

Ripe Tomatoes – 2 medium – sliced

Cucumber – 1 medium – sliced 

Salt – to taste

Lemon juice – 1 TBSP

Chopped Cilantro – 2 tsp

Avocado – 1/2 (optional – I didn’t use)

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How to:

In a bowl, add onions and a generous addition of salt, 2 TBSP hot water and mix well. Keep aside for 10 mins in the fridge. Squeeze the water from the onions, add the rest of the ingredients excluding salt and toss well. Serve immediately.



If serving as an appetiser, squeeze out the onions and lay on an absorbent towel for 5 mins, then add the rest. Place on toasted french bread / baguette slices with or without a smear of mashed avocado and serve as finger food. 

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(B) Ndengu – GF, Vegan Whole Moong Stew

Notes – I made this satvik style as mom prefers it that way. But you can always use onion, garlic and ginger as per the original recipe (which I modified with some tweaks). 

Prep time – 10 mins , Serves – 3, Cook time – 10 mins + 2 hours soaking time

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What you need:

Dry Whole Moong Dal / Green Moong – 100 grams

Onion – 1/2 medium (large)

Tomatoes – 2 nos

Carrots – 1 medium (diced)

Ginger – 1/2 inch

Garlic – 2 pods

salt – to taste

Red chilli powder – 1/2 tsp

Curry powder – 1/2 tsp (I used Madras Curry powder)

Turmeric / haldi – 1/4 tsp

Coriander powder – 1 T (T = tablespoon)

Jeera / Cumin powder – 1/2 T

Dry mango powder (Amchur) – 1/2 tsp (or to taste)

Oil – 1 tsp

Coriander leaves & lemon juice – for garnish 

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How to make Ndengu:

Wash and Soak Moong Dal for 2 hours. Pressure cook it with chopped carots till soft but not mushy. Let the pressure come down on its own (alternately, you can also cook the soaked and drained moong till al dente). Drain the water if any and reserve. 

In a pan, heat the oil, sautè the onions, garlic, ginger till onions turn translucent and slightly brown. Now add the tomatoes and cook till mushy. Add the spice powders, and saute again. Add the moong+carrot and mix well. Add any drained water from the moong (if any) Or add veg stock or warm water to the curry. Let it simmer on a low flame for 8-9 mins till the stew is thick

Add coriander leaves and lemon juice and serve with steamed rice. I added Kachumbari as a salad / side and we loved the entire meal. 


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12 Comments

  1. This sounds so interesting, and extremely delicious! Great share for the theme. 🙂

  2. I loved this satvik Moong stew recipe!!! Very nice and healthy share!! Thanks!!

  3. Perfect share for the theme Kalyani. Loved your post. I will try the dal tomorrow.

  4. Mayuri Patel

    Kalyani, ndengu looks so delicious.Tempting me to make it tomorrow for lunch. I'm so happy you chose Kenya. Kenya cuisine has been influenced by the English, Arabs and Indians. So thus the similarity to Indian food. Kachumbari is usually served with everything right from rice dishes to meat dishes.

  5. mildly indian

    I was reading your post and thinking, How similar the food flavours are that have travelled the world yet how different we feel. Fabulous meal combo. Loving each element in it.

  6. Vidya Narayan

    Kalyani, I am a firm believer of simple things that taste delicious. Clearly the moong curry, minus the onion and garlic does tick that box! Healthy, Delicious and filling lunch idea with the gorgeous side of fresh salad makes it a complete meal.

  7. Poonam Bachhav

    I love such simple yet soul satisfying meals Kalyani ! I am sure this satvik whole mung stew would be a hit at my place. So healthy and filling !

  8. Love these simple yet soul satisfying meal of Kenya 🙂 Awesome pick for theme sharing Kalyani !!!!

  9. This looks so interesting and simple. Must try it soon

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