Gujarat's simplest and most satisfying curry — ripe tomatoes reduced into a thick masala, finished with crispy sev. Ready in 20 minutes.
Sev tameta is Gujarat at its most honest — ripe tomatoes cooked down into a thick masala, finished with thin chickpea sev noodles that soften just enough to absorb the curry while retaining bite. The name is simply Gujarati for sev (the noodles) and tameta (tomato). It reveals everything about Gujarati flavour philosophy in a single bowl: the mustard seed tadka for aroma, tomatoes reduced until their acidity mellows, sugar for balance, sev for texture. Twenty minutes and it tastes like it took all day.
Heat oil on medium-high. Add mustard seeds and wait for them to pop — 30 seconds. Add cumin seeds, hing and curry leaves. Stand back — curry leaves splutter. Add green chilli.
Mustard seeds pop when internal moisture converts to steam and ruptures the seed coat — this indicates oil temperature around 180°C, hot enough for aromatic compounds to extract efficiently. Curry leaves at this temperature release carbazole alkaloids and linalool into the fat immediately.
Add chopped tomatoes and all dry spices. Cook on medium heat, stirring occasionally, until tomatoes completely break down and the masala begins frying in the oil — 12–15 minutes. Do not rush. The tomatoes must reach the bhuno stage — oil visible at the edges.
Tomatoes contain malic acid, citric acid and glutamate. As they reduce, water evaporates concentrating these compounds. At the bhuno stage — when oil separates — Maillard reactions produce new flavour compounds impossible at lower temperatures. Acidity also mellows significantly during reduction, converting sharp raw tomato taste to sweet, deep flavour.
Add sugar and salt. Stir and taste — the balance should be sweet, sour and spicy with no single element dominant. The sugar should be undetectable as sweetness but noticeable in its absence.
Sugar in Gujarati cooking functions as a flavour modulator rather than a sweetener. Small amounts suppress perception of bitterness and sharpness, making other flavours more prominent. The correct amount makes the curry taste rounder, not sweet.
Add sev, stir once gently and serve within 2 minutes. Do not cook the sev further. Garnish with coriander. If serving a group, add sev per bowl at the table rather than to the pot.
Sev is deep-fried chickpea flour — already fully cooked. In hot curry it absorbs moisture and softens from outside in. The window between pleasantly softened and completely dissolved is 2–3 minutes. Leftover sev tameta loses all textural contrast as the sev dissolves overnight.