Kerala's great mixed vegetable curry — coconut-yogurt gravy, curry leaves, coconut oil finishing. The coconut does all the work. No onion, no garlic.
Avial is one of the great dishes of Kerala — a medley of vegetables cooked in a thick coconut-yogurt gravy, finished with curry leaves and raw coconut oil. It contains no onion and no garlic, making it suitable for serving during religious occasions (it features prominently in Kerala Onam sadya). The coconut paste does all the flavour work. The vegetables are cooked in the gravy rather than before it — they absorb the coconut character as they cook. The finishing drizzle of raw coconut oil over the hot avial is non-negotiable and transformative.
Grind coconut, green chillies, cumin seeds and turmeric with a little water to a coarse paste — not smooth. The texture should be slightly gritty.
In avial the coconut paste should be coarser than in a chutney — the coconut particles provide texture in the final dish. Grinding smooth produces a sauce rather than the characteristic thick, slightly textured avial gravy. The cumin and green chilli volatile compounds are released during grinding and remain in the coconut fat, distributing through the dish during cooking.
Boil yam, raw banana and drumstick in salted water for 5 minutes until just starting to soften. Add remaining vegetables and cook 3 more minutes. The vegetables should be about 70% cooked. Do not fully cook — they will finish in the coconut paste.
Pre-cooking in water removes excess starch from the yam and banana surfaces, preventing them from becoming gluey in the coconut paste. The brief boil also ensures all vegetables reach the same partial-cooked state before the next stage begins, despite their different natural cooking times.
Drain most of the water, leaving about ½ cup. Add the coconut paste to the pot with the vegetables. Stir gently. Cook on medium heat for 5–7 minutes, stirring carefully, until vegetables are fully cooked and the coconut paste has dried slightly and coated every piece.
The coconut paste absorbs the remaining vegetable cooking water, creating a thick coating. The fat in the coconut distributes the green chilli and cumin compounds throughout. The drying of the paste — it should not be wet and saucy — concentrates the coconut flavour and creates the characteristic texture of avial.
Remove from heat. Add whisked yogurt and curry leaves. Stir gently through. Drizzle raw coconut oil over the top. Do not cook after adding yogurt.
Yogurt is added off the heat to prevent curdling — the lactic acid in yogurt causes rapid protein coagulation above 70°C. The raw coconut oil is added last specifically because heating coconut oil destroys its distinctive fresh aromatic compounds (octanoic acid and decanoic acid) — cooking it nullifies these aromatics. The raw oil drizzle is aromatic, the cooked coconut paste is textural — two different functions.