Why I Saved It
We’ve all been there: scrolling through Instagram at 11 PM, hitting “Save” on a vibrant, green-hued bowl of goodness, and then letting it languish in the Saved Folder Graveyard for months.
I originally flagged this Spinach Dal Quinoa Khichdi by @madrasigoingplaces because it looked like the ultimate “safe meal”- nutritious, vibrant, and theoretically low-effort.
Fast forward to last week: the flu hit our household like a freight train, and to make matters more complicated, the Head Taste Tester was recovering from a tooth extraction. We needed soft food, we needed comfort, and we needed it with zero Executive Function required. It was finally time for this recipe to move from “hoarded” to “handmade”.
Credit to the Chef
Original Recipe by: @madrasigoingplaces
Note: This recipe is a brilliant base for anyone needing a nutrient-dense, one-pot solution. You can find the original post here.

The Reality Check: The Brain
VS
Kitchen Struggle
Even “easy” recipes have a hidden mental cost. For me, the Wall of Awful wasn’t the cooking itself – it was the Pantry Paralysis.
My brain kept looping: “Do we have the Masoor Dal? Did I use the last of the Chana Dal for that soup in November?”.
Once I physically touched the bags of lentils, the Executive Function kicked back in. I decided to pivot based on what we had (and what our healing bodies needed): swapping quinoa for rice for that classic comfort texture, and mixing Masoor and Chana dal for a protein boost.
The final “chaos” move? Dumping 250g of frozen mixed veggies into the Nutricook because if we’re recovering, we’re doing it with every vitamin in the freezer.
The Duo Dynamic
The kitchen-to-couch balance looked a bit different this time. Usually, the Head Taste Tester is deep in a boss fight, but today he was in “Low-Battery Mode”. He managed a quick hero-run to the store for fresh spinach (the only thing we were missing) before retreating to recover. In exchange for the one-pot magic, he handled the minor dishwashing at the end, a fair trade in a flu-stricken house.

One-Pot Rice Khichdi with Dal and Veggies
Equipment
- Nutricook (You can use an InstaPot or even a regular Pressure Cooker)
Ingredients
- 1 cup Rice rinsed
- 1 cup Masoor dal rinsed
- 1/3 cup Chana dal rinsed
- 3-4 cups Water
- 1 tbsp Ghee or oil
- 1 tsp Cumin seeds
- Asafoetida (Hing) A pinch
- 1 Onion medium, chopped
- 3-4 Garlic minced (or you can use garlic paste – 1tbsp should work)
- 2 Green chilies slit
- 2 Red Chillies cut wide
- 6-8 Curry leaves
- 1 Tomatoes large, chopped
- 250 gms Frozen veggies
- 1 bunch Spinach chopped
- 1/4 tsp Turmeric powder
- 1 tsp Chili powder
- 1 tsp Garam masala
- 1 tsp Coriander powder
- Salt To taste
Instructions
- In your Nutricook or InstantPot (on saute mode) or regular pressure cooker, heat ghee/oil, add cumin seeds, asafoetida, onion, garlic, chilies, and curry leaves. Sauté until onions are golden.1 tbsp Ghee or oil, 1 tsp Cumin seeds, Asafoetida (Hing), 1 Onion, 3-4 Garlic, 2 Green chilies, 2 Red Chillies, 6-8 Curry leaves
- Add tomato, turmeric, chili powder, garam masala, coriander powder, and salt. Cook until oil separates.1 Tomatoes, 1/4 tsp Turmeric powder, 1 tsp Chili powder, 1 tsp Garam masala, 1 tsp Coriander powder, Salt
- Add in the frozen veggies. (Tip: I usually boil it with a little turmeric and salt before cooking). Mix it in well.250 gms Frozen veggies
- Stir in spinach and cook for 2 minutes until wilted.1 bunch Spinach
- Add in the rice, dals, and 3 cups of water for 20 minutes on a NutriCook or InstantPot or if using a regular pressure cooker, then 3 whistles.1 cup Rice, 1 cup Masoor dal, 1/3 cup Chana dal, 3-4 cups Water
- Let the steam completely release and rest it for another 5 mins before opening the pot. Stir and mash as you go. If it is too runny for your liking, then you can let it simmer for a bit more.
- Season with a bit of chaat masala, and serve warm or with yogurt.
Notes
- Touch the Ingredients First: Don’t turn on the heat until you’ve physically placed all the rice, dals and other ingredients on the counter to avoid the “missing ingredient” panic.
- The “One & Done” Dump: Toss 1 cup Rice, 1 cup Masoor Dal, and 1/3 cup Chana Dal into the Nutricook as per the above instructions. No fancy layers needed.
- The Dopamine Timer: Set the Nutricook and walk away. This is your permission to go lie down for 20 minutes if you needed it or just snuggle on the couch with your Head Taste Tester.
- The Frozen shortcut: When the beep happens, stir in your spinach and that 250g bag of frozen veggies. The residual heat does the work for you.
- The Mush Test: Stir until it’s a soft, “zero-chew” consistency – perfect for dental recovery and flu-tired jaws.
The TSFK Verdict: Signal vs. Noise
To turn this recipe from a “saved folder” dream into a kitchen reality, I’ve broken down the mental cost and the household impact.
Here is The Brain Check for the ADHD soul and The Verdict for the duo dynamic.


