Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Rava dosas and shallot sambhar


Description:
Okay, took this off someone else's blog. Never tried the recipe, but sure looks good.

( Taken from http://lululoveslondon.blogspot.com/2006_03_01_lululoveslondon_archive.html)

Ingredients:
1 tbsp wheat flour
1 1/2 cups semolina
1 cup rice flour
1/2 tsp jeera
1/4 tsp mustard seeds
a few curry leaves
3 to 4 chillies
1 inch piece of ginger
1/4 cup yogurt
1/4 tsp hing powder (asoeftedia)
oil for preparing dosa
salt to taste
5 1/2 cups water

Directions:
prep time: 15 min
cooking time: 20 mins
makes: 10 to 12

preparation
chop the chillies and ginger finely. you may blend the ginger into a paste.

method
mix yogurt, water, salt, hing and curry leaves with wheat flour, semolina and rice flour. the batter should be a very thin consistency.

in a deep pan heat the oil and pop the mustard seeds, and then add the jeera and the chillies in oil. stir in the ginger to the batter. add the curry leaves, yogurt and hing powder into the batter and mix well.



heat a tava or a flat griddle iron like the one in the picture above, spray a little bit of oil and wait till it is very hot. prepare dosa by pouring with a ladle and spread using the bottom of the ladle. using a small spoon, sprinkle a little bit of oil all over the perimeter of the dosa. since my pan is so rectangular, i usually make two dosas at a time. after a minute or two, turn over and let the other side cook.



serve hot with onion sambhar or coriander chutney. as you can see from the picture, my dosas aren't perfectly shaped but they were pretty delicious thanks to the easy recipe. my only regret was that i didn't have fresh curry leaves on hand - they add a lovely flavour to rava dosas that is very hard to substitute

1 comment:

  1. I remembered asking an Indian friend the first time I ate this, "what makes rava so crunchy, so different from thosai?"

    He replied, "oh, because they add semolina".*

    And as always, me who mishears everything, heard "salmonella"**.

    So I said, "Come again?"

    He said," Semolina."

    then I said "Ahhhhh... sorka..."

    ----------------------------------------------

    *He's an Indian indian, who knows his prata from his thoasi from his rava, and how they are all made. Despite his well-mannered and refined mannerisms, I suspect he comes from the Warrior caste. :D

    ** For those who don't catch the joke, see below entry on what's salmonella
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmonella

    and what's semolina
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semolina

    ReplyDelete