Masala Vadai from a tea shop in Mannargudi Guest post by Bharath M
Friday, April 25, 2014 by Unknown
Cucumber SaladOut of this list of delicious items, it was Bharaths Masala Vadai that stood out. He got the batter ready at his place in the morning, refrigerated in his office and got it to my place by evening, where he fried the vadai fresh and served it with drinks. Such delicious vadais, Ive never tasted. I pestered him enough to share the recipe, so I may do the first guest post ever, on my blog, in six years!
Masala Vadai
Seppankizhangu Roast
Cabbage Koottu
Radish arachuvitta Sambar
Jeera Rasam
Vetthakozhambu
Arisi Appalam
Banana Chips (from Hot Chips)
Curds
Rice
Semia Payasam
Bharath in the kitchen |
Bharath is a train enthusiast, an impulsive traveller, amazing photographer and a most evocative writer. Go through his blog Puri Subzi and you will know what I mean. And more than anything, he has grown to be a friend I can always depend on. And in his own words, he is a "Photographer of faces, writer of bus travels, driver of trains, lover of pongal, purveyor of seedy bars."
So heres Bharaths Masala Vadai for you, written in his own words...
Masala Vadai - Freshly fried |
"...but this is against TamBrahm culture. How can you put onions and garlic in an aamavadai?", my amusement disguised as a protest.
"Sssh, this is not aamavadai. Its a masala vadai. The inspiration comes from some tea shop in Mannargudi", my mothers indignant voice peaking.
"You had masala vadai from a tea shop in Mannargudi?", I bait
"Please dont be so righteous. Everyone eats from weird places once in a while. Now shut up and tell me how it tastes"
Crisp. Light. Golden brown and d-e-l-c-i-o-u-s. "I am sold, ma, I am sold". That chubby grin finally shows itself.
It may be against TamBrahm way of life, but by god, this vadai is brilliant. Goes well with beer. Or a single malt.
Heres how you put it together (Ive made a few changes to the basic recipe from my mothers original)
Ingredients
For the batter:
2 1/2 cups channa dal (soaked in slightly salted water for a good 4-5 hours)
1 teaspoon saunf (fennel seeds)
1/4 inch ginger
3 cloves of garlic
A generous pinch of black pepper powder
For the flavouring mix:
1/4 inch ginger, finely cut
2 cloves of garlic, finely cut
2 largish green chillis, finely cut
A handful of coriander and mint, coarsely cut
1 large red onion diced finely (2 if they are small to medium)
Salt to taste
A small pinch of red chilli powder (if you need the extra kick)
For the frying:
Some groundnut oil or rice bran oil.
Method
Method
- Drain the water completely from the soaked channa dal. Dunk the, by now slightly soft, dal into a mixer along with the fennel seeds and the rest of batter ingredients. Add a tablespoon of water and start grinding. Initially for about 20 sec and then pulse 3 times for about 5 sec each. The batter by now should be quite coarse and the fennel, garlic, ginger and pepper incorporated. If the batter resembles a gooey paste, then youve gone too far. The ideal batter should have a mix of pulped dal, coarse dal and almost whole dal. Scoop out a bit in your hand - if it feels grainy and stony, then its perfect.
- Transfer the batter to a large mixing bowl and refrigerate for 30 min.
- Chop all the flavouring mix ingredients according to the instructions above.
- Remove the batter from the fridge and all the flavour mix, except for the onions and salt. Let this now rest until you are ready to fry them up.
- 2-3 min before you ready to fry, add the onions and salt and give everything a thorough swirl.
- Heat the oil and drop a small roundel of the batter to test. If it raises to the top, the temperature is right and you can start.
- If you are comfortable patting the batter nice and thin, please do so, else shape it into small roundels. The later is much easier if you are doing all of this on your own!
- Fry until a nice golden brown.
Serve with either coconut or coarse coriander chutney.
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