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Rasmalai Recipe

23 January 2026 at 19:14

Rasmalai is a popular Indian dessert made using cottage cheese balls, milk, sugar, nuts, cardamom and saffron. It is quick to make when your homemade rasgullas are ready. Sweet and juicy rasgullas soaked in sweetened thick milk is super addictive and can be made at home easily. Learn to make delicious rasmalai at home with step by step pictures.

rasmalai in terracotta bowl

Rasmalai is a rich Indian delicacy, rasgullas in sweetened thickened milk with the flavor of cardamom and saffron topped with nuts, It is a yum combo!! You can use store bought rasgullas to make rasmalai quickly. Rasmalai is widely served in weddings, parties and is a popular order in restaurants too.

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About Rasamalai

'Ras' in Hindi means juicy and 'Malai' means cream so Rasmalai translates to juicy and creamy. Rasmalai is a popular rich Indian dessert made using cottage cheese balls soaked in sweetened thick milk called rabri topped with nuts and flavored with saffron and cardamom. It is super addictive as it tastes incredibly delicious.

I've become a great fan of rasmalai since I tasted it from a popular hotel here in Coimbatore named Annapoorna GowriShankar. Homemade ones are best if prepared in the right consistency. I buy rasgullas from stores and make rasmalai. Occasionally I make homemade rasgullas too as mittu is fond of that sweet.

Rasgullas can be flattenned and added as such. I have seen rasmalai as balls and in discs so you can make it the way you want. I would prefer small balls instead of discs as it looks more appealing.

rasmalai in terracotta bowl

Rasmalai Ingredients

  • Rasgulla - You can use store bought mini rasgullas or use homemade too. Make sure to use mini rasgullas for best results.
  • Milk -Β Use full cream milk either farm fresh or packaged milk.
  • SugarΒ - White granulated sugar is the best to use for rasmalai.
  • Condensed milk - Condensed milk adds richness to rasmalai.
  • NutsΒ - Cashews, pistachios and almonds are used.
  • FlavoringΒ - Cardamom powder and saffron is used for flavoring the milk.

Similar Recipes

How to make Rasmalai Step by Step

1.Take a pan - add condensed milk to it, along with 1 cup milk and whisk it well. Now add remaining milk and let it boil in medium flame for 5 minutes. Keep stirring. Crush saffron strands and add it. The color of milk will change to slightly yellow color, after saffron is added. Let it boil until thick at least for 15 minutes.

how to make rasmalai step1

2.Then add chopped nuts, cardamom powder give a quick mix and let it boil. Now take your rasgullas. I used store bought rasgullas this time.

how to make rasmalai step2

3.Take lemon squeezer and squeeze the excess sugar syrup from the rasgullas. Be gentle else the rasgullas will crumble. Now add the rasgullas to the milk and let it simmer for 5-7 minutes in low flame. Switch off.

how to make rasmalai step3

Cool down for few mins, then refrigerate for at least an hour. Serve chilled!

Expert Tips

  • Flavor - Don't use saffron more, it will be over powerful and will spoil the taste.
  • Add ons - The addition of condensed milk not only makes the rasmalai rich but extra tasty and gives a unique flavour to it.
  • Syrup - You can also use the sugar syrup that comes with the rasgullas and add it to the rabri instead of sugar.
  • Resting time - Allow at least 30 minutes sitting and refrigerating time before serving to taste best.
  • Quick option - You can also use store bought rasgullas, tinned ones are easy to reach.

Serving & Storage

Rasmalai is best when served chilled. Refrigerate & it keeps well for 2-3 days.

rasmalai in a bowl

If you have any more questions about this Rasmalai RecipeΒ do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Rasmalai Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Rasmalai Recipe

Rasmalai is a popular Indian dessert made using cottage cheese balls, milk, sugar, nuts, cardamom and saffron. It is quick to make when your homemade rasgullas are ready. Sweet and juicy rasgullas soaked in sweetened thick milk is super addictive and can be made at home easily. Learn to make delicious rasmalai at home with step by step pictures.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword dessert recipes, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, milk recipes, sweet recipes, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 4 people
Calories 413kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 20 small rasgullas
  • 3 cups milk
  • 3 tablespoon condensed milk
  • β…“ cup sugar
  • 3 tablespoon nuts chopped
  • 10 small strands saffron
  • ΒΌ teaspoon cardamom powder

Instructions

  • Take a pan - add condensed milk to it, along with 1 cup milk and whisk it well. Now add remaining milk and let it boil in medium flame for 5 minutes. Keep stirring. Crush saffron strands and add it. The color of milk will change to slightly yellow color, after saffron is added. Let it boil until thick at least for 15 minutes.
  • Then add chopped nuts, cardamom powder give a quick mix and let it boil. Now take your rasgullas. I used store bought rasgullas this time.
  • Take lemon squeezer and squeeze the excess sugar syrup from the rasgullas. Be gentle else the rasgullas will crumble. Now add the rasgullas to the milk and let it simmer for 5-7 minutes in low flame. Switch off.
  • Cool down for few mins, then refrigerate for at least an hour. Serve chilled!

Notes

  • Rasgulla - You can use store bought mini rasgullas or use homemade too. Make sure to use mini rasgullas for best results.
  • Milk -Β Use full cream milk either farm fresh or packaged milk.
  • SugarΒ - White granulated sugar is the best to use for rasmalai.
  • Condensed milk - Condensed milk adds richness to rasmalai.
  • NutsΒ - Cashews, pistachios and almonds are used.
  • FlavoringΒ - Cardamom powder and saffron is used for flavoring the milk.

Nutrition

Serving: 100g | Calories: 413kcal | Carbohydrates: 58g | Protein: 11g | Fat: 16g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 6g | Cholesterol: 40mg | Sodium: 120mg | Potassium: 501mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 56g | Vitamin A: 450IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 364mg | Iron: 0.4mg

The post Rasmalai Recipe appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Mathri Recipe (Mathiya)

14 January 2026 at 22:31

Mathri is a crunchy deep fried snack that you will find in many North Indian houses, mostly during festivals and family get togethers. It is made using maida with basic spices and some fat added into the dough which gives that flaky and crisp bite. This has a mild flavor because of dried methi leaves and it taste little peppery with balanced salt, perfect to munch with tea.

methi mathri served with tea

Methi Mathri is usually made during festivals or even weddings as it stays good for many days. It tastes too good with a cup of tea. What makes this different is the slow frying which gives that crisp texture without burning the outside. It is simple to make but needs little patience while frying.

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About Mathri

Mathri is a snack which is often compared with crackers or biscuits, but it is more tasty and full of flavor. Unlike namak pare or thin snacks, mathri is slightly thick and have layers inside. The outside turn crisp while inside stay flaky and soft in texture. This recipe is simple but you need some patience while frying to get the right texture.

Methi Mathri gets most of its flavor from dried fenugreek leaves along with ajwain and jeera added into the dough. These spices not only enhance the taste but also help in digestion. The black pepper add mild heat which balance the richness of ghee used. Each bite feels crunchy, aromatic and satisfying.

Mathri is one of the most popular snacks in North India, especially for marriages, religious occasions or festivals like Karwa Chauth, Diwali etc. Methi Mathri Recipe is just the addition of dried methi(kasoori methi) to the plain mathri dough. It is very flavourful and tasty.

There are many versions of mathri made in different homes and regions. Some people add rava for extra crispness while some replace maida with wheat flour. Few also add crushed pepper or green chilli paste to make it more spicy. But the base idea stays same, thick discs that are slow fried until golden and crisp.

I usually make this recipe on weekends or before festivals so it stays handy for few days. It is useful when guests come suddenly or when you want something homemade for evening tea.Β 

methi mathri served with tea

Methi Mathri Ingredients

  • Flour - I have used maida to make the base dough, it gives structure and crispness. You can replace half with wheat flour also.
  • Ajwain and jeera - I added for flavor and digestion. They give that typical mathri taste. I would recommend adding both.
  • Black pepper - I have used freshly cracked pepper for gentle heat, it adds a nice bite without making it spicy. You can reduce or skip if you don't like pepper.
  • Kasoori methi - It adds a distinct methi flavor and aroma, it makes the mathri taste different. You can use fresh methi leaves dried and crushed.
  • Ghee - I have used this in the dough to make the mathri flaky and rich. You can use oil also but ghee give better taste and aroma.
  • Oil - I used this for deep frying, it helps cook the mathri evenly from inside. You can use any oil for this recipe.

Similar Recipes

How to make Methi Mathri Step by Step

1.In a mixing bowl take white flour, add ajwain, jeera, salt, pepper powder, dried methi and ghee.

how to make methi mathri step1

2.First mix well with your fingers.

how to make methi mathri step2

3.Add water little by little to form a smooth dough. Set aside for 15 minutes.

how to make methi mathri step3

4.Now pinch and divide the dough into small equal potions. Place each portion on your palms to make a ball first. Then slightly flatten it to around 2 inches in diameter, it should not be very thin. Don't worry if it doesn't form a perfect circle, thats how a mathri should be.

how to make methi mathri step4

5.Then prick with a fork on both the sides.Likewise finish off the entire dough.Heat oil in pan, don't heat it smoking hot. When you put a pinch of dough in heated oil it should slowly come up, thats the right temperature. Add 3-4 mathris.

how to make methi mathri step5

6.Cook in low flame, flip and cook.It will take at least 5-7 imnutes to get the golden color in low flame.

how to make methi mathri step6

7.Cook till golden. Drain in tissue paper and store in a clean dry container.

how to make methi mathri step7

Store in airtight container.

methi mathri served with tea

Expert Tips

  • Dough consistency - I keep the dough tight and firm, not soft like chapati dough. I usually add water little by little so you can control this part easily.
  • Resting - I usually rest the dough for some time before shaping. This help in easy rolling and also give better texture to the final mathri.
  • Thickness - I don't roll the mathri very thin, it should be slightly thick. Thin ones will turn hard instead of flaky.
  • Pricking the dough - I prick both sides with fork, this avoids puffing while frying. I never skip this step.
  • Frying temperature - Always fry in low flame, patience is the key here. High flame will brown fast but inside stays uncooked.

Serving and Storage

Serve them hot with pickle or just enjoy with evening tea. This goes well with masala chai or plain coffee too. Let them cool completely before storing, else they may loose the crispiness. Store the leftover mathris in a clean airtight container only. It stays good for many days at room temperature when stored in proper way.

FAQS

1.Can I skip kasoori methI?

You can skip it but the flavor will change a bit. Methi gives the classic taste so I suggest adding at least little.

2.Can I make this in advance?

Yes, this is perfect to make ahead. I usually make it few days before festivals and store it.

3.Why are my mathris hard?

This happens if they are rolled too thin or fried on high flame. Keep them slightly thick and fry slowly.

4.Can I bake mathri instead of frying?

You can bake but texture will be different. Fried version gives proper flaky layers.

5.Can I add rava to this recipe?

Yes, you can add for extra crispness. Just adjust water while making dough.

methi mathri served with tea

If you have any more questions about this Methi Mathri Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Methi Mathri Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

πŸ“– Recipe Card

MethiMathri3
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Mathri Recipe (Mathiya)

Mathri is a crunchy deep fried snack that you will find in many North Indian houses, mostly during festivals and family get togethers. It is made using maida with basic spices and some fat added into the dough which gives that flaky and crisp bite. This has a mild flavor because of dried methi leaves and it taste little peppery with balanced salt, perfect to munch with tea.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword 30 mins recipes, all purpose flour recipes, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali snacks recipes, easy diwali snacks, ghee recipes, maida recipes, savoury recipes, snack recipes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 40 small mathris
Calories 18kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup plain white flour / maida
  • Β½ teaspoon ajwain
  • Β½ teaspoon jeera
  • ΒΌ teaspoon pepper
  • 1 teaspoon dried kasoori methi
  • 2 tablespoon ghee
  • salt to taste
  • oil to deep fry

Instructions

  • In a mixing bowl take white flour, add ajwain, jeera, salt, pepper powder, dried methi and ghee.
  • First mix well with your fingers. Add water little by little to form a smooth dough.
  • Set aside for 15 minutes. Now pinch and divide the dough into small equal potions.
  • Place each portion on your palms to make a ball first. Then slightly flatten it, it should not be very thin. Don't worry if it doesn't form a perfect circle, that's how a mathri should be.
  • Then prick with a fork on both the sides. Like wise finish off the entire dough.
  • Heat oil in pan, don't heat it smoking hot. When you put a pinch of dough in heated oil it should slowly come up, that's the right temperature. Add 3-4 mathris.
  • Cook in low flame, flip and cook.
  • Cook till golden. Drain in tissue paper and store in a clean dry container. Enjoy Mathri!

Notes

  • Dough consistency - I keep the dough tight and firm, not soft like chapati dough. I usually add water little by little so you can control this part easily.
  • Resting - I usually rest the dough for some time before shaping. This help in easy rolling and also give better texture to the final mathri.
  • Thickness - I don't roll the mathri very thin, it should be slightly thick. Thin ones will turn hard instead of flaky.
  • Pricking the dough - I prick both sides with fork, this avoids puffing while frying. I never skip this step.
  • Frying temperature - Always fry in low flame, patience is the key here. High flame will brown fast but inside stays uncooked.

Nutrition

Serving: 15g | Calories: 18kcal | Carbohydrates: 2g | Protein: 0.3g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 0.5g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.04g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 2mg | Sodium: 0.1mg | Potassium: 4mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 0.01g | Vitamin A: 1IU | Vitamin C: 0.01mg | Calcium: 1mg | Iron: 0.2mg

The post Mathri Recipe (Mathiya) appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Masala Mathri Recipe

12 January 2026 at 18:05

Masala Mathri is a crispy and masala packed savoury snack made by frying thin rolled dough stuffed with spiced besan mixture. This goes very well with evening tea or coffee. The taste is spicy, flaky and very addictive. Masala Mathri is a great accompaniment for tea and an anytime snack that the family will ask for more.

masala mathri served with tea

These mathris are perfect for storing and munching anytime. Once made, they stay good for many days. The stuffing inside makes it little different from plain mathri and gives more flavor. Family will keep picking one after the other without even realising. It is one of those snacks that disappear much faster than expected.

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About Masala Mathri

Masala Mathri is a popular North Indian style snack that is made during festive time or even as tea time snack. It is made using maida dough and a spiced besan stuffing. The dough is rolled thin, stuffed and then fried slowly till crisp. Though it looks lengthy, the process is quite simple actually.

This has crispy and flaky texture outside with a flavorful filling inside. The besan stuffing gives nice bite and mild spice. Also ajwain and jeera adds good flavor and also help in digestion. Every bite has good crunch and masala taste. Slow frying is the key to get the perfect texture in mathris.

There are many variations of mathri available. Some people make plain ones without any stuffing. Few add crushed pepper or more chilli flakes to make it extra spicy. You can adjust spice level easily based on your taste. Even thickness of rolling changes the final texture.Β 

I usually make this during weekends and store it in airtight box. It comes handy for sudden guests or evening snack time. Making this needs little patience but result is always worth it. Once you try it at home, it slowly becomes a regular snack idea.

masala mathri served with tea

Masala Mathri Ingredients

  • Maida - I have used to make the outer dough. I prefer using maida but you can try wheat flour.Β 
  • Ghee - I added for flakiness and crisp texture. You can use oil also, both works fine.
  • Besan flour - I used for stuffing inside the mathri. It gives body and nice flavor. Fresh besan always works best here.
  • Fine sooji - I have added this for extra crunch. It helps stuffing stay firm while frying. You can skip it if not available at home.
  • Oil - I add little to the stuffing for binding and flavor. It also keeps the stuffing moist inside.
  • Ajwain and jeera - I added these for flavor and digestion. They give that typical mathri taste. I would not suggest skipping both.
  • Chilli flakes - I have used this for mild spice. You can add more if you like spicy snacks.
  • Hing - I add a small pinch for aroma. It balances the besan taste very well.
  • Oil - I just used for deep frying mathris. You must use enough oil so they fry evenly and nicely.

Why This Recipe Works

  • It gives crispy and flaky mathris when fried slowly.
  • Stuffing inside adds more flavor than plain mathri.
  • Ingredients are simple and easily available at home.
  • It stays good for many days when stored properly.
  • Perfect snack option for tea time or travel also.

How to make Masala Mathri Step by Step

1.Take flour in a mixing bowl.Add required and ghee.

how to make masala mathri step1

2.Mix well with your finger tips so that it resembles breadcrumbs.

how to make masala mathri step2

3.Now add water little by little to form a smooth firm dough. Keep covered to rest for 15 minutes.

how to make masala mathri step3

4.When the dough rests you can prepare the stuffing. Take besan flour in a mixing bowl, add fine sooji to it.

how to make masala mathri step4

5.Add oil, then ajwain seeds, jeera, chilli flakes and required salt.

how to make masala mathri step5

6.Add hing. Mix well with a spoon. Now add little water.

how to make masala mathri step6

7.Keep mixing add more water if needed, you should be able to roll into a dough thats the right consistency. Make small balls from the dough and set aside.

how to make masala mathri step7

8.Make small marble sized balls from the dough. Take one ball flatten it slightly using a rolling pin. Keep the stuffing.

how to make masala mathri step8

9.Pull the edges to the center and seal it. Flip it and press it slightly so that the stuffing is even on all sides.

how to make masala mathri step9

10.Now flatten it using a rolling pin, it should be slightly thin. Now prick holes using a fork, flip over then again prick holes-this is to avoid puffing. Repeat this until you are done with the entire dough. If you have dough remaining you can make plain mathris.

how to make masala mathri step10

11.Heat oil in a kadai, the flame should low or low medium, you put a pinch of dough it should slowly rise and come, thats the right consistency. Now add 2-3 mathris at a time, deep fry in low flame, flip over and cook.

how to make masala mathri step11

12.Cook till it becomes golden brown on both sides. Drain using a perforated ladle, then strain the extra oil using tissue paper. Cool down completely then store in an airtight container.

how to make masala mathri step12

Enjoy as a snack!

masala mathri served with tea

Expert Tips

  • Firm dough - I always make sure the outer dough is slightly loose and soft to roll easily but not too loose as it may drink more oil.
  • Resting time - I usually rest the dough for some time. This helps in easy rolling and better final texture.
  • Thin rolling - I roll the mathris very thin. Thick ones will not turn crispy properly.
  • Pricking holes - I never forget to prick holes on both sides. This avoids puffing while frying.
  • Low flame frying - I always fry in low or low medium flame. This is the main key for crispy mathris.
  • Do not rush - I fry slowly with patience. High flame will brown fast but inside will not cook well.

Serving and Storage

Serve them with hot tea or coffee. These mathris can be eaten as such without any side dish or chutney. Let them cool completely before storing, else they may loose the crispiness. Store the leftover mathris in a clean airtight container only. It stays good for many days at room temperature when stored in proper way.

FAQS

1.Can I make this without stuffing?

Yes, just roll the dough thin and fry slowly. Plain mathris are also crispy and taste good.

2.Why my mathris are not crispy?

Mostly because oil was too hot or dough was soft. Soft dough absorbs more oil and makes mathris little soggy. Frying in high flame also affects crispness.

3.Can I bake this?

You can try baking but taste and texture will change. Baked mathris will not be as flaky as fried ones.

4.How long does it stay good?

It stays good for a week or more if stored properly in airtight container. Make sure to use dry spoon or hands.

5.Can I make it spicier?

Yes, just add in some red chillies or pepper.

masala mathri served with tea

If you have any more questions about this Masala Mathri Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Masala Mathri Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

πŸ“– Recipe Card

MasalaMathri3
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Masala Mathri Recipe

Masala Mathri is a crispy and masala packed savoury snack made by frying thin rolled dough stuffed with spiced besan mixture. This goes very well with evening tea or coffee. The taste is spicy, flaky and very addictive. Masala Mathri is a great accompaniment for tea and an anytime snack that the family will ask for more.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword all purpose flour recipes, Festival, ghee recipes, maida recipes, masala recipes, savoury recipes, snack recipes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 12 mathris
Calories 62kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

For the outer dough:

  • Β½ cup white flour / maida
  • 1 tablespoon ghee
  • β…› teaspoon salt
  • water as needed

For the stuffing:

  • Β½ cup besan flour
  • 1 tablespoon fine sooji
  • 1 tablespoon oil
  • ΒΌ teaspoon ajwain
  • ΒΌ teaspoon jeera
  • Β½ teaspoon chilli flakes
  • a pinch hing
  • salt to taste

Instructions

For the outer dough:

  • Take flour in a mixing bowl. Add required and ghee.
  • Mix well with your finger tips so that it resembles breadcrumbs.
  • Now add water little by little to form a smooth firm dough. Keep covered to rest for 15mins.

For the stuffing:

  • When the dough rests you can prepare the stuffing. Take besan flour in a mixing bowl, add fine sooji to it.
  • Add oil, then ajwain seeds, jeera, chilli flakes and required salt.
  • Add hing. Mix well with a spoon. Now add little water.
  • Keep mixing add more water if needed, you should be able to roll into a dough that's the right consistency. Make small balls from the dough and set aside.
  • Make small marble sized balls from the dough. Take one ball flatten it slightly using a rolling pin. Keep the stuffing.
  • Pull the edges to the center and seal it. Flip it and press it slightly so that the stuffing is even on all sides.
  • Now flatten it using a rolling pin, it should be very thin. Now prick holes using a fork, flip over then again prick holes. Repeat this until you are done with the entire dough. If you have dough remaining you can make plain mathris.
  • Heat oil in a kadai, the flame should low or low medium, you put a pinch of dough it should slowly rise and come, that's the right consistency. Now add 2-3 mathris at a time, deep fry in low flame, flip over and cook.
  • Cook till it becomes golden brown on both sides. Drain using a perforated ladle, then strain the extra oil using tissue paper. Cool down completely Masala Mathri store in an airtight container.

Notes

  • Firm dough - I always make sure the outer dough is slightly loose and soft to roll easily but not too loose as it may drink more oil.
  • Resting time - I usually rest the dough for some time. This helps in easy rolling and better final texture.
  • Thin rolling - I roll the mathris very thin. Thick ones will not turn crispy properly.
  • Pricking holes - I never forget to prick holes on both sides. This avoids puffing while frying.
  • Low flame frying - I always fry in low or low medium flame. This is the main key for crispy mathris.
  • Do not rush - I fry slowly with patience. High flame will brown fast but inside will not cook well.

Nutrition

Serving: 20g | Calories: 62kcal | Carbohydrates: 7g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 3g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.01g | Cholesterol: 3mg | Sodium: 29mg | Potassium: 54mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 27IU | Vitamin C: 0.004mg | Calcium: 4mg | Iron: 1mg

The post Masala Mathri Recipe appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Beetroot Halwa Recipe

By: Aarthi
8 January 2026 at 09:18

Beetroot Halwa, Easy sweet recipe made with fresh beetroot, sugar, milk, ghee, nuts. It is called as beetroot pudding or halwa is a popular winter delicacy. It is similar sweet recipe to carrot halwa but lesser known halwa which is loved by many specially for its vibrant colour. Everyone is familiar with carrot halwa, but...

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7 Cup Burfi Recipe

By: Aarthi
7 January 2026 at 08:07

7 cup barfi is a classic South Indian sweet made using seven equal measures (cups or katori) of simple ingredients like gram flour, sugar, ghee, milk, and coconut, all cooked together in a kadai till barfi consistency. 7 Cup Burfi Recipe When we were little, Amma used to make this 7 cup burfi quite often....

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Fruit and Nut Chocolates Recipe

By: Aarthi
23 December 2025 at 04:40

Easy Homemade fruit and nut chocolate recipe, easy to put together but creates a festive feel with minimum effort. This easy recipe makes your boring dark chocoalte into something spectacular which taste absolutely amazing and is perfect for gifting during this holiday season. Fruit and Nut Chocolate Recipe I usually make this chocolate when I...

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Fruit and Nut Chocolates Recipe

By: Aarthi
23 December 2025 at 04:40

Easy Homemade fruit and nut chocolate recipe, easy to put together but creates a festive feel with minimum effort. This easy recipe makes your boring dark chocoalte into something spectacular which taste absolutely amazing and is perfect for gifting during this holiday season. Fruit and Nut Chocolate Recipe I usually make this chocolate when I...

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The post Fruit and Nut Chocolates Recipe appeared first on Yummy Tummy.

Rabdi Recipe (Rabri)

By: Aarthi
16 December 2025 at 05:07

Rabri also known as rabdi is a sweet thickened milk which is made by simmering full-fat milk for hours until it reduces and thickens, forming layers of malai. These malai are mixed back into the milk, which is then lightly sweetened and flavored with cardamom, saffron, or rose water. Thick Rabri is paired with classic...

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Badam Katli | Badam Barfi

15 November 2025 at 18:26

Badam Katli is a soft, rich sweet made by cooking powdered almonds along with sugar syrup till it turns into a smooth dough then cutting into pices. This recipe has mild nutty flavor from the almonds and the gentle sweetness makes it a sweet that almost everyone at home will enjoy without any fuss. Once you cut them into those thin diamond shapes, it gives that festival feeling instantly.

badam katli served

This sweet needs only few simple ingredients but still the taste comes out really good when made in the right way. It feels light, not too sugary, and has that soft melt-in-mouth feel which is the best part. Homemade version also tastes better most of the times, as you can adjust the sweetness and softness just the way you prefer.

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About Badam Katli

Badam Katli is made by soaking almonds, peeling the skin and grinding it to a semi-fine powder. This almond powder is cooked with a plain sugar syrup till it all comes together into a smooth flexible dough. The flavor mainly comes from the almonds only, so even without adding many extra flavors it tastes already nice on its own.

The texture stays soft but slightly firm too. It should roll out smooth but not sticky, so it holds the shape neatly when you cut it. The sweetness remains mild which makes it good even for people who prefer light sweets. The natural pale cream color from almonds gives the katli a clean and neat look.

You can find many variations in different homes. Some add little ghee for more shine, while some add tiny bit of rose essence. Few also use milk while grinding but that reduces the shelf life. You can roll the dough thin for katli or keep it slightly thick and cut as barfi squares.

I usually make Badam Katli during festival month or when I want a simple sweet that still feels rich. I enjoy the part where you roll the dough between butter paper because it gives smooth finish. Even kids like this sweet because it is soft and not too sugary. Homemade version is always more fresh and tastes great too.

badam katli served

Badam Katli Ingredients

  • Badam / Almonds - I have used whole almonds and soaked them to remove the skin. It gives soft nutty taste and blends easily into a powder. You can use store bought almond flour also if your mixer is not strong enough, but fresh almonds gives better flavor.
  • Sugar - I used regular white sugar for this sweet. It melts fast and gives the right sweetness without making the katli heavy. You can add little more if you like sweeter version but I prefer mild sweetness.
  • Water - I add water only for dissolving sugar. It helps form the syrup which later binds with the almond powder. Do not add extra water or the dough becomes too soft.
  • Cardamom Powder - I just use a small pinch for light aroma, blends well with almond taste and gives mild fragrance.
  • Ghee - I use for greasing the paper, it helps the dough prevent from sticking to the paper.
  • Butter Paper - I have use this for rolling gives smooth finish. It makes the shaping part more easy and the dough spreads neat without giving small cracks.
badam katli served

Similar Recipes

How to make Badam Katli Step by Step

1.Boil 1 cup water, when it starts to boil rigorously measure and add badams. Let it cook for 3 minutes. Switch off and rinse it in cold water.

how to make badam katli step1

2.Now remove the skin, it will easily peel off. You know who did it for me?! Yes mittu neatly peeled the skin for all the almonds. Measure your ingredients and keep it ready. If your are badams are refrigerated, then bring to room temperature and then proceed. Ensure your mixer is completely dry. Transfer badams to a mixer

how to make badam katli step2

3.Grind it to a semi fine powder. Don't overdo as the badams will leave out oil and the whole mixture will turn sticky. See my badam powder was this coarse. Set aside.

how to make badam katli step3

4.Take sugar in a thick bottomed kadai, Now add water. Stir in till sugar dissolves.

how to make badam katli step4

5.Then it starts to bubble up. Once the sugar completely dissolves and it starts to bubble up, add the badam mixture.

how to make badam katli step5

6.Keep stirring in low flame.

how to make badam katli step6

7.Add cardamom powder, keep stirring. Scrape the sides and keep cooking.

how to make badam katli step7

8.It will become dry and starts rolling like this. It should be like a flexible dough. The dough should be slightly dry, but should be soft and flexible so switch off accordingly. You can even try rolling a tiny ball, if it forms then that's the correct consistency. It took me around 12 minutes for forming the dough. Switch off and let it cool down for 5 minutes.

how to make badam katli step8

9.When its still warm, knead it well. If you feel the mixture is dry add Β½ teaspoon ghee and then knead it. I didn't use as it was easy for me to gather and knead. Place the dough on a plate.

how to make badam katli step9

10.Now lay a butter paper over it, slightly apply ghee. Now start rolling with a chapathi roller to ΒΌ inch thick. And cut into diamonds.

how to make badam katli step10

11.First draw vertical lines then cross it to form diamond shapes. Now you have the liberty to enjoy the edge uneven pieces :)Now separate the pieces. I collected the extras, kneaded rolled again and cut into pieces, this way you can eliminate the uneven edge pieces.

how to make badam katli step11

Cool down and store in airtight container.

badam katli served

Expert Tips

  • Soaking - I usually soak almonds in hot water for few minutes so the skin peels off easily. This makes the powder smooth and prevents grainy texture.
  • Grinding - I always grind in short pulses. If you grind too much the almonds release oil and become pasty, so better to keep it semi fine and little coarse.
  • Sugar Syrup - I keep the flame low when making the syrup. It does not need any string consistency, only needs to dissolve completely and turn slightly thick.
  • Dough Stage - I usually take small pinch from the pan and try rolling a tiny ball. If it forms without sticking too much, then the dough is ready to switch off.
  • Kneading Warm Dough - I knead the dough when it is still warm as it becomes soft and flexible. If it turns dry, I just add half teaspoon ghee and knead again.
  • Rolling Evenly - I roll between butter papers because it helps to spread evenly without cracks. It also gives smooth clean finish on top which looks neat.

Serving and Storage

Serve Badam Katli with any festive meal or simple evening tea. It pairs well with other sweets like laddu or kaju katli too. You can store leftover katli in airtight box for four to five days at room temperature.

If you want to keep longer, you can refrigerate but I usually prefer finishing it fresh as the taste stays better. When stacked properly it does not stick much and stays firm.

FAQS

1.Can I use almond flour?

Yes use almond flour. Just make sure it is fine and fresh so the dough comes smooth.

2.Why did my dough turn too sticky?

It usually means syrup cooked little less. You can put the mixture back on low flame and cook few minutes more.

3.Can I add saffron?

Yes you can add few strands soaked in warm milk. It gives light yellow shade and mild aroma.

4.Why did my katli break while cutting?

The dough may be too dry. You can knead with few drops ghee and roll again to fix it.

5.Can I use jaggery?

I don't suggest as it changes taste and texture. White sugar gives proper soft finish.

badam katli served

If you have any more questions about this Badam Katli Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Badam Katli Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Badam Katli Recipe | Badam Barfi Recipe

Badam Katli is a soft, rich sweet made by cooking powdered almonds along with sugar syrup till it turns into a smooth dough then cutting into pieces. This recipe has mild nutty flavor from the almonds and the gentle sweetness makes it a sweet that almost everyone at home will enjoy without any fuss. Once you cut them into those thin diamond shapes, it gives that festival feeling instantly.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword barfi, burfi, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, Festival, ghee recipes, sweet recipes, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 20 minutes
Servings 15 Barfis
Calories 40kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • Β½ cup badam almonds
  • ΒΌ cup sugar
  • ΒΌ cup water
  • melted ghee just for greasing

Instructions

  • Boil 1 cup water, when it starts to boil rigorously measure and add badams. Let it cook for 3 minutes. Switch off and rinse it in cold water.
  • Now remove the skin, it will easily peel off the badams.
  • Measure your ingredients and keep it ready .Ensure your mixer is completely dry. Transfer badams to a mixer.
  • Grind it to a semi fine powder. Don't overdo as the badams will leave out oil and the whole mixture will turn sticky. Badam powder should be coarse. Set aside.
  • Take sugar in a thick bottomed kadai, now add water. Stir in till sugar dissolves.
  • Then it starts to bubble up. Once the sugar completely dissolves and it starts to bubble up, add the badam mixture. Keep stirring in low flame.
  • Add cardamom powder, keep stirring. Scrap the sides and keep cooking.
  • It will become dry and starts rolling into a flexible dough.
  • The dough should be slightly dry, but should be soft and flexible so switch off accordingly. You can even try rolling a tiny ball, if it forms then that's the correct consistency. It took me around 12 minutes for forming the dough.
  • Switch off and let it cool down for 5 minutes.
  • When its still warm, knead it well. If you feel the mixture is dry add Β½ teaspoon ghee and then knead it. I didn't use as it was easy for me to gather and knead. Place the dough on a plate.
  • Now lay a butter paper over it, slightly apply ghee. Now start rolling with a chapathi roller to ΒΌ inch thick. And cut into diamonds.
  • First draw vertical lines then criss cross it to form diamond shapes. Now you have the liberty to enjoy the edge uneven pieces πŸ™‚ Now separate the pieces.
  • I collected the extras, kneaded rolled again and cut into pieces, this way you can eliminate the uneven edge pieces.
  • Cool down and store in airtight container. Enjoy Badam Katli / Badam Barfi!

Notes

  • Soaking - I usually soak almonds in hot water for few minutes so the skin peels off easily. This makes the powder smooth and prevents grainy texture.
  • Grinding - I always grind in short pulses. If you grind too much the almonds release oil and become pasty, so better to keep it semi fine and little coarse.
  • Sugar Syrup - I keep the flame low when making the syrup. It does not need any string consistency, only needs to dissolve completely and turn slightly thick.
  • Dough Stage - I usually take small pinch from the pan and try rolling a tiny ball. If it forms without sticking too much, then the dough is ready to switch off.
  • Kneading Warm Dough - I knead the dough when it is still warm as it becomes soft and flexible. If it turns dry, I just add half teaspoon ghee and knead again.
  • Rolling Evenly - I roll between butter papers because it helps to spread evenly without cracks. It also gives smooth clean finish on top which looks neat.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 40kcal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 2g | Saturated Fat: 0.2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.001g | Sodium: 0.3mg | Potassium: 35mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 0.05IU | Calcium: 13mg | Iron: 0.2mg

The post Badam Katli | Badam Barfi appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Jalebi Recipe | Jilebi Recipe

14 November 2025 at 19:55

Jalebi is a juicy sweet made by pouring a fermented maida batter into hot oil in concentric circles, frying it until crisp and dipping it inside sugar syrup. It is mostly made during festive seasons and special occasions. Sweet jalebi with syrup is perfect for celebration or even just a small treat at home. The smell of hot jalebi frying in oil itself makes you feel so happy.

jalebi served with sugar syrup

This dessert is little tricky but really worth trying at home. The batter ferments overnight and gives that nice tangy flavor which is very special for jalebis. The sugar syrup coats each jalebi well making it soft inside and crisp outside. It is one of those sweets everyone likes, and honestly looks so pretty on the plate also.

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About Jalebi

Jalebi is a sweet made using maida and little besan along with a hint of yogurt and baking powder. Then it is poured in hot oil in small concentric circles, fried until crisp and dunked straight into warm sugar syrup. You can add pinch of cardamom or saffron too for extra aroma.

The texture comes crispy outside and soft inside, almost falling in love the second you take one bite. The sugar syrup gives sweetness and that glossy look which makes jalebi very tempting. It is usually golden yellow in color and you can make plain or add saffron for more flavor.

The taste is sweet and little tangy because of fermentation, and that combo is really lovely for dessert lovers. Sometimes after sitting few minutes in syrup it actually tastes more tasty and juicy. Making jalebi takes some time but the result always feels worth it. The batter must be thick but still pourable, otherwise it won't hold shape.

I usually make jalebi during special days or whenever I feel like something celebratory at home. I love dipping it in warm syrup so it stays juicy. It is fun to make with family too, drawing circles in oil and watching them puff slightly, it gives that festive mood instantly.

jalebi served with sugar syrup

Jalebi Ingredients

  • Maida (all-purpose flour) - I use it for the batter, it gives soft inside and slightly chewy texture. You can mix little atta if you want mild wheat flavor.
  • Besan flour - I add small amount to help batter hold shape and give little nutty flavor.
  • Baking powder - I add a small pinch for slight puffiness while frying.
  • Baking soda - Tiny pinch helps batter rise, gives crisp outer layer. Don't add more else batter becomes loose.
  • Sour curd / yogurt - I add for fermentation and tangy flavor. It also helps batter get small bubbles after resting overnight.
  • Water - I added lukewarm water little by little to get batter thick yet pourable. Too thin batter will not hold shape while making jalebi.
  • Oil - I deep fry in heavy bottom pan, level enough to immerse jalebi. Can use ghee for richer taste.
  • Sugar - I use it for making the syrup, it makes the jalebi sweet and little sticky. The syrup should be thick but not too much thick.
  • For the syrup - I put a little yellow color or sometimes turmeric for getting the shade, saffron and cardamom for nice smell, and rose essence for light fragrance. Lemon juice helps the syrup from turning grainy.

Why This Recipe Works

  • This makes crispy outside and soft inside jalebis.
  • It's tangy from fermented batter and sweet from syrup.
  • It has golden color and perfect shape make it look beautiful for occasions.
  • It can be prepared in advance as batter ferments overnight.
  • Simple ingredients but gives professional style sweet at home.

Similar Recipes

jalebi served with sugar syrup

How to make Jalebi Step by Step

1.In a mixing bowl - take maida, besan flour, baking powder, baking soda, sour yogurt, mix it with a whisk.

how to make jalebi step1

2.Then add water little by little to form a thickish batter more like idli batter consistency.

how to make jalebi step2

3.It should be pourable but very thick, Add food color, mix it well, Make sure there are no lumps.

how to make jalebi step3

4.Cling wrap it and set aside for at least 12-15 hours or overnight preferably in a warm place. Next day morning if you check there will be small bubbles seen as shown. Mix well, when you mix Β you can see the fermented batter, even the smell will be different. Set aside. It may be slightly runny the next day.

how to make jalebi step4

5.Take sugar in a pan - add water and saffron let it boil

how to make jalebi step5

6.When it forms a thick sticky syrup switch off, Add food color and rose essence.

how to make jalebi step6

7.Add lemon juice to prevent from crystallization. I added 2 teaspoon maida flour(do not add more) as I found the batter a bit runny, this step is purely optional, if your batter is thick you don't need to add flour. Now take a sauce bottle or zip lock or whichever is suitable for you.

how to make jalebi step7

8.Fill the sauce bottle with the batter. Check by drawing concentric circles on the batter itself, just for practice.

how to make jalebi step8

9.Heat oil in a flat heavy bottomed pan(the level of oil should be just right for the jalebis to immerse) - try pouring few drops it should rise immediately without sticking and changing color then the oil temperature is perfect. Now start drawing small concentric circles. Deep fry, turn over and cook on both sides until slightly golden and crisp. Drain for few seconds.

how to make jalebi step9

10.Immediately add it to the sugar syrup, dip it for few seconds, press it with a fork for the jalebis to dunk in, turn over and press again.Β Remove the jalebi from oil and immediately add it to get the syrup evenly coated put them in the sugar syrup. Remove and place it in a Β plate. Then store. I got a big container full.

how to make jalebi step10

I love it when it still warm, juicy yummy jalebis!!!

jalebi served with sugar syrup

Expert Tips

  • Ferment batter - I keep batter in warm place overnight. Bubbles show it is ready and smell becomes slightly tangy.
  • Batter consistency - Thick but pourable like idli batter. Too thin batter spreads and won't hold shape.
  • Frying oil - I keep in low-medium flame works best. Test with few drops first, should rise without changing color quickly.
  • Making shapes - I used thin-holed nozzle or sauce bottle. Draw small circles, do not overcrowd in pan or stick.
  • Serving warm - I serve immediately after dipping in syrup. Leftover can keep at room temp or fridge, warm slightly before serving.

Serving and Storage

Serve jalebi warm or slightly cooled. Goes well alone or with rabri. Leftover jalebi can keep in airtight container at room temperature for few hours or in fridge. While serving again, warm little so syrup mixes back and jalebi stays soft inside.

FAQS

1.Can I skip food color?

Yes, jalebi will be pale. Can use pinch turmeric if you want golden color.

2.Can I make batter less hours?

Better to ferment 12 hours, else jalebi will not get tangy and bubbles.

3.Can I add more baking soda?

No, too much makes batter porous and jalebi loose.

4.Can I fry on high flame?

No, jalebi will burn outside and stay raw inside. Use low-medium flame.

5.Can I store in fridge?

Yes, airtight container 1-2 days. Warm slightly before serving.

jalebi served with sugar syrup

If you have any more questions about this Jalebi Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Jalebi Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Jalebi Recipe | Jilebi Recipe

Jalebi is a juicy sweet made by pouring a fermented maida batter into hot oil in concentric circles, frying it until crisp and dipping it inside sugar syrup. It is mostly made during festive seasons and special occasions. Sweet jalebi with syrup is perfect for celebration or even just a small treat at home. The smell of hot jalebi frying in oil itself makes you feel so happy.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword all purpose flour recipes, cardamom powder recipe, curd recipes, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, maida recipes, North Indian, sweet recipes, virtual diwali party, yogurt recipes
Prep Time 12 hours 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 12 hours 40 minutes
Servings 25 Jalebi
Calories 52kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup maida
  • 2 tablespoon besan flour
  • ΒΌ teaspoon baking powder
  • β…› teaspoon baking soda
  • 2 tablespoon sour curd
  • few drops yellow food color
  • luke warm water as required
  • oil to fry
  • 1 cup sugar
  • ΒΎ cup water

For sugar syrup

Instructions

Making Batter:

  • In a mixing bowl - take maida, besan flour, baking powder, baking soda, sour yogurt, mix it with a whisk.
  • Then add water little by little to form a thickish batter more like idli batter consistency.
  • It should be pourable but very thick. Add food color, mix it well, make sure there are no lumps.
  • Cling wrap it and set aside for at least 12-15 hours or overnight preferably in a warm place.
  • Next day morning if you check there will be small bubbles seen. Mix well, when you mix Β you can see the fermented batter, even the smell will be different. Set aside. It may be slightly runny the next day.

Making Sugar Syrup

  • Take sugar in a pan - add water and saffron let it boil
  • When it forms a thick sticky syrup switch off, add food color and rose essence.
  • Add lemon juice to prevent from crystallization. I added 2 teaspoon maida flour (do not add more) as I found the batter a bit runny, this step is purely optional, if your batter is thick you don't need to add flour. Now take a sauce bottle or zip lock or whichever is suitable for you.

Making Jalebis:

  • Fill the sauce bottle with the batter. Check by drawing concentric circles on the batter itself, just for practice.
  • Heat oil in a flat heavy bottomed pan (the level of oil should be just right for the jalebis to immerse) - try pouring few drops it should rise immediately without sticking and changing color then the oil temperature is perfect.
  • Now start making small concentric circles in oil with the batter. Deep fry, turn over and cook on both sides until slightly golden and crisp. Drain for few seconds.
  • Immediately add it to the sugar syrup, dip it for few seconds, press it with a fork for the jalebis to dunk in, turn over and press again.Β 
  • Remove the jalebi from oil and immediately add it to get the syrup evenly coated put them in the sugar syrup. Remove and place it in a Β plate. Store in an air tight container. Enjoy Jalebi!

Notes

  • Ferment batter - I keep batter in warm place overnight. Bubbles show it is ready and smell becomes slightly tangy.
  • Batter consistency - Thick but pourable like idli batter. Too thin batter spreads and won't hold shape.
  • Frying oil - I keep in low-medium flame works best. Test with few drops first, should rise without changing color quickly.
  • Making shapes - I used thin-holed nozzle or sauce bottle. Draw small circles, do not overcrowd in pan or stick.
  • Serving warm - I serve immediately after dipping in syrup. Leftover can keep at room temp or fridge, warm slightly before serving.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 52kcal | Carbohydrates: 12g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.2g | Saturated Fat: 0.1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.03g | Cholesterol: 0.2mg | Sodium: 11mg | Potassium: 13mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 8g | Vitamin A: 2IU | Vitamin C: 0.05mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 0.1mg

The post Jalebi Recipe | Jilebi Recipe appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Sabudana Ladoo | Sago Laddu

12 November 2025 at 19:30

Sabudana Ladoo is a quite easy to make sweet made using simple ingredients. This has mild sweet taste and soft texture that melts in your mouth when you bite. These ladoos are perfect for festival time or even when you feel to make something quick and different. The small pearls of sago gives a light crunch and coconut adds nice flavor to it.

sabudana ladoo served

This is a lovely sweet to try when you run out of rice flour or regular ingredients for other ladoos. It takes less time and gives good quantity also. I like how ghee binds everything well and makes the ladoos smell so good. Each bite feels light, rich and full of flavor. You can make them easily in small batch too.

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About Sabudana Ladoo

Sabudana Ladoo or Sago Laddu is a traditional Indian sweet but not very common compared to other ladoos. It is made by dry roasting sago till puffed and grinding it to powder. Then sugar, coconut and fried cashews are added along with melted ghee to form soft balls.

This ladoo has a nice aroma from roasted sago and ghee. The coconut in this recipe gives body and mild taste that balance the sweetness. Also cashews adds crunch and cardamom brings traditional smell. The best part is it stays soft even after few days because ghee keeps it moist. It is light and not very heavy to eat, so perfect for small snack or treat.

You can use desiccated or fresh coconut, anything you have at home works fine. Desiccated coconut gives longer shelf life while fresh ones gives little more flavor. It is important to roast sago in low flame patiently else it will remain hard inside. Once powdered and mixed, shaping ladoos is very easy.

I usually make this when I want something quick during festive season. I like to make small ladoos and serve with tea or just after meal. The texture is so unique from other sweets and my family also likes the mild taste. It stays good for few days so I keep few in jar always.

sabudana ladoo served

Sabudana Ladoo Ingredients

  • Sabudana (Sago) - I added white sago, it turns crisp when roasted nicely. It gives light crunch and acts as main base for the ladoo. You can use small size sago so it roasts even without getting burnt.
  • Sugar - I used normal white sugar and made it into fine powder for smooth texture. It gives mild sweetness and helps to bind all things together.
  • Cardamom - I used one cardamom pod for light aroma. You can use cardamom powder also if you already have at home.
  • Cashews - I fried few broken cashews in ghee and mixed. It gives crunchy bite and rich taste. You can add raisins or almonds too if you like some mix texture.
  • Ghee - I melted ghee to bind the ladoo and make it shiny. Just add little by little while mixing so that the texture stays soft and not oily.
  • Coconut - I added desiccated coconut for nice flavor and light aroma. You can also use fresh grated coconut if you like more rich taste and soft feel.

Why This Recipe Works

  • This recipe is very easy and use few ingredients which are mostly available.
  • Sago gives nice crisp bite and light nutty flavor after roasting.
  • It does not need any sugar syrup or tricky cooking step.
  • Ghee make the ladoos soft, aromatic and give rich taste.
  • It stay fresh for many days and perfect during festival or for quick sweet craving.

Similar Recipes

How to make Sabudana Ladoo Step by Step

1.Dry roast sago in low flame.Roast until it becomes golden and puffs up a bit, it will take at least 20 minutes. You can see a closer look at this.

how to make sabudana ladoo step1

2.Cool down then transfer to a mixer jar. Powder it and transfer to a mixing bowl. Now add sugar and cardamom.

how to make sabudana ladoo step2

3.Powder it fine, transfer to mixing bowl, add desiccated coconut. Now add a teaspoon of ghee and fry broken cashews until golden brown, transfer to mixing bowl.

how to make sabudana ladoo step3

4.Mix well. Now add ghee little by little and keep mixing.

how to make sabudana ladoo step4

5.Mix it well with your hands, break the lumps and keep mixing. Start rolling balls. If you press like this.

how to make sabudana ladoo step5

6.it should hold together without falling. This is the right consistency. Form balls by holding tight. Shape all the ladoos and arrange it in a plate. Set aside for sometime then store in a clean container.

how to make sabudana ladoo step6

Keeps well for a week in room temperature itself.

sabudana ladoo served

Expert Tips

  • Roast sago - I have roasted sago in low flame till it puffed slightly. This step is important else it will stay hard after grinding.
  • Add ghee - I usually add melted ghee little by little while mixing. If you add all together it becomes too greasy.
  • Powder fine - I have powdered sago and sugar separately to make it smooth. Coarse powder makes ladoo break easily.
  • Mix by hand - I prefer mixing with hands to feel the texture and break any lumps before shaping ladoos.
  • Shape while warm - I have noticed shaping becomes easier when mixture still little warm. Once it cools too much, it becomes dry.

Serving and Storage

Serve Sabudana Ladoo as sweet snack or after meal dessert. It goes well with a cup of tea also. Store the ladoos in airtight jar at room temperature. It stays good for about a week. If you are using fresh coconut, keep in fridge and use within 3 to 4 days.

FAQS

1.Can I use nylon sago?

No, I will not suggest nylon type. Use white regular sago as it roasts well and gives right texture.

2.Why my ladoos not holding shape?

It means mixture needs little more ghee. Add few drops warm ghee and try shaping again.

3.Can I use jaggery?

Yes, you can but melt and strain it before adding. The taste will change slightly.

4.Can I skip coconut?

Yes, you can skip or reduce it. Ladoo will still come good but flavor will be less rich.

5.How long it stays good?

If stored in dry container it stays good for one week. If using fresh coconut keep refrigerated and use soon.

sabudana ladoo served

If you have any more questions about this Sabudana Ladoo Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me onΒ Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Sabudana Ladoo Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Sabudana Ladoo Recipe | Sago Laddu Recipe

Sabudana Ladoo is a quite easy to make sweet made using simple ingredients. This has mild sweet taste and soft texture that melts in your mouth when you bite. These ladoos are perfect for festival time or even when you feel to make something quick and different. The small pearls of sago gives a light crunch and coconut adds nice flavor to it.
Course Snack, sweet
Cuisine Indian
Keyword 30 mins recipes, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, laddu, ladoo recipes, sabudana recipes, sago recipes, sweet recipes, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 10 ladoos
Calories 81kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • Β½ cup sabudana
  • β…› cup sugar
  • 1 no cardamom
  • 8 nos cashews broken
  • ΒΌ cup melted ghee
  • Β½ cup desiccated / fresh coconut

Instructions

  • Dry roast sago in low flame. Roast until it becomes golden and puffs up a bit, it will take at least 20 mins.
  • Cool down then transfer to a mixer jar. Powder it and transfer to a mixing bowl.
  • Now add sugar and cardamom.
  • Powder it fine, transfer to mixing bowl. Add dessicated coconut
  • Now add a teaspoon of ghee and fry broken cashews until golden brown, transfer to mixing bowl.
  • Mix well. Now add ghee little by little and keep mixing.
  • Mix it well with your hands, break the lumps and keep mixing. Start rolling balls.
  • Form balls by holding tight. Shape all the ladoos and arrange it in a plate. Set aside for sometime then store in a clean container.
  • Sago Laddu keeps well for a week in room temperature itself.

Notes

  • Roast sago - I have roasted sago in low flame till it puffed slightly. This step is important else it will stay hard after grinding.
  • Add ghee - I usually add melted ghee little by little while mixing. If you add all together it becomes too greasy.
  • Powder fine - I have powdered sago and sugar separately to make it smooth. Coarse powder makes ladoo break easily.
  • Mix by hand - I prefer mixing with hands to feel the texture and break any lumps before shaping ladoos.
  • Shape while warm - I have noticed shaping becomes easier when mixture still little warm. Once it cools too much, it becomes dry.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 81kcal | Carbohydrates: 10g | Protein: 0.2g | Fat: 5g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 12mg | Sodium: 0.3mg | Potassium: 7mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin C: 0.03mg | Calcium: 2mg | Iron: 0.2mg

The post Sabudana Ladoo | Sago Laddu appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Beetroot Burfi Recipe

11 November 2025 at 20:00

Beetroot Barfi is a quick burfi made using beetroot, coconut, sugar and ghee. It has soft texture and little chewy taste that feels rich. The natural color from beetroot makes it bright pink and very pretty to look. It is also little healthy as beetroot has iron and fiber which gives some goodness too.

beetroot burfi served

This sweet is simple and easy to make, you just need few basic things that are mostly at home. It takes less than half hour and gives perfect result each time. I like how coconut gives mild sweetness and beetroot adds earthy flavor. The ghee makes it glossy and soft which melts so nicely when we eat.

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About Beetroot Barfi

Beetroot Barfi is an easy sweet recipe which has lovely bright color without using any artificial color. The base is made with grated beetroot and coconut cooked together till it becomes thick. Sugar gives shine and ghee add richness to make texture soft. It is bit chewy and moist but not sticky, which make it delicious.

I have used just sugar and ghee to make it simple. Many add condensed milk or milk powder but I feel this version is more fresh and light. Beetroot gives natural sweetness so it needs less sugar also. The aroma of cardamom at the end makes it more pleasant and traditional.

You can try few changes also like adding few drops of rose essence or a spoon of milk while cooking if you want it more soft. Even some add nuts or dry fruits for bite. The color and texture depends on how much time we cook, so you need to stop at the right stage.

I usually make this for Diwali or when guests come. I love the color so much it looks so bright among other sweets. Also kids eat without any complaints as it tastes sweet and soft. I like it warm because it feels juicy and fresh at that time.

beetroot burfi served

Beetroot Barfi Ingredients

  • Beetroot - I used fresh beetroot for natural color. It is grated finely so it cooks evenly and gives smooth texture. You can use any small tender beetroot for better taste.
  • Coconut - I grated coconut which gives mild flavor and make the barfi soft and thick. You can also use frozen.
  • Sugar - This adds mild sweetness. You can adjust as per your taste or even try brown sugar also.
  • Cashews - I have fried broken cashews in ghee to add small crunch. You can use almonds also or skip nuts if you like soft barfi.
  • Ghee - I used homemade ghee which gives rich taste and glossy look. You can use store one also, it helps to avoid sticking while cooking.
  • Cardamom Powder - I added for nice aroma and light flavor. You can also use rose essence or saffron if you want different flavor.

Why This Recipe Works

  • This recipe is very simple and no need to check sugar syrup stage.
  • It uses only basic ingredients which mostly available in kitchen.
  • Beetroot gives bright natural color, so no need for any food color.
  • Coconut and ghee gives rich soft texture and keeps it moist.
  • It cooks very quick and perfect for festival or sudden sweet craving.

Similar Recipes

beetroot burfi served

How to make Beetroot Burfi Step by Step

1.Peel off the skin, trim the edges and grate beetroot. Measure grated beets and set aside.

how to make beetroot burfi step1

2.Now measure grated coconut, set aside. Now take ghee.

how to make beetroot burfi step2

3.Grease a plate / tray with ghee and keep it ready. Now add beets and coconut, saute.

how to make beetroot burfi step3

4.Saute till raw smell leaves, this will take at least 10 minutes in low flame. Now add sugar, the mixture will turn goey.

how to make beetroot burfi step4

5.Add little ghee, roast the broken cashews till golden brown and keep aside. By now the mixture would have thickened. It will start coming together.

how to make beetroot burfi step5

6.Keep stirring continuously in low flame, it will start to bubble at the edges. Look at the small bubbles at the edges.

how to make beetroot burfi step6

7.Keep stirring for few more minutes, once it is thick and starts to leave the sides of the panic will also look little dry this is the perfect stage, Transfer the mixture to the tray, flatten it using a flat bottomed bowl.

how to make beetroot burfi step7

8.Cut into squares when its still warm. Cool down completely then store it in airtight container.

how to make beetroot burfi step8

I love it when it still warm, juicy yummy burfis!!!

beetroot burfi served

Expert Tips

  • Even cooking - I have used fine grater for beetroot, it helps to cook fast and mix smooth with coconut without lumps.
  • Roast properly - I usually roast beetroot and coconut till raw smell leaves before adding sugar else it will taste little raw later.
  • Do not overcook - I have noticed if you cook longer, the mixture turns dry and barfi becomes hard. Stop when it leaves sides of pan.
  • Use thick pan - I have used heavy bottom pan to avoid burning. Keep flame low after sugar is added as it may stick soon.
  • Cut when still warm - I usually mark pieces when the mixture is still warm. Once cold it gets firm and difficult to cut evenly.

Serving and Storage

Serve Beetroot Barfi warm or at room temperature. This goes well for Diwali, pooja or small family celebration. You can store in airtight container for 3 to 4 days. Keep in fridge for longer use. Before eating again, keep outside for few minutes so it turns soft again.

FAQS

1.Can I use dry coconut?

Yes you can use dry one, but soak it in little warm water first to make it soft before grinding.

2.Why my barfi turned hard?

Maybe you cooked it for too long. Next time take it off from flame once mixture start leaving the sides of pan.

3.Can I use jaggery?

Yes you can, it will give dark color and strong taste. But barfi may become little sticky in texture.

4.Can I skip ghee?

I will not suggest skipping it, because ghee give nice aroma and soft bite. You can reduce the amount little if you want.

5.How long it stays fresh?

It stay good for 3 days outside and around 5 days in fridge.

beetroot burfi served

If you have any more questions about this Beetroot Barfi Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Beetroot Barfi Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Beetroot Barfi Recipe

Beetroot Barfi is a quick burfi made using beetroot, coconut, sugar and ghee. It has soft texture and little chewy taste that feels rich. The natural color from beetroot makes it bright pink and very pretty to look. It is also little healthy as beetroot has iron and fiber which gives some goodness too.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword barfi, burfi, cardamom powder recipe, coconut recipes, diwali dishes, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, ghee recipes, sweet recipes, veg recipes, vegetable, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 10 Barfis
Calories 130kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • Β½ cup beetroot
  • Β½ cup coconut
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 tablespoon cashews broken
  • β…› cup + 1 teaspoon ghee
  • ΒΌ teaspoon cardamom powder

Instructions

  • Peel off the skin, trim the edges and grate beetroot. Measure grated beets and set aside.
  • Now measure grated coconut, set aside. Now take ghee.
  • Grease a plate/tray with ghee and keep it ready.
  • Now add beets & coconut and sautΓ©.
  • SautΓ© till raw smell leaves, this will take at least 10mins in low flame. Now add sugar, the mixture will turn gooey.
  • Add little ghee, roast the broken cashews till golden brown and keep aside. By now the mixture would have thickened. It will start coming together.
  • Keep stirring continuously in low flame, it will start to bubble at the edges. Look at the small bubbles at the edges.
  • Keep stirring for few more mins, once it is thick and starts to leave the sides of the pan it will also look little dry this is the perfect stage.
  • Transfer the mixture to the tray, flatten it using a flat bottomed bowl. Cut into squares when its still warm.
  • Cool down completely then store it in airtight container. I love it when it still warm, juicy yummy Beetroot burfis!!!

Notes

  • Even cooking - I have used fine grater for beetroot, it helps to cook fast and mix smooth with coconut without lumps.
  • Roast properly - I usually roast beetroot and coconut till raw smell leaves before adding sugar else it will taste little raw later.
  • Do not overcook - I have noticed if you cook longer, the mixture turns dry and barfi becomes hard. Stop when it leaves sides of pan.
  • Use thick pan - I have used heavy bottom pan to avoid burning. Keep flame low after sugar is added as it may stick soon.
  • Cut when still warm - I usually mark pieces when the mixture is still warm. Once cold it gets firm and difficult to cut evenly.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 130kcal | Carbohydrates: 22g | Protein: 0.4g | Fat: 5g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 9mg | Sodium: 7mg | Potassium: 44mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 21g | Vitamin A: 2IU | Vitamin C: 0.5mg | Calcium: 2mg | Iron: 0.2mg

The post Beetroot Burfi Recipe appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Namak Para | Namakpare

9 November 2025 at 19:39

Namak Para is a quite simple and crispy snack made with wheat flour, maida, ghee and some spices. These small fried pieces are very crunchy and perfect to munch anytime. Namak Para is an Indian version of cookie perfect for tea time. It is a favorite tea time snack in many homes and liked by all age groups.

namak pare served with coffee

Namak Pare is made by making a flour dough then the dough is rolled, cut and fried till golden to get that perfect crunch. Namak Para has mild flavor of ajwain and ghee which makes it so aromatic. It tastes best with evening tea or can be packed for small trips and picnics. Once you make a batch, it stays crisp for many days if stored properly.

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About Namak Para

Namak Para is quite common during festivals like Diwali or Holi. It is also called as Nimki or Namakpare in different parts of India. The snack is made by deep frying small dough pieces prepared using flour, ghee and few spices. The texture is crispy outside and little soft inside which makes it very nice to eat.

The recipe is quite simple and does not need any special ingredient. The mix of maida, wheat flour and sooji give right crunch and light texture. Ghee gives flaky texture and rich flavor which is main secret for perfect Namak Para. Ajwain gives a small punch of flavor and also helps in digestion.

You can see both sweet and salty versions of this snack. The salty one is called Namak Para and the sweet one is known as Shakkar Para. You can even flavor it with kasuri methi, black pepper or cumin seeds for some change. It can be made only with maida or wheat flour or even mix of both as per your choice.

I usually make Namak Para during weekends or festival time. I enjoy making a big batch, store in jar and serve with hot tea in the evening. The sound of that crisp bite is so satisfying. Once you start eating, it is hard to stop with few pieces only.

namak pare served with coffee

Namak Para Ingredients

  • Maida - I have used maida to get that light and crisp texture. You can make fully with wheat flour also but maida gives more crunch.
  • Wheat Flour - Added along with maida for light healthy touch. It makes the snack bit firm and gives good color after frying.
  • Fine Sooji - I have used fine sooji for crispness. It helps Namak Para to stay crunchy for a long time.
  • Ajwain Seeds - This adds mild flavor and helps in digestion too. You can replace with jeera or skip if you do not like the taste.
  • Ghee - I add this for richness and nice aroma. It gives that flaky texture in each bite. Oil can be used too but ghee gives better flavor.
  • Water - I used to knead the dough into soft and smooth texture. Add little by little to get correct consistency.
  • Oil - I used for deep frying. Use fresh oil and fry them in low medium flame for even color and crispness.

Similar Recipes

How to make Namak Pare Step by Step

1.Take maida, wheat flour, sooji, ajwain, ghee and required salt. First mix it well, then add water little by little.

how to make namak pare step1

2.Keep kneading and adding water little by little to form a soft pliable dough like this. Keep covered for 15 minutes.

how to make namak pare step2

3.Then take it out and knead it once. Roll it using a chapathi roller to slightly thick, it should thick like salted crackers. Now prick with fork to avoid puffing.

how to make namak pare step3

4.Using a knife cut like this.Each piece can be 1and Β½ inches long. Carefully separate them.

how to make namak pare step4

5.Now heat oil - add few pieces, do not overcrowd. It will slowly come up and change color. Do not keep the flame in high, low medium should be fine.

how to make namak pare step5

6.Deep fry till golden on both sides. Take it out and drain in tissue paper. Like wise fry the remaining.

how to make namak pare step6

Cool down and store in airtight container.

namak pare served with coffee

Expert Tips

  • Dough Texture - I usually knead the dough soft and smooth but not sticky. If dough is too tight, Namak Para will turn hard, so add water little by little while mixing.
  • Rolling - Roll the dough bit thick like how we roll crackers. If it is too thin, it will become extra crisp and break soon after frying.
  • Pricking - I always prick the rolled dough with fork before cutting. It helps to stop from puffing up while frying.
  • Frying - Keep the flame on low medium so Namak Para cook nice and even. If flame is high, outside turn brown fast but inside stay soft and uncooked.
  • Cooling - Let it cool down fully before putting in jar. This will help to keep it crisp and tasty for long time.

Serving and Storage

Serve Namak Para with hot cup of tea or coffee. It is nice snack to serve when guests come home also. Keep cooled Namak Para in airtight box and it stay good for around 10 to 15 days.

FAQS

1.Can I make this with wheat flour?

Yes you can make it fully with wheat flour, but texture will be little tight though still very nice in taste.

2.Can I bake this recipe?

Yes you can bake this in oven at 180Β°C till it turn golden and crisp. Baking makes it lighter and less oily, good for healthy option.

3.Why my Namak Para became soft after frying?

If oil is not hot enough or dough rolled too thick, it will turn soft. Fry in right heat and roll evenly.

4.Can I add other spices for flavor?

Yes you can add crushed pepper, jeera or kasuri methi for different taste. All versions come out nice.

5.How long can I store Namak Para?

If stored in airtight box, it stays good for around two weeks. Make sure it cools completely before storing.

namak pare served with coffee

If you have any more questions about this Namak Para RecipeΒ do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Namak Para Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Namak Para Recipe | Namakpare Recipe

Namak Para is a quite simple and crispy snack made with wheat flour, maida, ghee and some spices. These small fried pieces are very crunchy and perfect to munch anytime. Namak Para is an Indian version of cookie perfect for tea time. It is a favorite tea time snack in many homes and liked by all age groups.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword 30 mins recipes, all purpose flour recipes, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali snacks recipes, easy diwali recipes, easy diwali snacks, Festival, maida recipes, rava recipes, savoury recipes, snack recipes, virtual diwali party, wheat flour recipes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 25 namakpare
Calories 15kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • ΒΌ cup maida
  • ΒΌ cup wheat flour
  • 1 tablespoon fine sooji
  • ΒΌ teaspoon ajwain seeds
  • 1 tablespoon ghee
  • oil to deep fry
  • salt to taste
  • less than ΒΌ cup water

Instructions

  • Take maida, wheat flour, sooji, ajwain, ghee and required salt. First mix it well, then add water little by little.
  • Keep kneading and adding water little by little to form a soft pliable dough like this. Keep covered for 15mins.
  • Then take it out and knead it once. Roll it using a chapathi roller to slightly thick, it should thick like salted crackers. Now prick with fork to avoid puffing.
  • Using a knife cut into into rectangular shapes . Each piece can be 1and Β½ inches long. Carefully separate them.
  • Now heat oil - add few pieces, do not overcrowd. It will slowly come up and change color. Do not keep the flame in high, low medium should be fine.
  • Deep fry till golden on both sides.
  • Take it out and drain in tissue paper. Likewise fry the remaining.
  • Cool down and store Namak Para in airtight container.
  • Enjoy Namakpare!

Notes

  • Dough Texture - I usually knead the dough soft and smooth but not sticky. If dough is too tight, Namak Para will turn hard, so add water little by little while mixing.
  • Rolling - Roll the dough bit thick like how we roll crackers. If it is too thin, it will become extra crisp and break soon after frying.
  • Pricking - I always prick the rolled dough with fork before cutting. It helps to stop from puffing up while frying.
  • Frying - Keep the flame on low medium so Namak Para cook nice and even. If flame is high, outside turn brown fast but inside stay soft and uncooked.
  • Cooling - Let it cool down fully before putting in jar. This will help to keep it crisp and tasty for long time.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 15kcal | Carbohydrates: 2g | Protein: 0.3g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 0.4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 2mg | Sodium: 0.1mg | Potassium: 5mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 0.01g | Vitamin A: 0.03IU | Calcium: 0.5mg | Iron: 0.1mg

The post Namak Para | Namakpare appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Sago Murukku | Javvarisi Murukku

6 November 2025 at 19:27

Sago Murukku is a crispy snack made with rice flour and sago pearls as main ingredients. It has that perfect crunch with mild spicy flavor which makes it a great tea time snack in the evening. The texture is bit different from regular murukku because of the soaked sago, it gives nice bubbly look and extra crisp feel when you bite.

sago murukku served with coffee

This murukku is very popular during festival time but also a nice choice for casual snacking anytime. The method is quite simple but the soaking of sago should be done properly else it may burst while frying. Once fried, the murukku turns golden and crunchy with that little taste of cumin and butter which make it so addictive.

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About Sago Murukku

Sago Murukku, also called Javvarisi Murukku, is one interesting twist to the usual South Indian murukku recipe. Instead of using only rice flour, this version adds soaked sago pearls which give lovely crisp texture and airy bubbles on top when fried. The look itself is tempting and taste is even more.

The recipe mainly uses rice flour, sago, curd, and butter. The curd and soaked sago helps in binding the dough easily and adds slight tangy flavor too. Once deep-fried in medium hot oil, the murukku puffs up slightly, gets crunchy on the outside and remains light inside.

This version is perfect for those who are bored of making same old thenkuzhal or butter murukku every time. It is something new and flavorful with nice crispness. Even though soaking part takes little time, the actual mixing and frying are very simple and quick to do.

At my home, I usually make this in small batches during festive or when guests come. It stays good for many days and goes well with tea, coffee or even with rasam rice. Kids also love it because of its crunch and mild spicy taste.

sago murukku served with coffee

Sago Murukku Ingredients

  • Rice flour - I add homemade flour as it gives the best crisp texture. You can use store bought also, but make sure it is fine and smooth.
  • Sago (Javvarisi) - This is the main ingredient that gives the murukku its bubbly look and light crunchy feel. I always soak it well in curd, else it may pop while frying. The soaking part is really important.
  • Curd - I have used thick curd to soak the sago, it helps to soften it and gives mild tang taste too. If the curd is very thick, I add little water or sometimes use buttermilk instead.
  • Butter - I add a small piece of butter to give rich flavor and soft crispness. Too much butter will make dough break while pressing, so I always add carefully.
  • Red chilli powder - I used mild red chilli powder just for light spice and color. You can add more if you like little extra heat.
  • Cumin seeds - I like adding cumin seeds as it gives nice aroma and also helps for easy digestion. Sometimes I mix few sesame seeds also for change in flavor.
  • Hing (asafoetida) - I always add one small pinch of hing for flavor and also to avoid gas trouble after eating fried snacks. It adds nice subtle aroma.
  • Oil - I used refined oil for deep frying, it helps to makes the murukku more crispy and tasty. You can also use groundnut oil for better taste.

Similar Recipes

How to make Sago Murukku Step by Step

1.Measure and soak sago in curd at least for 6 hours. I soaked it overnight

how to make sago murukku step1

2.Morning when you see the sago pearls will be soft. Now in a mixing bowl - add rice flour, red chili powder, sago, jeera, butter, hing.

how to make sago murukku step2

3.Mix it well with your hands, then add water little by little. Gather together to form a non sticky dough like this.

how to make sago murukku step3

4.Shape it into a log and keep it ready. Fix your thenkuzhal murukku mold.

how to make sago murukku step4

5.Now fill the murukku press with the dough, in parallel heat oil. When oil is hot, drop a pinch of batter to check it comes up immediately, then oil is at the correct temperature. Squeeze in a spread manner, do not crowd. Fry till golden and until shh sound ceases.

how to make sago murukku step5

6.t will stick together just break it while frying. You can break it after frying. Drain in tissue paper. Once it cools down, break it and set aside.

how to make sago murukku step6

Store in a dry jar.

sago murukku served with coffee

Expert Tips

  • Soaking sago- I always soak sago for minimum 6 hours or overnight. When I press it between fingers it should feel soft, else it may burst while frying.
  • Dough consistency - The dough should be smooth and soft. If it feels dry, I sprinkle few drops of water and knead again till it becomes even.
  • Oil temperature - I check the oil by dropping tiny piece of dough, it should come up slowly. If oil is too hot, murukku will turn brown fast and stay soft inside.
  • Shaping method - Because of the sago, the dough will not come perfectly in circles. So i just press directly into oil to make uthiri murukku, it comes more crunchy this way.
  • Storage - I always cool the murukku completely before storing. I keep it in airtight tin box and it stays crisp for about 10 days easily.

Serving and Storage

Serve this Sago Murukku along with evening tea or filter coffee as a light crunchy snack. It is also a nice addition to your festive snacks box to share with friends and family. Once cooled completely, transfer to clean airtight container or steel box. If kept away from moisture, it stays fresh and crispy up to 10-12 days easily.

FAQS

1.Can I skip curd and use only water?

Yes, but curd helps to soften the sago and gives slight flavor. Only water may make the murukku little hard in texture.

2.My sago is popping while frying, what to do?

That happens when sago is not soaked enough. Soak it for more hours till it turns soft when pressed.

3.Can I make in air fryer?

No, it will not give same texture as deep frying, it gives best crisp and taste for this murukku.

4.Can I use ghee?

You can use ghee also, but butter gives a lighter and flakier result with nice golden color.

5.Why my murukku is breaking while pressing?

It means the dough is too dry. Sprinkle little water, knead again till soft and then press gently.

sago murukku served with coffee

If you have any more questions about this Sago Murukku RecipeΒ do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Sago Murukku Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Sago Murukku | Javvarisi Murukku

Sago Murukku is a tasty, savoury snack made by frying a dough of powdered sago passed through murukku press. Sago Murukku is an alternate murukku to try for Diwali & other festivals. Sago Murukku translated as Javvarisi Murukku is a healthy snack compared to the packed foods.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword diwali dishes, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali snacks recipes, easy diwali recipes, easy diwali snacks, Festival, fry, fry recipes, sago recipes, savoury recipes, snack recipes, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 10 Murukku
Calories 87kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup rice flour
  • β…“ cup sago
  • ΒΌ cup curd
  • ΒΎ tablespoon butter
  • Β½ teaspoon red chilli powder
  • Β½ teaspoon cumin seeds
  • a tiny pinch hing
  • salt to taste
  • oil to deep fry

Instructions

  • Measure and soak sago in curd at least for 6 hrs. I soaked it overnight. Morning when you see the sago pearls will be soft.
  • Now in a mixing bowl - add rice flour, red chilli powder, sago, jeera, butter, hing.
  • Mix it well with your hands, then add water little by little. Gather together to form a non sticky dough.
  • Shape it into a log and keep it ready.
  • Fix your thenkuzhal murukku mould and fill the murukku press with the dough.
  • Now, in parallel heat oil. When oil is hot, drop a pinch of batter to check it comes up immediately, then oil is at the correct temperature. Squeeze in a spreaded manner, do not crowd.
  • Fry till golden and until shh sound ceases. It will stick together just break it while frying. You can break it after frying.
  • Drain in tissue paper. Once it cools down, break it and set aside.
  • Serve Sago Murukku with tea!

Notes

  • Do not overcook, it should golden.
  • As sago is more in this recipe, I recommend to make it as uthiri murukku as I don't think we can make circles with this recipe.
  • Soaking for more hours is required else sago may pop out so be at a safer distance while frying.
  • When you squeeze the dough will stick to each other, when it becomes crispy try to break with the ladle else after frying you can break it.
  • Regulate flame and cook, do not cook in high flame.
  • I used my thenkuzhal press to get this shape.
  • If you are making in larger quantity keep the dough closed to avoid from drying.
    If the dough is too dry sprinkle little water.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 87kcal | Carbohydrates: 17g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.4g | Trans Fat: 0.03g | Cholesterol: 3mg | Sodium: 18mg | Potassium: 26mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 0.3g | Vitamin A: 63IU | Vitamin C: 0.2mg | Calcium: 11mg | Iron: 0.1mg

The post Sago Murukku | Javvarisi Murukku appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Jangri Recipe | Jangiri Recipe

5 November 2025 at 22:08

Jangri is a crispy and soft sweet that has a beautiful bright orange color and shiny look which makes it very eye catching on any festive table. It is made by squeezing a smooth urad dal batter into hot oil and soaking it in sugar syrup. This makes jangri crisp on the outside, more soft and chewy inside.

jangiri served

It has that light crunch when you bite and soon turns soft with the syrup sweetness. It is often prepared during family gatherings or special festivals when we wish to make something classic and beautiful. Though it looks difficult, with a bit of patience and right consistency it turns out really perfect.

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About Jangri

Jangri is a very old South Indian sweet which many of us have grown up seeing in sweet shops displayed in glass cases. It is sometimes confused with jalebi but both are different in taste and ingredients. Jangri is made using urad dal batter while jalebi is made using maida and fermented batter.

The sugar syrup gives jangri its main sweetness, it should be slightly sticky and aromatic with rose essence or cardamom. The color is usually bright orange which looks beautiful and festive. The texture is soft, juicy and it stays like that for many hours if soaked properly.

Over time there are many small variations seen, some people add little rice flour for extra crispness, while some add ghee in syrup for more aroma. Few make them mini sized and some prefer the big round ones. The method remains almost same but what matters is the consistency of batter and syrup which decides the final result.

I usually prepare jangri when I have some relaxed weekend or when we plan a family get together. It takes little time and focus but it gives so much happiness to see those golden rings floating and soaking in syrup.

jangiri served

Jangri Ingredients

  • Urad dal - I have used whole urad dal without skin, it gives the soft and fluffy texture for the batter. You can use split urad dal also but the batter may not be that smooth.
  • Idli rice - I add little idli rice for giving slight crispness to jangri and to help it hold shape. You can skip it if you like more soft texture.
  • Orange food color - I use this for giving that bright traditional color. You can skip or use natural food color like saffron water.
  • Sugar - I add white sugar for the syrup, it gives a shiny glaze and light sweetness. You can try jaggery syrup version for a earthy taste.
  • Rose essence - I add few drops in syrup to give a pleasant floral smell. You can use cardamom powder if you want more Indian touch.
  • Lemon juice - I add to the syrup to stop crystallization and to keep syrup smooth. You can even use vinegar in very small amount.
  • Oil - I have used refined oil for deep frying. You can mix little ghee for extra flavor and aroma.

Why This Recipe Works

  • This recipe is simple once you understand the batter and syrup consistency.
  • The jangris stay soft and juicy for long time as syrup coats evenly.
  • You can control sweetness and color as per your preference.
  • The urad dal gives perfect spongy and light texture inside.
  • It is a nice sweet to prepare ahead and serve for any special meal or festival.

Similar Recipes

jangiri served

How to make Jangri Step by step

1.Rinse rice and urad dal twice, then soak for 2 hours.

how to make jangiri step1

2.Then grind it in a wet grinder with very little water. Grind it to a thick batter like medu vada batter. Scrape the sides every now and then. Grind it for atleast 30-40 minutes. When you take a pinch of the batter and put it in water, it should float that's the right consistency. The batter should be more like butter very smooth and light.

how to make jangiri step2

3.Look at the batter fluffy and smooth.Take it a mixing bowl, add salt and food color to it.Set aside.

how to make jangiri step4

4.In parallel make the sugar syrup - Take sugar in a wide bottomed pan ,add water to it and let it boil. When it becomes thick and sticky start checking for string consistency. When it is half string that is it will start to form 1 string but will not stand that is the stage we are looking for, switch off.

how to make jangiri step5

5.Add rose essence and food color.

how to make jangiri step5

6.Then add lemon juice, Set aside. The syrup will be sticky, it will thicken with time, to avoid crystallization we are adding lemon juice. Now get ready with your piping bag or zip lock cover or jangiri cloth. Amma gave this cloth but I was comfortable using zip lock only so used it.

how to make jangiri step6

7.Mix the batter well for the color and salt to be mixed evenly. Take a zip lock cover fill it with the batter, cut a small hole.

how to make jangiri step7

8.First I tried in a plate, it is not bad right?! Heat oil, oil temperature is very important it should not smoking hot, it should be hot. Squeeze and draw patterns, do not crowd much.

how to make jangiri step8

9.I used my paniyaram ladle to flip. You can use a skewer or wooden chopstick too .Flip over and cook. Deep fry till both sides are slightly crisp but color should not change. Drain and remove from oil.

how to make jangiri step9

10.Quickly add to warm syrup for 3-5 minutes for each batch, then drain and arrange it in a plate. Repeat the process till the entire batter finishes. Finally after all the jangiris are fried, you can pour the remaining syrup over the jangiris.

how to make jangiri step10

Enjoy!

jangiri served

Expert Tips

  • Batter consistency - The batter should be thick but smooth, when dropped in water it should float. This is the key for good jangri.
  • Oil temperature - Keep oil hot but not smoking. I usually lower flame while drawing the shapes and increase slightly while frying.
  • Syrup texture - Make sure syrup is in half string consistency. If thick it will not soak properly, if thin jangri will turn soggy.
  • Drawing shapes - If you are not confident, practice on plate first then try in oil. Even if shape is not perfect, taste will be the same.
  • Soaking time - Keep each batch in syrup for 3 to 5 minutes. I turn them once or twice to let syrup absorb evenly.

Serving and Storage

Serve jangri as a sweet treat after meals or along with evening tea. It looks beautiful in serving plate and can also be packed as homemade gift. Store leftover jangri in a airtight container after it cool down fully. It stays good for 2 to 3 days in room temperature or you can keep in fridge for few more days. If kept in fridge, warm it little before serving to get that soft fresh taste again.

FAQS

1.Can I make jangri without food color?

Yes, you can use saffron or turmeric water for mild natural color, though the traditional bright orange look will be missing.

2.Why my jangri is not soft?

The syrup might have gone too thick or batter could be over beaten. Try using half string syrup next time.

3.Can I grind the batter in mixie instead of grinder?

Yes you can, but the texture may be little coarse. If using mixie, add few drops water at a time and grind patiently.

4.Can I make jangri a day before serving?

Yes you can prepare one day before and keep covered. It actually tastes better next day as syrup sets well.

5.Why my jangri lost shape in oil?

The batter may be loose or oil too hot. Make batter slightly thick and regulate flame while frying.

jangiri served

If you have any more questions about this Jangri RecipeΒ do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Jangri Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Jangri Recipe | Jangiri Recipe

Jangri is a crispy and soft sweet that has a beautiful bright orange color and shiny look which makes it very eye catching on any festive table. It is made by squeezing a smooth urad dal batter into hot oil and soaking it in sugar syrup. This makes jangri crisp on the outside, more soft and chewy inside.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, sweet recipes, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 2 hours
Servings 25 jangiris
Calories 36kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • Β½ cup whole urad dal
  • Β½ tablespoon idli rice
  • a tiny pinch salt
  • few drops orange food color

For the sugar syrup

  • ΒΎ cup sugar
  • Β½ cup water
  • few drops rose essence
  • few drops orange food color
  • Β½ teaspoon lemon juice

Instructions

Making Jangri Batter:

  • Rinse rice and urad dal twice, then soak for 2 hours. Then grind it in a wet grinder with very little water.
  • Grind it to a thick batter like medu vada batter. Scrap the sides every now and then. Grind it for at least 30-40 minutes. When you take a pinch of the batter and put it in water, it should float that's the right consistency. The batter should be more like butter very smooth and light.
  • Take it a mixing bowl, add salt and food color to it. set aside.

Making Sugar Syrup:

  • Take sugar in a wide bottomed pan, add water to it and let it boil. When it becomes thick and sticky start checking for string consistency. When it is half string (that is it will start to form a string but will not stand), switch off.
  • Add rose essence and food color. Then add lemon juice, set aside. The syrup will be sticky, it will thicken with time, to avoid crystallization we are adding lemon juice.

Making Jangri:

  • Now get ready with your piping bag or zip lock cover or jangri cloth.
  • Mix the batter well for the color and salt to be mixed evenly. Take a zip lock cover fill it with the batter, cut a small hole.
  • Heat oil, oil temperature is very important it should not smoking hot, it should be hot. Squeeze and draw patterns, do not crowd much.
  • I used my paniyaram ladle to flip. You can use a skewer or wooden chopstick too. Flip over and cook. Deep fry till both sides are slightly crisp but color should not change. Drain and remove from oil.
  • Quickly add to warm syrup for 3-5 minutes for each batch, then drain and arrange it in a plate. Repeat the process till the entire batter finishes. Finally after all the jangiris are fried, you can pour the remaining syrup over the jangiris.
  • Offer Jangris to God if you are making for Diwali and enjoy!

Notes

  • Batter consistency - The batter should be thick but smooth, when dropped in water it should float. This is the key for good jangri.
  • Oil temperature - Keep oil hot but not smoking. I usually lower flame while drawing the shapes and increase slightly while frying.
  • Syrup texture - Make sure syrup is in half string consistency. If thick it will not soak properly, if thin jangri will turn soggy.
  • Drawing shapes - If you are not confident, practice on plate first then try in oil. Even if shape is not perfect, taste will be the same.
  • Soaking time - Keep each batch in syrup for 3 to 5 minutes. I turn them once or twice to let syrup absorb evenly.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 36kcal | Carbohydrates: 8g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.1g | Saturated Fat: 0g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.001g | Sodium: 1mg | Potassium: 1mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 6g | Vitamin A: 0.2IU | Vitamin C: 0.2mg | Calcium: 3mg | Iron: 0.3mg

The post Jangri Recipe | Jangiri Recipe appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Arisi Murukku

4 November 2025 at 19:55

Arisi Murukku is a crispy and light South Indian snack made using rice and few spices. It is little different from regular murukku as it is made using soaked and ground rice batter instead of ready made rice flour. The texture comes out light, crunchy with mild spice flavor that makes it perfect to have with evening tea or coffee.

arisi murukku served

This murukku is a very good choice when you do not have rice flour at home but still want to make something crunchy and tasty. Because it is made with ground rice batter, it tastes more fresh and has nice homemade feel. Arisi Murukku can be made for any festival time or even as small evening snack when you feel like eating something savory and crisp.

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About Arisi Murukku

Arisi Murukku is a traditional South Indian snack where "Arisi" means rice. This version is made using parboiled rice, also called puzhungal arisi, which is soaked and ground like idli batter then mixed with few simple ingredients to make a smooth dough. The ground rice gives special flavor and make the murukku light, crispy and tasty after frying.

The main flavor in this murukku comes from red chili, cumin and ajwain. These spices give small burst of flavor in every bite while butter add that melt in the mouth crispness. Roasted gram dal powder add mild nutty taste and also help to bind the dough well.

The process may look long but it is very simple once you start step by step. The rice is soaked, ground thick and mixed with spices, butter and flour to make smooth dough. The aroma while frying these golden murukkus fills the house and brings that festive feel.

I usually make Arisi Murukku on weekends or whenever family feels like having something crunchy with tea. It feels nice to make snack fully from scratch without using any packed flour.

arisi murukku served

Arisi Murukku Ingredients

  • Parboiled Rice - I used puzhungal arisi soaked and ground into thick smooth batter. It gives soft inside and crisp outer after frying. You can use raw rice also, but texture will be little different.
  • Roasted Gram Dal - I ground it to fine powder which makes dough soft and gives light nutty flavor. If not available, you can replace with besan but taste change a bit.
  • Butter - I used soft butter at room temperature. It gives rich taste and nice crisp texture. You can replace half of it with oil if you want lighter version.
  • Red Chillies - I added it with rice to give mild spice and light color. You can add more or less as per taste.
  • Cumin Seeds - It gives nice aroma and helps for easy digestion. Can replace with carom seeds also if you like.
  • Ajwain - I used small amount for flavor and mild crunch. It gives very nice smell while frying.
  • Oil - I used for frying murukku till golden and crispy. Use any neutral oil, but keep flame medium for even color.

Similar Recipes

How to make Arisi Murukku Step by Step

1.Measure 1 cup parboiled rice, rinse it well drain water, Then soak it in water till immersing level for at least 2 hours. Then grind it in wet grinder along with 2 red chilies.

how to make arisi murukku step1

2.Add very little water as possible and grind at least for 30 minutes to get a smooth thick batter like this.

how to make arisi murukku step2

3.Take fried gram dal in a mixer jar and grind it to a fine powder. Sieve it in a fine sieve.

how to make arisi murukku step3

4.Discard the coarse particles. In a wide mixing bowl - add rice batter along with butter, salt, jeera, ajwain and fried gram dal powder.

how to make arisi murukku step4

5.Mix well to form a smooth non sticky dough, mine was too dry so sprinkled little water to get a smooth dough consistency.

how to make arisi murukku step5

6.Take a portion, Grease the murukku press and use the murukku press(I used the thenkuzhal mold). Fill the dough till ΒΎth of the murukku press.

how to make arisi murukku step6

7.Β Start pressing. I usually press in 2 ladles and flip it in oil. Heat oil , check by adding a pinch of dough if it raises immediately with a shh sound then the oil is ready.

how to make arisi murukku step7

8.Now carefully flip over the prepared murukkus and deep fry till golden. Fry in batches. Repeat the process until the entire dough finishes. Drain in tissue paper and store it.

how to make arisi murukku step8

Serve with tea.

arisi murukku served

Expert Tips

  • Soaking - Always soak the rice for at least 2 hours and grind it to a smooth thick batter. Do not pour too much water else the dough becomes sticky and little hard to press.
  • Butter Quantity - Adding more butter can make murukku break while pressing. If lines break, add little fried gram powder or rice flour and knead again.
  • Oil Temperature - Oil should be hot but not smoking. Drop small dough piece, if it comes up slowly then oil is ready for frying.
  • Keep Dough Covered - Always keep rest of dough covered with wet cloth while frying to prevent drying. If dough turn dry, sprinkle little water and knead again.
  • Pressing Shape - I usually use thenkuzhal mould for even thin lines. You can try star or other moulds too for different pattern.

Serving and Storage

Serve Arisi Murukku with a hot cup of tea or coffee for nice evening snack. It also makes lovely gift during Diwali or small family functions. Cool down the murukku completely and the keep it in airtight container so it stay crisp and fresh. It stay good for around 10 to 12 days at room temperature.

arisi murukku served

FAQS

1.Can I use raw rice instead?

Yes you can use, but murukku will turn bit hard. Parboiled rice give more light and crispy texture.

2.Why murukku dough is too dry?

Hard douh makes the murukku dry. Just sprinkle little water and knead again till smooth.

3.The murukku is breaking while pressing, why?

That happen if butter is more or dough too soft. Add small amount of rice flour or roasted gram powder to fix it.

4.Can I store the dough and fry later?

Yes you can, just keep it covered properly so it not dry out. But better to fry fresh for nice crispness.

5.Which mold is best for this recipe?

I use thenkuzhal mould as it give thin and even lines. But you can use any mold shape you like, all come out nice and tasty.

arisi murukku served

The post Arisi Murukku appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Sweet Sev | Seeni Sev

4 November 2025 at 19:39

Sweet Sev, also known as Seeni Sev, is a light and crispy snack covered with thin sugar coating that makes it slightly crunchy and sweet in each bite. It is a simple and tasty sweet made using gram flour and rice flour, deep fried into thin golden strands and then mixed with sugar syrup. The whole process fills the kitchen with lovely aroma and gives that festive feel.

seeni sev served

This sweet sev is mostly made during festivals and special family occasions, and it is liked by both kids and elders equally. It has that melt in mouth texture with sugar coating holding on each strand, giving nice crunch and sweetness together. The cardamom and dry ginger flavor adds small warmth which makes it more comforting and homely.

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About Sweet Sev

Sweet Sev or Seeni Sev is a simple South Indian sweet that mix the crunchy taste of fried sev with sugar coating. The sev is first made by mixing gram flour and rice flour with hot oil which makes it crispy. Then it is fried golden and later tossed in sugar syrup that coat the sev evenly.

The texture of Sweet Sev is light, crispy and little sticky when just made, but turns fully crisp after cooling. It stays crunchy for many days if stored properly in airtight box. The small hint of cardamom and dry ginger powder gives nice traditional flavor that balance the sweetness.

The main step here is the sugar syrup consistency. It should reach hard ball stage, that means when you drop syrup in water, it form a hard ball without dissolving. This stage gives perfect coating to the sev. If syrup go little more thick, it make sev stick together, so this part needs bit careful watching.

Seeni Sev is my favorite. I love all sweet recipes especially when sweet murukku. Kovilpatti and Sattur are famous for this cheeni sev / seeni sev apart from kadala mittai. I don't really remember when I tasted seeni sev first but I loved it like anything that I finished half of it myself.

I usually make Sweet Sev on weekends or when guests visit home. It is one of those sweets that stay well for long time and go perfect with evening tea or coffee. It also looks very pretty when packed for gifting during festive time.

seeni sev served

Sweet Sev Ingredients

  • Besan Flour - I used gram flour as main base for sev. It gives nice golden color and crispy texture when fried. Always use fresh flour for better taste.
  • Rice Flour - I added little rice flour to make sev more light and crunchy. You can use idiyappam flour also if you like same result.
  • Hot Oil - I used few spoons of hot oil while mixing the dough. It gives that perfect crispness and helps sev absorb less oil while frying.
  • Oil - I used refined oil for frying. Keep oil in medium heat to get even color and crisp texture. Too hot oil will brown sev fast but keep inside soft.
  • Sugar - I used white sugar for syrup as it gives best coating. You can also use light brown sugar but color will come little darker.
  • Cardamom Powder - It adds a nice smell and mild sweet flavor to the syrup. It add that perfect traditional touch to the sev.
  • Dry Ginger Powder - Small pinch adds warmth and helps to balance sweetness. You can skip it if not available but it really gives nice taste.

Why This Recipe Works

  • The sev stays crisp and light even after mixing with sugar syrup.
  • The sugar syrup coating form thin crystal layer that shine and give small crunch.
  • The combination of besan and rice flour gives perfect balance.
  • It can be made easily at home with basic ingredients from kitchen.
  • It store well for long time and perfect to make during festivals or holidays.

Similar Recipes

How to make Sweet Sev Step by Step

1.In a mixing bowl - measure and add besan flour, rice flour along with required salt. Add hot oil to it.

how to make seeni sev step1

2.Mix it well with your hands, then add water little by little

how to make seeni sev step2

3.Gather together to form a non sticky dough like this. Shape it into a log and keep it ready. Fix your thenkuzhal murukku mold.

how to make seeni sev step3

4.Now fill the murukku press with the dough, in parallel heat oil. When oil is hot, drop a pinch of batter to check it comes up immediately, then oil is at the correct temperature. Squeeze in circular motion, do not crowd, just 2 layers is enough.

how to make seeni sev step4

5.Fry till golden and until shh sound ceases. Drain in tissue paper. Once it cools down, break it and set aside.

how to make seeni sev step5

6.Take sugar in a pan,add water to it. Heat it up.

how to make seeni sev step7

7.Add cardamom and dry grinder powder, keep cooking. Sugar will first dissolve then start to thicken up.

how to make seeni sev step7

8.Keep a small plate of water and keep checking. When you add few drops to the plate first the syrup will get dissolved after sometime it will stand still in water without dissolving and try to gather and form a hard ball, this is the right consistency we want.

how to make seeni sev step8

9.Switch off. Now add the broken sev and toss it well.

how to make seeni sev step9

10.Toss it for a minute and leave it un disturbed, in few minutes sugar will be coated so beautifully. Cool down then store in airtight container.

how to make seeni sev step10

Store in a dry jar.

seeni sev served

Expert Tips

  • Syrup Consistency - Always check syrup by dropping small bit in water. When it form hard ball and not dissolve, off the flame immediately. That gives perfect coating on sev.
  • Dough Texture - Make dough soft and smooth, not tight. If it is too stiff, sev will break when pressing. Add water little by little till right texture.
  • Oil Temperature - Keep oil medium hot always. Too hot oil will brown sev quick but make inside soft, too low heat will make it oily.
  • Breaking the Sev - After frying, let sev cool fully before breaking to small pieces. This keep it crisp and clean.
  • Mixing with Syrup - Once syrup reaches right stage, quickly add sev and toss nicely so it coat well. Do not stir too much later, just leave to set.

Serving and Storage

Serve Sweet Sev as light snack with evening tea or coffee, or enjoy anytime when craving sweet. It is also a nice sweet to gift during Diwali or festive days. Once sev cool completely, store in airtight box and keep in room temperature. It stays fresh and crispy for about one week or even more if handled properly.

FAQS

1.Can I use store bought sev for this recipe?

Yes you can, but homemade sev taste much better and has nice crisp texture that holds sugar perfectly.

2.Why my sev is not crispy?

Maybe oil was not hot enough or dough was tight. Always fry in medium hot oil to get right crispness.

3.How to fix sev that became too hard?

That happens when syrup becomes thick. Add one spoon water, heat again slightly and toss sev once more to make it soft again.

4.Can I use brown sugar?

Yes, you can use, but color will turn darker and taste will be more caramel like. Still it taste good.

5.How long does Sweet Sev stay fresh?

It stays good for around one week in airtight container. Keep it away from moisture else it may turn sticky.

seeni sev served

If you have any more questions about this Sweet Sev RecipeΒ do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram,Β Facebook,Β PinterestΒ ,YoutubeΒ andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Sweet Sev Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Sweet Sev Recipe | Seeni Sev Recipe

Sweet Sev, also known as Seeni Sev, is a light and crispy snack covered with thin sugar coating that makes it slightly crunchy and sweet in each bite. It is a simple and tasty sweet made using gram flour and rice flour, deep fried into thin golden strands and then mixed with sugar syrup. The whole process fills the kitchen with lovely aroma and gives that festive feel.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword cardamom powder recipe, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali snacks recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, rice flour recipes, sev, sweet recipes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 2 cups
Calories 469kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • Β½ cup besan flour
  • β…› cup rice flour / idiyappam flour
  • 2 tablespoon hot oil
  • oil to deep fry
  • salt to taste

To make sugar syrup

  • Β½ cup sugar
  • ΒΌ cup water
  • β…› teaspoon cardamom powder
  • 1 pinch dry ginger powder

Instructions

Making Sev:

  • In a mixing bowl - measure and add besan flour, rice flour along with required salt. Add hot oil to it.
  • Mix it well with your hands, then add water little by little.
  • Gather together to form a non sticky dough. Shape it into a log and keep it ready.
  • Fix your thenkuzhal murukku mold and fill the murukku press with the dough.
  • In parallel heat oil. When oil is hot, drop a pinch of batter to check it comes up immediately, then oil is at the correct temperature.
  • Squeeze the press in circular motion, do not crowd, just 2 layers is enough.
  • Fry till golden and until shh sound ceases. Drain in tissue paper. Once it cools down, break it and set aside.

Making Sugar Syrup:

  • Take sugar in a pan, add water to it. Heat it up.
  • Add cardamom and dry grinder powder, keep cooking. Sugar will first dissolve then start to thicken up.
  • Keep a small plate of water and keep checking. When you add few drops to the plate first the syrup will get dissolved after sometime it will stand still in water without dissolving and try to gather and form a ball, it will form a little loose ball, this is the right consistency we want.Switch off.

Making Sweet Sev:

  • Now add the broken sev and toss it well.
  • Toss it for a minute and leave it undisturbed, in few mins sugar will be coated so beautifully. Cool down then store in airtight container.
  • Offer Seeni Sev to God and enjoy!

Notes

  • Syrup Consistency - Always check syrup by dropping small bit in water. When it form hard ball and not dissolve, off the flame immediately. That gives perfect coating on sev.
  • Dough Texture - Make dough soft and smooth, not tight. If it is too stiff, sev will break when pressing. Add water little by little till right texture.
  • Oil Temperature - Keep oil medium hot always. Too hot oil will brown sev quick but make inside soft, too low heat will make it oily.
  • Breaking the Sev - After frying, let sev cool fully before breaking to small pieces. This keep it crisp and clean.
  • Mixing with Syrup - Once syrup reaches right stage, quickly add sev and toss nicely so it coat well. Do not stir too much later, just leave to set.

Nutrition

Serving: 125g | Calories: 469kcal | Carbohydrates: 75g | Protein: 7g | Fat: 16g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 5g | Monounsaturated Fat: 9g | Trans Fat: 0.1g | Sodium: 21mg | Potassium: 264mg | Fiber: 4g | Sugar: 53g | Vitamin A: 12IU | Vitamin C: 0.03mg | Calcium: 16mg | Iron: 2mg

The post Sweet Sev | Seeni Sev appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Adirasam | Adhirasam

3 November 2025 at 19:45

Adhirasam is a famous South Indian sweet that is crispy on the outside and soft inside with nice rich taste of jaggery and rice flour. Adirasam is a popular & traditional sweet of South India commonly during Diwali and special occasions. Usually it is prepared during festivals and special days as it stays good for few days and even taste better after one day.

adhirasam served in banana leaf

The process of making Adhirasam may look bit tricky in beginning, but once the jaggery syrup comes right, everything else become easy. The smell of jaggery and rice flour frying in oil just fills the whole kitchen with aroma. I love that golden brown color and the soft inside that comes when fried slowly in low flame.

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About Adhirasam

Adhirasam is one of the traditional sweets made in South India, prepared mainly with raw rice and jaggery. The rice is soaked, dried slightly and ground into semi fine flour which has small coarse bits. This fresh rice flour mixed with jaggery syrup gives a soft dough that has lovely aroma and taste.

The dough is usually kept overnight for resting which helps to ferment a bit and make it perfect for frying. The most important part in Adhirasam is the jaggery syrup consistency. It should reach soft ball stage, means when dropped in water it should form a loose ball. This gives perfect chewy and soft texture to the sweet.

The flavor of Adhirasam is rich and earthy with cardamom and sesame seeds giving small crunch in between. The outside turns crisp while the inner stay soft and melt in mouth. The dough can be kept for few days and fried fresh whenever needed. Some people also add bit of dry ginger powder or small grated coconut for extra flavor.

I mostly make Adhirasam during family occasions or when I feel like making some traditional sweet at home. It always give a nice satisfaction and remind me of old times whenever I make it fresh and see it puff up in oil.

adhirasam served in banana leaf

Adhirasam Ingredients

  • Raw Rice - I used maavu pacha arisi which is soaked and ground fresh at home. It gives that perfect slightly coarse texture which we cannot get from store bought flour.
  • Jaggery - I used dark jaggery called paagu vellam that gives rich color and deep taste. If you do not have dark one, you can use light yellow jaggery but the flavor will be mild.
  • Cardamom - I added crushed cardamom for sweet aroma and that small traditional touch.
  • Sesame Seeds - It gives nice nutty smell and small crunch in every bite. Usually white sesame is used but you can use black also if that is what you have.
  • Ghee - I added little ghee to make the dough glossy and give lovely smell. You can use oil instead if you want to reduce richness.
  • Oil - I used refined oil for frying the Adhirasams. Adding one spoon of ghee in it give extra good flavor. Always fry in medium flame to get even golden color and soft inside.
adhirasam served in banana leaf

Similar Recipes

How to make Adhirasam Step by Step

1.I used paagu velam. First crush jaggery, measure and take it in a pan. Add water to it

how to make adhirasam step1

2.I use my potato masher to crush it. Heat it up, once jaggery is dissolved strain and set aside.

how to make adhirasam step2

3.Now measure and take raw rice. First rinse it once, then transfer to a bowl, add water till immersing level. Soak for at least 2 hours. After 2 hours spread it in a cloth and set aside for 30 minutes.

how to make adhirasam step3

4.The rice should still have moisture content in it, when you press it with your hands it will stick like this. Now transfer it to a mixer jar and grind it to a semi fine powder. It should not be very fine like store bought flour, it should be slightly coarse.

how to make adhirasam step4

5.Now transfer this to a sieve then sieve it. Do not discard the coarse particles, grind it again and then sieve. Now take the flour, add sesame seeds and cardamom powder to it.

how to make adhirasam step5

6.Mix well and keep it covered and set aside. Now take jaggery syrup in a pan and heat it up. Keep stirring until it is thick.

how to make adhirasam step6

7.Keep checking the syrup by poring it on a plate containing water. First the syrup will dissolve in water when poured. At one stage when add few drops of the syrup it will not get dissolved in water it will stand still like this. Now gather it with your hands, it will form a loose ball more like a jelly. This is soft ball consistency, it will easily slide from our hands, yes this is the right stage we are looking for. If you pass this stage, the ball will become hard and your athirasams will become hard.

how to make adhirasam step7

8.Immediately switch off (we are doing this to avoid the syrup from passing to next stage). I reserved a tablespoon of jaggery syrup alone. Now add the flour and keep mixing.

how to make adhirasam step8

9.Mix it well without any lumps.It will be a little loose. I formed a ball but it went flat in few minutes. Now transfer to a airtight container and set aside for a day in room temperature. You can keep this dough for about a week. But after 1 day keep refrigerated if you are planning to make athirasams later

how to make adhirasam step9

10.This is how tight it was the next day. Add a Β teaspoon of ghee and knead it once. Then pinch and roll into lemon sized balls.

how to make adhirasam step10

11.I got 9 balls and 1 Β tiny ball which I used for testing. Now take banana leaf / polythene sheet, grease it with little oil / ghee, take a ball keep on the banana leaf and flatten it with your fingers, it should be slightly thick. Heat oil(enough for the athirasams to immerse fully) in a kadai in parallel.

how to make adhirasam step11

12.You can see how thick it is in this pic. Oil should not be fuming hot, lower the flame when you drop the athirasam as it will get cooked quickly. Carefully drop one athirasam, it will first float on top.

how to make adhirasam step12

13.Then slowly it will puff up, carefully flip over and cook in low flame till reddish brown on both the sides. Do not cook in high flame.

how to make adhirasam step13

14.Press it with a ladle to drain excess oil, Then drain in tissue paper.

how to make adhirasam step14

Serve with tea.

adhirasam served in banana leaf

Expert Tips

  • Rice Flour Texture - I usually grind the rice when it still has little moisture. This helps to get semi fine flour which gives good texture to Adhirasam.
  • Jaggery Syrup Stage - Always check syrup in water to see if it forms soft ball. Once you reach that stage switch off immediately to avoid overcooking.
  • Resting the Dough - The dough must rest overnight. It becomes tighter and easier to shape it next day.
  • Frying Temperature - Keep the flame low to medium. If the oil is hot, Adhirasam will quickly brown outside and still uncooked inside.
  • Dough - If the dough becomes too tight next day, I usually add a few drops of hot water or ghee and knead it softly before shaping.

Serving and Storage

Serve Adhirasam warm or just at room temperature with a cup of hot tea or coffee. It is perfect sweet for festivals or small family get-togethers as it stays good for few days easily. Once the Adhirasams are cooled fully, store them in airtight box. The dough can be kept in fridge for almost a week. Always bring it to room temperature before frying again, else it may turn hard.

FAQS

1.Can I use readymade flour?

You can try but the texture will not come same. Freshly ground rice flour with slight coarse feel gives best taste and softness.

2.My Adhirasam turned hard, why?

That mostly happen if jaggery syrup goes little beyond soft ball stage. Always check the syrup in water carefully before mixing.

3.Can I store the dough?

Yes, you can keep the dough in fridge for about one week. Just let it come to room temperature before making again.

4.Can I fry in ghee?

Yes you can, but use half ghee and half oil. Only ghee will make it very heavy and dark in color.

5.Why should I rest the dough overnight?

Resting time help the dough become firm and improve the texture after frying. It also make the flavor blend well and give soft inside.

adhirasam served in banana leaf

If you have any more questions about this Adirasam Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Adirasam Recipe? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Adhirasam | Athirasam Recipe

Adhirasam is a famous South Indian sweet that is crispy on the outside and soft inside with nice rich taste of jaggery and rice flour. Adirasam is a popular & traditional sweet of South India commonly during Diwali and special occasions. Usually it is prepared during festivals and special days as it stays good for few days and even taste better after one day.
Course sweet
Cuisine Indian
Keyword adhirasam, chettinad, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, Rice, virtual diwali party
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
1 day
Total Time 20 minutes
Servings 12 Adhirasams
Calories 113kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup raw rice
  • ΒΎ cup jaggery powdered
  • Β½ cup water
  • 1 no cardamom crushed
  • Β½ teaspoon sesame seeds
  • 1 teaspoon ghee
  • oil for deep frying

Instructions

  • I used paagu velam (jaggery). First crush jaggery, measure and take it in a pan. Add water to it. I use my potato masher to crush it.
  • Heat it up, once jaggery is dissolved strain and set aside.
  • Now measure and take raw rice. First rinse it once, then transfer to a bowl, add water till immersing level. Soak for at least 2 hrs.
  • After 2 hours spread it in a cloth and set aside for 30mins.
  • The rice should still have moisture content in it, when you press it with your hands it will stick. Now transfer it to a mixer jar and grind it to a semi fine powder. It should not be very fine like store bought flour, it should be slightly coarse.
  • Now transfer this to a siever then sieve it. Do not discard the coarse particles, grind it again and then sieve.
  • Now take the flour, add sesame seeds and cardamom powder to it.
  • Mix well and keep it covered, and set aside.
  • Now take jaggery syrup in a pan and heat it up. Keep stirring until it is thick.
  • Keep checking the syrup by pouring it on a plate containing water. First the syrup will dissolve in water when poured. At one stage when add few drops of the syrup it will not get dissolved in water it will stand still.
  • Now gather it with your hands, it will form a loose ball more like a jelly. This is soft ball consistency, it will easily slide from our hands, yes this is the right stage we are looking for. If you pass this stage, the ball will become hard and your athirasams will become hard.
  • Immediately switch off (we are doing this to avoid the syrup from passing to next stage). I reserved a tablespoon of jaggery syrup alone. Now add the flour and keep mixing.
  • Mix it well without any lumps. It will be a little loose. I formed a ball but it went flat in few mins. Now transfer to a airtight container and set aside for a day in room temperature. You can keep this dough for about a week. But after 1 day keep refrigerated if you are planning to make athirasams later.
  • The next day when you observe the dough becomes tight. Add a Β teaspoon of ghee and knead it once. Then pinch and roll into lemon sized balls.
  • I got 9 balls and 1 Β tiny ball which I used for testing πŸ˜‰ Now take banana leaf / polythene sheet, grease it with little oil / ghee, take a ball keep on the banana leaf and flatten it with your fingers, it should be slightly thick.
  • Heat oil (enough for the athirasams to immerse fully) in a kadai in parallel. Oil should not be fuming hot, lower the flame when you drop the athirasam as it will get cooked quickly.
  • Carefully drop one athirasam, it will first float on top.
  • Then slowly it will puff up, carefully flip over and cook in low flame till reddish brown on both the sides. Do not cook in high flame.
  • Press it with a ladle to drain excess oil, then drain in tissue paper.
  • Serve Athirasam with tea.

Notes

  • Rice Flour Texture - I usually grind the rice when it still has little moisture. This helps to get semi fine flour which gives good texture to Adhirasam.
  • Jaggery Syrup Stage - Always check syrup in water to see if it forms soft ball. Once you reach that stage switch off immediately to avoid overcooking.
  • Resting the Dough - The dough must rest overnight. It becomes tighter and easier to shape it next day.
  • Frying Temperature - Keep the flame low to medium. If the oil is hot, Adhirasam will quickly brown outside and still uncooked inside.
  • Dough - If the dough becomes too tight next day, I usually add a few drops of hot water or ghee and knead it softly before shaping.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 113kcal | Carbohydrates: 25g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 0.3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 1mg | Sodium: 1mg | Potassium: 19mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 13g | Vitamin A: 0.01IU | Vitamin C: 0.02mg | Calcium: 10mg | Iron: 0.3mg

The post Adirasam | Adhirasam appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Milk Powder Gulab Jamun

2 November 2025 at 19:49

Milk Powder Gulab Jamun is one of the easiest sweets to make when sudden guests arrive or festival vibe hits home. It looks rich and tastes almost same like the traditional khoya jamun. Soft balls made from milk powder dough are fried until golden brown and soaked in sugar syrup. Every bite just melts inside the mouth with that sweet milky flavor.

milk powder jamun served

You do not need to run behind khoya or condensed milk. Just simple ingredients from the kitchen, few steps and you get perfect Gulab Jamuns that look and taste same like bakery ones. When warm jamuns soak in syrup, it feels like magic happening in pot. I have been making this version quite often as it saves time and gives that authentic feel.

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About Milk Powder Gulab Jamun

Milk Powder Gulab Jamun is a delicious alternate made using milk powder, ghee, little maida and rava. The dough is formed soft, fried slowly till golden brown and then soaked in light sugar syrup. The texture comes very soft and juicy if you follow the right steps.

Many of us hesitate to make Gulab Jamun at home thinking it is complicated, but honestly it is not. The trick is in getting the dough right and controlling oil temperature. I have spoiled few batches in early days but once I learnt the right flame and syrup consistency, it became my favorite sweet to make at home.

The sugar syrup is made with sugar, saffron and little rose essence which gives it mild fragrance. The jamuns soak beautifully if the syrup is warm when we drop them in. I always give 2 to 3 hours resting time so that every jamun become soft inside. The best part is it stays soft even next day when reheated slightly.

I still remember my first successful batch, I was so happy that I shared it with neighbors immediately. Now it has become a regular sweet during Diwali or any celebration.

milk powder jamun served

Milk Powder Gulab Jamun Ingredients

  • Milk powder - I have used one cup milk powder for this. It gives the main body and soft milky taste to the jamuns. You can use any good brand, it will work fine.
  • Ghee - I used homemade ghee, it gives nice aroma and rich flavor to the dough. You can also use store bought one if you like, but homemade always taste more better.
  • Oil - I add little oil along with ghee so that the dough stays soft and not dry after frying. You can use any cooking oil which has no strong smell.
  • Fine sooji (rava) - I use fine sooji as it gives light texture and helps jamuns to hold shape well. You should always soak it before adding to dough.
  • Maida (plain flour) - I add little maida as binding agent which gives smooth finish. If you skip it, jamuns may break while frying in oil.
  • Baking powder - I always add just a small pinch, it helps to make jamuns soft and fluffy. You should not add more else it changes taste.
  • Milk - I use milk to bring the dough together. Add little at a time, only till it gathers nicely, not too much.
  • Sugar - I use white sugar for making syrup. It gives clear syrup and perfect sweetness that balance well.
  • Saffron - I add few strands for nice color and beautiful smell to syrup. It is optional but gives lovely touch.
  • Rose essence - I like to add few drops at the end, it gives very nice flavor that lift up the whole sweet. You can skip if you not prefer strong smell.
  • Oil (for frying) - I use fresh oil and always fry in medium low flame so jamuns get even brown color.
milk powder jamun served

Similar Recipes

How to make Milk Powder Jamun Step by Step

1.Take sooji/rava in bowl, add water to it and keep aside for 10 minutes

how to make milk powder jamun step1

2.In a mixing bowl - add milk powder, ghee and oil

how to make milk powder jamun step2

3.Mix well with your fingers, don't use your, don't knead just mix with your finger tips for even distribution of oil and ghee. Now add maida.

how to make milk powder jamun step3

4.Then soaked rava, baking powder.

how to make milk powder jamun step4

5.Now again mix well with your fingers, Now add a tablespoon of milk first if it gathers then don't add more. Else add another tablespoon .

how to make milk powder jamun step5

6.Gather to form a sticky dough, Now keep covered with a cloth for 10 minutes. After 10mins you will have a dough like this.

how to make milk powder jamun step6

7.To make the sugar syrup : Take sugar, water and saffron in a pan mix well. Then heat it up and let it boil for at least 10-12 minutes in medium flame. It may take some time so meanwhile you can continue making the jamun balls. Stir the syrup in between. When the sugar syrup starts turning sticky switch off.

how to make milk powder jamun step7

8.The syrup should be sticky and the consistency should look like oil, add rose essence and Switch off and set aside. Now roughly pinch the dough and keep in a separate plate.

how to make milk powder jamun step8

9.Roll smoothly without any cracks. Don't apply pressure while rolling and also don't roll them tight, the balls should be smooth. The jamuns will grow in size so make small sized balls. Heat oil in a kadai not smoking hot, just hot enough to fry, - when you put a small pinch it will should immediately come up with changing color that is the right stage. When oil is hot, keep in medium low flame drop few jamuns(may be 3-4) at a time, Roll the jamuns with a ladle when its getting cooked in the oil for even cooking and coloring.

how to make milk powder jamun step9

10.Fry in low flame till golden brown. Drain in tissue and immediately add it to warm sugar syrup. Cover and let it rest for 2 hours for the jamuns to absorb the sugar syrup well.

how to make milk powder jamun step10

Garnish with any nuts of your choice.

milk powder jamun served

Expert Tips

  • Dough Texture - The dough has be soft and little bit sticky, it should not be too dry. If it looks dry, sprinkle few drops of milk and mix it again gently.
  • Do Not Overknead - I only mix gently using fingers. If you knead too much, jamuns will turn bit hard after frying.
  • Oil Temperature - Keep oil hot but not smoking. Drop a small piece first to check, it should come up slowly without changing colour very fast.
  • Sugar Syrup Consistency - The syrup should be little sticky like oil, not string consistency. Warm syrup helps jamuns to absorb well and stay juicy.
  • Resting Time - Always soak jamuns for 2 to 3 hours before serving. It makes them turn fully soft and juicy when you eat.

Serving and Storage

Serve them warm or in room temperature as you like. You can also garnish with some chopped pistachios or almonds on top for nice look and taste. It pairs well with vanilla ice cream too for a fusion touch.

Store leftovers in airtight box inside fridge. Just warm lightly before serving again, they stay soft even after two days.

FAQS

1.Can I skip baking powder?

Better not skip. It helps jamuns stay soft and prevents them from turning dense.

2.Why my jamuns cracked while frying?

The dough may be dry or you rolled it too tight. Add few drops of milk next time and roll smooth.

3.My jamuns turned brown fast but raw inside, why?

This happens if the oil is too hot. Fry in medium low flame for even cooking.

4.Can I add cardamom?

Yes, cardamom powder gives good smell too. You can add either one.

5.How long can I store Gulab Jamun?

It keeps well for 3 to 4 days in fridge. Just warm it them lightly before serving.

milk powder jamun served

If you have any more questions about this Milk Powder Gulab Jamun Recipe do mail me at sharmispassions@gmail.com. In addition, follow me on Instagram, Facebook,Β  Pinterest, Youtube andΒ TwitterΒ .

Tried this Milk Powder Gulab Jamun Recipe ? Do let me know how you liked it. Also tag us on Instagram @sharmispassions and hash tag it on #sharmispassions.

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Milk Powder Gulab Jamun Recipe

Milk Powder Gulab Jamun is one of the easiest sweets to make when sudden guests arrive or festival vibe hits home. It looks rich and tastes almost same like the traditional khoya jamun. Soft balls made from milk powder dough are fried until golden brown and soaked in sugar syrup. Every bite just melts inside the mouth with that sweet milky flavor.
Course sweets
Cuisine Indian
Keyword 30 mins recipes, all purpose flour recipes, diwali dishes, diwali food, diwali mithai, diwali recipes, diwali sweets, diwali sweets recipes, easy diwali recipes, Festival, gulab jamun, maida recipes, rava recipes, sweet recipes
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 25 Jamuns
Calories 57kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup milk powder
  • Β½ tablespoon ghee
  • Β½ tablespoon oil
  • 1 tablespoon fine sooji
  • 1 and Β½ teaspoon water
  • 1 tablespoon maida
  • 1 to 2 tablespoon milk
  • ΒΌ teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon pistachios
  • oil to deep fry

For the sugar syrup

  • ΒΎ cup sugar
  • 1 cup water
  • 4 strands saffron
  • 2 drops rose essence

Instructions

Dough Making:

  • Take sooji / rava in bowl, add water to it and keep aside for 10 minutes.
  • In a mixing bowl - add milk powder,ghee and oil.
  • Mix well with your fingers, don't use your, don't knead just mix with your finger tips for even distribution of oil and ghee. Now add maida.
  • Then soaked rava,baking powder.
  • Now again mix well with your fingers, now add a tablespoon of milk first if it gathers then don't add more, else add another tablespoon .
  • Gather to form a sticky dough, now keep covered with a cloth for 10mins. After 10mins you will have a dough.

Making Sugar Syrup:

  • To make the sugar syrup : Take sugar, water and saffron in a pan mix well.
  • Then heat it up and let it boil for at least 10-12 minutes in medium flame. It may take some time so meanwhile you can continue making the jamun balls.
  • Stir the syrup in between. When the sugar syrup starts turning sticky switch off.
  • The syrup should be sticky and the consistency should look like oil, add rose essence, switch off and set aside.

Jamun Making:

  • Now roughly pinch the dough and keep in a separate plate.
  • Roll smoothly without any cracks. Don't apply pressure while rolling and also don't roll them tight, the balls should be smooth. The jamuns will grow in size so make small sized balls.
  • Heat oil in a kadai not smoking hot, just hot enough to fry, - when you put a small pinch it will should immediately come up with changing color that's the right stage.
  • When oil is hot, keep in medium low flame drop few jamuns (may be 3-4) at a time, roll the jamuns with a ladle when its getting cooked in the oil for even cooking and coloring.
  • Fry in low flame till golden brown. Drain in tissue and immediately add it to warm sugar syrup.
  • Cover and let it rest for 2 hours for the jamuns to absorb the sugar syrup well.
  • Garnish Milk Powder Gulab Jamun with any nuts of your choice.

Notes

  • Dough Texture - The dough has be soft and little bit sticky, it should not be too dry. If it looks dry, sprinkle few drops of milk and mix it again gently.
  • Do Not Over knead - I only mix gently using fingers. If you knead too much, jamuns will turn bit hard after frying.
  • Oil Temperature - Keep oil hot but not smoking. Drop a small piece first to check, it should come up slowly without changing color very fast.
  • Sugar Syrup Consistency - The syrup should be little sticky like oil, not string consistency. Warm syrup helps jamuns to absorb well and stay juicy.
  • Resting Time - Always soak jamuns for 2 to 3 hours before serving. It makes them turn fully soft and juicy when you eat.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 57kcal | Carbohydrates: 8g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 2g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.001g | Cholesterol: 6mg | Sodium: 24mg | Potassium: 75mg | Fiber: 0.1g | Sugar: 8g | Vitamin A: 50IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 51mg | Iron: 0.1mg

The post Milk Powder Gulab Jamun appeared first on Sharmis Passions.

Pepper Thattai | Milagu Thattai

17 October 2025 at 22:26

Pepper Thattai is a crispy, spicy snack made during festivals or for evening tea. These are thin rice flour discs which are flavored with pepper and fried till golden and crunchy. They are also called Milagu Thattai and they are simple to make but very satisfying. The pepper gives warm little kick and butter adds richness, it just melts in mouth.

pepper thattai served

These thattais are crisp outside and little nutty inside. The aroma of pepper, hing and curry leaves while frying makes kitchen smell so nice. They can be eaten right after frying or stored for later. They taste much better than store bought ones and are a comforting snack anytime.

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About Pepper Thattai

Pepper Thattai is a South Indian snack rich in crunch and taste. The dough is soft and easy to press thin which helps to get crispy thattais when fried. The pepper gives mild spicy flavor and chana dal gives small crunchy bites here and there. Butter makes the thattai have a soft crunch and adds nice flavor too.

The mixture of rice flour, fried gram dal powder and spices gives that authentic taste that reminds of festive snacks from childhood. The smell of curry leaves and hing while frying is so lovely and fills the kitchen with nice aroma.

This recipe is easily customizable, you can adjust pepper according how spicy you want. You can try a pinch of red chili powder for extra heat. You can add some sesame seeds for extra crunch. Every family has its own small twist to this recipe, and that what makes homemade thattai special.

I usually make this few days before festivals. Pressing each thattai thin and watching it puff little while frying is satisfying. Once cooled they turn perfectly crisp and stay like that for days.

pepper thattai served

Pepper Thattai Ingredients

  • Rice flour - I have used regular rice flour as the base. It makes the dough soft and gives crisp thattais after frying. You can even mix little idli rice flour if you like more texture.
  • Fried gram dal - I grind them to a fine powder and added it to the dough. This adds a nutty taste and makes thattais light and crunchy.
  • Pepper - I crushed whole pepper coarsely. This gives nice aroma and mild heat. You can increase or decrease as you prefer.
  • Butter - I added little at room temperature. It makes the dough smooth and adds rich flavor. You can use ghee.
  • Chana dal - I soaked them for few minutes before adding it. This gives small crunchy bites in every thattai. You can skip if not available but I like that texture.
  • Hing - I used a small pinch for aroma. It gives that authentic South Indian flavor.
  • Curry leaves - I added few along with pepper. This adds a nice aroma and flavor. You can use dry leaves too.
  • Oil - I used for deep frying. It gives that perfect crisp golden texture. You can either use groundnut or sunflower oil, both work fine.

Similar Recipes

How to make Pepper Thattai Step by Step

1.Take rice flour in the mixing bowl. Grind fried gram dal (pottukadalai) in a mixer to a fine powder.

how to make pepper thattai step1

2.Add it to rice flour. Then add whole pepper and curry leaves in the mixer jar and grind it to a coarse mixture, Set aside.

how to make pepper thattai step2

3.Soak chana dal for 10 minutes. Now to the mixing bowl add chana dal and pepper mixture with salt and butter. Mix well.

how to make pepper thattai step3

4.Now add water little by little to form a smooth dough. The dough should not be too tight. Take a lemon sized ball, I used 1 tablespoon measure to get all the balls of even size.

how to make pepper thattai step4

5.Make few balls, then take a plastic sheet grease it with oil.Β Keep a ball, place another plastic sheet over it then press it with a flat surfaced bowl.

how to make pepper thattai step5

6.Prick with fork to avoid puffing up. Carefully remove it from the plastic sheet. Flatten as thin as possible only then you will get crisp thattais.

how to make pepper thattai step6

7.Heat oil, carefully add 2-3 thattais at a time, deep fry till golden brown. This will take time to cook at least 3 minutes for each batch so fry patiently in low medium flame. Then drain in tissue paper.

how to make pepper thattai step7

Cool down and Store in airtight container.

pepper thattai served

Expert Tips

  • Press thin - I always press dough as thin as possible between greased sheets. This helps to make thattais crisp. If thick, they turn chewy.
  • Prick before frying - I prick each thattai with fork so that it does not puff up while frying. This makes them cook evenly.
  • Frying - I fry them in low medium flame. If flame is high, outside turns brown fast but inside stays soft.
  • Dough - Make sure the dough is soft and not tight. This helps to press it easily and prevents cracks.
  • Cool before storing - I always cool the thattais completely before keeping them in the jar. This keeps them crisp for long.
  • Butter quantity - Do not skip butter. I have tried without once, but thattais become hard. So little butter gives perfect crispness.

Serving and Storage

Serve Pepper Thattai as tea time snack or just as crunchy bite anytime. It also goes well with sweets during festivals. Store them in airtight container. It stays fresh and crisp for 2 to 3 weeks. I usually make small batch so I can enjoy.

FAQS

1.Can I skip curry leaves?

Yes you can skip, but I feel it adds very nice aroma and taste, so I always add.

2.Can I use regular dal instead of fried gram dal?

You can, but roasted fried gram dal gives better taste and lightness.

3.Can I make dough ahead?

Yes, you can prepare dough few hours earlier and keep in fridge covered.

4.Can I bake this recipe?

Frying gives best crisp texture. You can either bake or fry, bith can work but the flavor will be slightly different.

5.How thin should I press them?

I press them very thin, almost like papad thickness. The thinner you press, the crispier they turn out.

pepper thattai served

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Pepper Thattai Recipe (Milagu Thattai Recipe)

Pepper Thattai is a crispy, spicy snack made during festivals or for evening tea. These are thin rice flour discs which are flavored with pepper and fried till golden and crunchy. They are also called Milagu Thattai and they are simple to make but very satisfying. The pepper gives warm little kick and butter adds richness, it just melts in mouth.
Course Snack
Cuisine Indian
Keyword diwali dishes, diwali recipes, diwali snacks, diwali snacks recipes, easy diwali recipes, easy diwali snacks, fry, fry recipes, rice flour recipes, snack recipes
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Total Time 55 minutes
Servings 15 Thattai
Calories 48kcal
Author Sharmilee J

Ingredients

  • 1 cup rice flour
  • 2 tablespoon fried gram dal
  • 1 teaspoon pepper
  • ΒΎ teaspoon butter at room temperature
  • 1 teaspoon chana dal
  • 1 tiny pinch hing
  • few curry leaves
  • salt to taste
  • oil to deep fry

Instructions

  • Take rice flour in the mixing bowl.
  • Grind fried gram dal in a mixer to a fine powder. Add it to rice flour.
  • Then add whole pepper and curry leaves in the mixer jar and grind it to a coarse mixture, set aside.
  • Soak chana dal for 10mins.
  • Now to the mixing bowl add chana dal and pepper mixture with salt and butter. Mix well.
  • Now add water little by little to form a smooth dough. The dough should not be too tight.
  • Take a lemon sized ball, I used 1 tablespoon measure to get all the balls of even size.
  • Make few balls, then take a plasic sheet grease it with oil.Β Keep a ball, place another plastic sheet over it then press it with a flat surfaced bowl.
  • Prick with fork to avoid puffing up. Carefully remove it from the plastic sheet. Flatten as thin as possible only then you will get crisp thattais.
  • Heat oil, carefully add 2-3 thattais at a time, deep fry till golden brown. This will take time to cook at least 3mins for each batch so fry patiently in low medium flame.
  • Then drain in tissue paper.
  • Cool down and store Pepper Thattai in an airtight container.

Notes

  • Press thin - I always press dough as thin as possible between greased sheets. This helps to make thattais crisp. If thick, they turn chewy.
  • Prick before frying - I prick each thattai with fork so that it does not puff up while frying. This makes them cook evenly.
  • Frying - I fry them in low medium flame. If flame is high, outside turns brown fast but inside stays soft.
  • Dough - Make sure the dough is soft and not tight. This helps to press it easily and prevents cracks.
  • Cool before storing - I always cool the thattais completely before keeping them in the jar. This keeps them crisp for long.
  • Butter quantity - Do not skip butter. I have tried without once, but thattais become hard. So little butter gives perfect crispness.

Nutrition

Serving: 25g | Calories: 48kcal | Carbohydrates: 10g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 0.4g | Saturated Fat: 0.2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Trans Fat: 0.01g | Cholesterol: 1mg | Sodium: 2mg | Potassium: 23mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 0.1g | Vitamin A: 7IU | Vitamin C: 0.1mg | Calcium: 3mg | Iron: 0.2mg




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