Sizzling Tastebuds

First guest post on this blog by Vardhini, and a yummy Poli recipe by her :-)

Happy to present the first edition of guestposts for my blog – Sizzling Tastebuds.. When I first thought of this, I was sceptical to be frank, for my blog was just 6 months old, and didnt have too many blogger friends to reach out at first. But thanks to many wonderful friends that I met through events, blog hops, blogging marathons, roundups, I eventually summed up courage to ask a newbie blogger – Vardhini of Zesty Palette

Although a new entrant to the blogosphere, Vardhini needs no introduction. Hercooking techniques intrigued me lot, and with both our families having similar palates and taste preferences (low fat/zero fry/veggie-loaded dishes etc), I took this opportunity to ask her out to do a guest post. When she agreed, I was thrilled to bits, and the following guestpost shows her committment to the same… 

Thanks Vardhini 🙂

So, without any more talking from my end, lets get on to her post today of a simply yummy festive delight – Polis. I am sure, like all her posts with step by step cooking, this too willl linger long in your minds and palates too 🙂

The following lines from here on would be Vardhini’s — reproduced verbatim from the guest post she sent me… Read on for a yummy delight 🙂

I have known Kalyani (MomChef) for a few months now and when she asked me to do a guest post for her, I was extremely happy that she thought about me in the first place. So there I was breaking my head for a week to find something traditional to post. Among the various ideas she gave for guest posting, I was particularly drawn to the one where she asks “how I perceive India from US especially on Indian food”.

I have to admit that given the place I reside the only thing linking India with me is food. It gives me a sense of satisfaction and a feeling of “home” when I make things from scratch since that is what most of us grew up with. Even my 3 year old understands that I make yogurt at home and when she sees me heating up milk, she asks me if I am making yogurt. I am not expecting or hoping for her to do the same when she grows up given the fast-paced lifestyle, but at least she is exposed to a small bit of Indian lifestyle in my opinion.

So I finally decided on “Poli” which I feel takes us closer to home and is part of festival menus like Pongal. Now the surprising part is that I have tasted poli only once and my mom never made it at home. I followed the recipe from a cookbook which K brought to US when he first started cooking. Making poli is like making stuffed paratha with the addition of ghee. Yeah, please don’t skimp on ghee as that adds a lot of taste. Poli is flaky, has the right amount of sweetness and is loved by most people. So let’s get cooking.

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Ingredients

1 + 1/4 cups all purpose flour

A pinch of salt

A pinch of turmeric

2 tsp oil

Ghee

Ingredients – For filling

1 cup channa dal soaked for 2 hours

1 cup jaggery grated

1/2 cup coconut

1 cardamom

Notes

1. Do not stack the polis when they are warm as they stick to each other and break apart.

Method

Take all purpose flour and turmeric in a bowl.

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Add salt.

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Add oil.

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Using water make a dough. Let it rest for an hour.

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Method – For filling

Bring water and the soaked channa dal to a boil and simmer until channa dal is cooked. Soaking reduces the cooking time a lot.

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Channa dal is cooked. If there is any water left, drain it.

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Add jaggery.

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Add cardamom.

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Add coconut.

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Mix until everything combines. Allow to cool.

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Take in a mixie / food processor.

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Grind without adding water.

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Filling is ready.

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Take a small ball of the dough and roll it into a circle. Place a small ball of filling in the middle.

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Bring the edges together and pinch on top to keep the filling inside.

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Flatten it.

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Now roll the flattened ball. You can roll it thick or thin. This one below was rolled very thin and you can see the filling.

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Heat a pan and add some ghee. Place the rolled dough. Smear some ghee over it.

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Flip over and smear some ghee.

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Flip over and cook until both sides are done. Can you see the brown patches?

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Tasty and flaky polis ready. You can smear more ghee for added flavor.

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Enjoy!

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18 Comments

  1. Absolutely delicious dear. Love this post. Thanks!

    Do check out my event and send me your entries.

  2. Vimitha Durai

    Perfectly done polis. Thanks for s/s recipe.. First time here and u have a lovely blog. Happy to follow u. Do check out my blog My culinary Trial room

  3. Loved the polis and equally loved ur detailed explanation with pics.First guest post – a success.

  4. Yummy recipe:)

  5. Priya Sreeram

    perfectly done polis vardhini & kalyani congrats on the new series

  6. Rani acharyulu

    tasty n yummy poli…absolutely delicious…beautiful picks!

  7. Delicious..Congrats on ur first guest post..

    @vardini, lovely step-by-step pictures..thanks for sharing this..

  8. munchmunchcrunchcrunch

    looks perfect and yummy…thanks for sharing vardhini. congrats on your first guest post kalyani

  9. Rinku Naveen

    Such perfect and yummy polis..

  10. wonderful post- poli looks awesomely yum!

  11. The stack of polis look perfect… inviting…Good choice!!

  12. Hari Chandana P

    Perfect and tempting poli.. looks awesome 🙂
    Indian Cuisine

  13. Lovely looking polis…

  14. This looks absolutely yummy…I should try this soon…Thanks for the recipe dear…

  15. Priya Suresh

    Love this polis,my fav..love to finish that stack of fantastic polis..

  16. KrithisKitchen

    Lovely guest post… great job Vardhini & Kalyani…
    Krithi's Kitchen
    Event: Serve It – Steamed

  17. The Pumpkin Farm

    Hey Kalyani, Absolutely shocked to know u r just 6 months old. Great idea, all thes best.

    Vardhini- perfect start for a new event. Love the puran polis as we call them.

  18. Santosh Bangar

    yummy fantastic!!!!!!!!!

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