

Dosa (crispy savory pancakes) from South India is a staple food in its
home region. In the rest of the country too, Dosas are hugely popular
and Udipi restaurants serving them and other South Indian foods can be found in almost every suburb! Learn how to make them with my easy recipe. This recipe will make approximately
Ingredients
- 3 cups rice
- 1 cup skinless split urad daal (skinless black gram)
- 3/4 tsp fenugreek seeds
- Salt to taste
- Vegetable/ canola/ sunflower cooking oil
- When all the rice-daal mix is ground like
this, put it into a large mixing bowl and add enough water to make a
batter. The consistency of the batter should be such that it thickly
coats a spoon dipped in it.
- Now add salt to taste and keep the
Dosa batter aside in a warm, dark spot, covered, for 6-8 hours. After
this fermentation, stir the batter well. It is now ready to make Dosas.
- Put
some cooking oil in a small bowl and keep ready. You will also need a
bowl of ice cold water, a large, flat nonstick pan, 2 sheets of paper
towel, a ladle, a spatula and a basting brush.
- Fold
one sheet of paper towel into a wad and dip lightly into the bowl of
cooking oil. Squeeze out any excess and then rub the paper towel all
over the surface of the pan to grease. The correct amount of oil is such
that it is barely visible on the pan. Now turn on the heat/ flame at
medium high.
- Fill the ladle upto the 3/4 level with Dosa
batter. Gently pour this batter onto the center of the pan - just as you
would for a pancake - till the ladle is empty.
- Now begin to spread the batter in sweeping
circular motions to form a pancake of roughly 8" diameter. Do not be
alarmed if the Dosa develops tiny holes as you spread the batter. This
is normal.
- As soon as you have finished spreading the batter out on the pan, dip the basting
brush in cooking oil and drizzle the oil all over the surface of the
dosa and also around its edges. Now hold the pan by its handle, lift up
and swirl it so as to make the drizzled oil spread all over the Dosa.
- When
the upper surface begins to look cooked (it will no longer look soft or
runny), flip the Dosa. By this time, ideally, the surface that was
underneath should be light golden in color. Allow to cook for 1 minute
after flipping.
- The Dosa is almost done. Fold it in half and allow to cook for 30 seconds more.
- Serve the ready Dosa with side dishes like South Indian Coconut Chutney, South Indian Gunpowder Chutney and Sambar.
I like to make and serve Dosas immediately while I cook as this means
they are crisp and fresh when eaten. This, however, is not absolutely
necessary. You can also make, stack and serve the Dosas later. Just
ensure you keep them warm till serving time by placing them - just like
with pancakes - in a closed dish.
- Before you start making the
next Dosa, fold another sheet of paper towel into a wad and dip it in
ice cold water. Squeeze the wad to remove excess water and then rub it
all over the surface of the pan to cool it slightly. This ensures your
next Dosa will spread evenly and not break because the pan is too hot.
Now proceed as you did for the last Dosa.
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