Chennai
Bengali Patishapta
Bengali households use the freshly harvested paddy and date palm jaggery in most of their Sankranti dishes. Many of the traditional sweets use rice flour, date palm jaggery, coconut and milk. Among the commonly made dishes are the much-loved pitha (coconut and jaggery stuffed sweet), patishapta (rice flour crepes) and date palm jaggery payesh (pudding). Home chef Sunita Banerji shares her recipe to create patishapta.
Ingredients:
Rice flour: ½ cup
Maida: 1 cup
Semolina: ¼ cup
Milk: a little (to make batter soft)
Date palm syrup: 2 cups
For the filling: Desiccated coconut: 2 ½ cups
Date palm jaggery: 1 cup
Cardamom powder: ½ tsp
Khoya kheer: 1/3 cup
Method:
Andhra Style Palathalikalu
These are handmade rice hoppers in a richly flavoured milk, a dish that is a well-kept delicious secret among many Telugu-speaking households. Chennai-based entrepreneur and home chef Hyma Sakhamuri shares this recipe which is commonly made during Sankranthi at her family home in Guntur. Besides that, dishes like garelu (medu vada), poornalu (jaggery and lentil stuffed traditional sweet) and palathalikalu figure in the feast, she says. The traditional sweets use freshly harvested jaggery and rice.
Ingredients:
Full cream milk: 1 litre
Rice flour: 1 cup
Jaggery syrup: 1 1/2 cup
Cardamom powder: 1/2 tsp
Sago: 1/4 cup
Water: as needed
Method:
Assamese Coconut Ladoo
Home cook and tattoo artist Mallika Chaudhuri recalls Bihu being her favourite time of the year as her grandmother, or ‘aita’ as she would call her, would make her famous coconut ladoos. Even though dishes like the traditional pitha, made using rice flour, are common in Assamese households during the festive season, every home has its own coconut ladoo recipe, she says.
Ingredients:
Desiccated coconut: 1 cup
Milk: 1 litre
Condensed milk: ¼ cup
Sugar: 100 gm
Semolina: ½ cup (roasted)
Sesame seeds: 2 tbsp
Almonds, pistachios, cashews: ½ cup chopped
Butter: 1 tbsp
Method:
Thanjavur Ezhu Kari Kootu
This is a dish made with at least seven types of fresh country vegetables, prepared mandatorily in many Tamil homes along with sakkarai pongal and ven pongal, which are commonly made from the new harvest of rice and jaggery. City-based home chef and retired banker Shanthi Ramachandran shares this recipe from the cookbooks of her mother-in-law. The dish, also called thaalaga kuzhambu in Tirunelveli, tastes best served with pongal and kali, she suggests.
Ingredients:
White pumpkin, yellow pumpkin, baby brinjals, flat beans, sweet potatoes, raw banana: (chopped into big pieces) ½ kg mix
Chana dal: ½ cup
Coriander seeds: 2 tsp
Red chillies: 15
Pepper corns: handful Coconut: Freshly grated from a small one
Toor dal: 2 cups
Method:
—Compiled by Bhavana Akella
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