- Rice Flour………………….…1 ½ Cup (I used ready made)
- Sesame Seeds…………….…3/4 Teaspoon
- Boiling water as needed
- Salt as needed
- Oil for deep frying
- Grated Coconut…………….1/4 Cup (I used desiccated, which is grated very small)
- Shallots……………………….4
- Garlic………………………….1 big clove
- Cumin Seeds………………..1/4 Teaspoon
- Grind all the ingredients in the ‘to grind’ section into a smooth paste using enough Water to make the blender run. (Well Cumin, Shallots and Garlic have to be smooth but the presence of very small Coconut grains is okay.) Do rinse the blender jar and get all the goodness out. (I used ½ Cup Water including the Water I used to rinse the jar.)
- In a pan on medium low heat fry the Rice Flour for 4-5 minutes or till it is nicely toasted. (To a Puttupodi consistency)
- Add the ground Shallot Coconut mixture together with the liquid (that we got by rinsing); mix well and let it heat through for 30 -45 seconds before switching it off.
- Once the heat is off, mix in Sesame Seeds and enough Salt.
- Add enough boiling Water and mix with a spatula. (Don’t use too much Water at this stage as too much Water will make it hard to work with and we can add more Water later if needed.)
- Once this Rice mixture is cold enough to handle, knead it really well (use more Water if needed) into a soft dough. To know whether the dough is soft enough, take a small amount of dough; roll into a ball and press to flatten it. If it cracks too much along the edges it is not soft enough.
- Now make small balls with a size of a marble out of the dough. Work in small quantities as the balls will dry off pretty fast. Cover it with a damp paper towel.
- Place a ball in between two lightly oiled plastic sheets (cut all the 4 sides of a Zip Lock bag for plastic sheets or use oiled Plantain leaf pieces instead) on a flat surface and press with another flat surface (flat bottoms of two plates will work).
- Remove the flattened Rice sheet from the plastic wrap and shape it into a Kuzhalappam with the help of a rod (at home my mom uses small round Papaya stems) or your lightly oiled finger. Do take care to press and seal the edges properly or it will open up in the hot Oil.
- Arrange this in a plate till ready to be fried.
- Heat Oil in a pan on medium heat till hot; drop the prepared Kuzhalappam and fry till crispy. Do stir in between to fry them evenly.
- Once crispy, take them out of the oil and drain the excess Oil on a Paper towel.
- Store in airtight containers and serve at room temperature.
- I used the regular store bought Rice flour that is usually finely ground, which is essential for Kuzhalappam (Coarsely ground Flour is not good); it doesn’t have to be any particular brand.
- It is very uncomfortable to grind Shallots, Garlic and Cumin alone due to the unpleasant fumes from the Shallots and hence I add the Coconut too (the presence of Coconut will reduce the uncomfortable fumes). If it is possible for you to grate Coconut very finely, then you can add it just like that. But if you have doubt that there are big pieces, do grind it like in the recipe.
- I used unsweetened dry desiccated Coconut, but that worked very well.
- Once the dough is made, always keep it covered with a damp paper towel until it reaches the hot Oil to prevent from drying.
- While working in batches keep the remaining dough covered in a damp towel and don't forget to give it a quick knead before using it.
- Don’t keep the shaped Kuzhalappam like that for long; do fry them as soon as possible. You can always work side by side. I fry 10-15 of them while I shape the next 10-15. But if you cannot work like that, do make and fry them in batches.
- Don’t crank up the heat as it will make the Kuzhalappam brown fast without making it crispy.
- Please don't overcrowd the pan while frying Kuzhalappams.
- Kuzhalappams, like most of the other fried snacks will slowly loose its crispiness if kept open (like when we serve it to guests) for a long time. So if there are leftovers from plating, keep them in another container and don't keep it back in the original container with the bulk of the Kuzhalappam. This will help the bulk of it to stay fresh and crispy.
6 comments:
These look very tempting...used to have many while @ home...WIll try them some time..bookmarked.Thanks for he recipe and neat explanation..
another walk down memory lane.... amma making this with the help of her helpers..... papaya stem, the nice smell of kuzhalappam frying... banana leaves in the kitchen...urali for roasting the rice flour... O my, Asha... looks like we had a similar childhood..(hee hee, ella suriyaani christyaanikkum same childhood....alle?)
exactly Sojo.... thanks a lot...
aah...my fav snack..u knw im havn them nw..but store bot..wud love to try them in my kitchen..thanks a lot fr the recipe...
This looks fantastic - Love the pictorials - And sesame in anything is acceptable to me because I simply love it --- super yummy post!
Omg,droolworthy kuzhalappams, feel like munching some..
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