The crust of the samosas is like pastry dough and is crispy tender. Ghee or clarified butter is mixed with the dough, which makes it flaky and aromatic. The stuffing I have used here is a spicy meat filling. Keema means mince, and you can make the filling of samosa with lamb/mutton, chicken, or beef mince. Earlier I tried samosas with potato filling. Check the recipe here. Meat samosas are very popular all over India, and there are so many variations. The filling for this recipe is inspired by the Malabar meat samosas. The best part of meat samosas is that you can make this ahead of time, and it freezes like a charm. It is a great time-saver if you are planning a get-together. Go ahead, and give it a try. I am sure you'll love them too!
You can freeze keema samosa as mince filling and samosa pastry dough are both are freezer friendly. You can make this ahead of time, and it freezes well and is a great time saver. Fill pastry dough sheet with the filling and shape into triangles. Line them on a baking sheet and freeze them. Once it is frozen transfer it into freezer-safe zip lock bags. When it is time to fry, allow it to defrost for half an hour and then fry.
For the dough
All purpose flour/maida- 1 1/2 cup
Ghee/oil- 2 1/2 tsp
( use ghee for better results)
salt to taste
Sugar- 1/2 tsp
For the filling
Minced mutton- 250 grams
Green peas- 1/2 cup
Onion- 1 medium
Ginger garlic paste- 1 1/2 tsp
Turmeric powder- 1/3 tsp
Chilly powder- 3/4 tsp
(Add according to spice tolerance)
Pepper powder- 1/2 tsp
Coriander powder- 1/3 tsp
Coriander leaves chopped - 2 tbs
Garam masala- 3/4 tsp
lemon juice- 1/2 lemon
Salt to taste
oil for frying
To make the dough
In a bowl, mix flour, sugar, and salt. Add ghee or oil and mix and rub the flour with your fingers till the ghee gets mixed uniformly with the flour and looks like a crumbly mixture. Sprinkle water and knead the dough( use between half to 3/4 cup). Do not add too much water, and do not knead too much. Make it into a smooth, stiff dough. Allow this to rest for one hour.
To make the filling
Wash meat and pressure cook along with turmeric powder and salt(4-5 whistles). Do not add water. Allow it to cool down and shred into small pieces or pulse a few times in a food processor. You can also use store brought minced mutton. Heat two tsp oil in a pan and saute onions till it turns golden brown. Add ginger-garlic paste and saute for two minutes. Add the chilly powder and other spice powders, and green peas. Cover and cook for three minutes and then add the cooked meat. Stir fry till all the moisture evaporates. Add chopped coriander leaves and lemon juice. All this to cool down completely.
To fry
Divide the dough, into equal-sized balls. Use a rolling pin to roll into small circles. Cut each circle into two halves. Dip your fingertips in water and slightly moist the edge that you had cut and lift them from two sides and bring it together and seal so that it resembles a cone. Put three tsp of filling inside. Moist with your finger and pull forward the larger third end and secure. Make sure that it is tightly sealed, so that the filling does not come through gaps while frying. Heat around 2 cups of oil in a deep pan. The oil should not become too hot. Slide the samosas and fry in low medium flame till both sides are evenly browned. It will take about 8-10 minutes. Drain in paper towels and serve with chutney/ ketchup. This recipe will make around 12 medium-sized samosas.
You might also like,
Potato and peas Samosa
Sabudana/Sago pearls Vada
Vada Pav
Paneer Pakora
Spinach Onion Pakoras
Stuffed Bread
Srilankan Prawns Vada
Try this
Hope you will all enjoy..
wow well made samosas...luks tempeting....
ReplyDeletesuper
ReplyDeleteSinful I bet !
ReplyDeletethis is so good with a cup of tea.
ReplyDeleteI am coming over with a cup of chai!!! Yum...
ReplyDeletethis brings lot of memories.. Nostalgic!
ReplyDeleteSuddenly craving for some samosas..
drooling over those samosas...yummy with meat filling!!
ReplyDeleteAdipoli meat samosa.
ReplyDeletePerfect tea time snack. Loved the picture too.
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