Skip to main content

Poori Masala/ Fluffy Puri and Potato Masala






Poori Masala/ Fluffy Puri and Potato Masala

Poori Masala is a hugely popular breakfast staple in India. Poori/Puri masala is a fantastic meal combination, with fluffy puri and potato curry. Everyone loves flatbread that is deep-fried until crispy perfection. Frying the perfect, beautifully puffed up, and flaky poori is an art by itself. Once you master making perfect fluffy puris, you'll find lots of ways to enjoy it. The most delicious combo with puri is potato curry, chickpeas, mixed vegetable curry, and also egg masala goes well with puris. On festive occasions, poori's are enjoyed, with desserts like semolina halwa. Puri/poori is made all over India. But the curry combination with puri usually has the regional flair to it. The yellow potato masala that you see with this recipe is a typical South Indian specialty.

Poori masala/ bhaji was my favorite for school lunch. My mom also makes them for picnics and trips. The train journey was incomplete, without homemade poori masala or egg masala. They are great for travel as it stays fresh for a longer time. They stay soft and delicious.

 
 
Warm fluffy pooris taste delicious, and it is quick and easy to make. The dough is not leavened or fermented. The basic poori recipe has whole wheat flour, salt, sugar, and water. Adding semolina helps to make fluffy and crispy pooris, but it is optional. Make small balls of dough and roll them and immediately fry in hot oil. The oil temperature should be medium-high for perfect fluffy puris. 
 
The curry is a simple yet delicious potato masala with cooked and mashed potatoes, flavored with turmeric, ginger, green chilly, coriander leaves, and hing. You can add urad dal, channa dal, or cashew nuts for a crunch.
 
 


Poori Masala/ Fluffy Puri and Potato Masala

Ingredients
For the poori
Wheat flour/atta- 2 cup
Semolina- 2 tbs
Oil- 1 1/2 tsp
Salt to taste
Sugar- 1/2 tsp
oil for frying- 2 cups

For the masala
Boiled potato - 3 medium
Onion sliced- 1 medium
Ginger chopped- 1 tbs
Green chilly- 3-4
Turmeric powder- 1/2 tsp
Hing- a pinch
Mustard seeds- 1/2 tsp
Urad dal- 1 tsp
Cumin seeds- 1/2 tsp
Chopped cashew nuts- 5-6
Coriander leaves chopped- 2 tbs
Curry leaves- a few
Lemon juice- 1/2 lemon (optional)
salt to taste

To make the Puri

In a large mixing bowl, add flour, sugar, salt, oil, and semolina and mix well.  Add water little by little and knead into a smooth and stiff dough ( use around 3/4 cup to one cup of water). It should be a little stiffer than chapati dough. Let the dough rest for half an hour. Make small gooseberry size balls. Dust the work surface with flour (or grease with some oil), and using a rolling pin, flatten each ball to make small size discs. Flatten into four-inch rounds. Do not make it too thin. Brush off the excess flour as much as possible.
Heat oil in a deep pan. To check whether the oil is hot, drop a small pinch of dough, and if it quickly raises and floats on the surface, it is perfect to fry poori). Fry poori in hot oil till it puffs up. Use a slotted spoon and gently press the edges, and pour oil over the poori. This will help the puri to fluff up. When one side is golden brown, turn around and fry till both sides are fluffy and golden. Lift the puffed poori from oil and drain on a paper towel. Continue frying the rest of the pooris.

To make the masala
Cook potatoes and keep aside. Heat oil in a pan and mustard seeds, cumin seeds, and urad dal. When the mustard seeds splutter and the urad dal turns golden, add hing, chopped cashew nuts, sliced onions, ginger, green chilly, and curry leaves and saute till golden brown. Add turmeric powder, salt, and stir fry. Cover and cook for two minutes. Add the cooked potatoes and one cup of water and allow to simmer for 3-4 minutes. Adjust water according to the consistency you like.  When the gravy thickens, remove it from the heat. Sprinkle chopped coriander leaves and add lemon juice, and mix. Serve with the fried pooris.

You might also like,

Mixed Vegetable Upma
Easy Quinoa Egg Bhurji - Spicy Indian Scrambled Eggs
Crispy Masala Dosa-South Indian Crepes with Potato Filling
Jack fruit Puttu- Chakka Puttu
Karikku Appam/Tender Coconut Appam
Akuri/Parsi Style Scrambled Eggs


Try this
Hope you will all enjoy!


Comments

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

12 Best Traditional Kerala Snacks - Tea Time Snacks

 12 Best Traditional Kerala Snacks - Tea Time Snacks  Are you looking for some light bites to indulge during tea time? Well, you have come to the right place. Kerala cuisine has an exhaustive list of traditional tea-time snacks.  The list of ingredients is available in your pantry, making it possible to make these delicious snacks. Many of these snacks, can be quickly whipped up with rice flour, coconut, and jaggery. I am sharing a list of snack recommendations from Kerala that are easy to cook at home. These sweet and savory snacks are heartwarming and will make you nostalgic. It is by no means is a complete list. I am sharing some of the top picks of this blog in one space for easy reference. If you like to try, more recipes check my earlier post on 10 Quick and Easy Kerala Snacks/ Tea time snacks that you can make in under 20 minutes . Do you have any favorite snack that is simple and easy to make? I would love to hear about your favorite traditional snacks. Please share your idea

Kerala Black Halwa/ Karutha Halwa/ Rice Flour Halwa

Kerala Black Halwa/ Karutha Halwa/ Rice Flour Halwa December has finally arrived and it means it is almost Christmas time! How many of you look forward to the Season of Joy! My birthday also comes in December, so it is a double celebration for me :) How is the Christmas planning coming along for everyone? It is exactly three weeks for Christmas and I am planning to share a few recipes for the holidays this year. This is the first one I wanted to share with all of you -Kerala style sweet delicacy- a real nostalgia, the Black Halwa. Halwas has always amazed me with its simplicity, unique texture and taste. It is a gel-like sweet candy that you can never stop eating. When making halwa there is a time-honored cooking technique and halwa making is time-consuming. So people simply prefer to buy it from the shop. But making your own is a rewarding experience. Now many of the traditional sweets are forgotten or get overlooked for fancier ones in bakeries. But that is not the case w

15 Easy-To-Cook Kerala Vishu Sadhya Recipes

Happy Vishu to all my friends and Readers! How is the Vishu Sadhya planning coming along for everyone? For all my Malayalee friends who are planning to celebrate this joyous festival, I am sharing a guide to preparing an easy  and tasty Sadhya. Vishu celebrations are real nostalgia, the fully blossomed Kani Konna trees (Cassia fistula), Vishu Kani, new clothes, and Sadhya. Vishu Kani is beautifully arranged the night before, and the sight you see on the morning of the New year brings luck throughout the year. Vishu celebration is not complete without the traditional vegetarian feast- Sadhya. It is served on a banana leaf, and there is a colorful array of vegetarian curries, rice, and desserts. Vishu Kanji, vishu katta or ada is served for breakfast. Sometimes non-vegetarian food is also part of the feast in some regions. In Southern Kerala, Vishu Sadhya is not so elaborate as the Onam sadhya. It is cooked with simple ingredients and seasonal vegetables. Mango, golden cucumber, jack f