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Fried pav bhaji, with the pav tossed in the bhaji; Paneer pav bhaji, with paneer cheese in the bhaji; Mushroom pav bhaji, with mushrooms in the bhaji; Khada pav bhaji, in which vegetables are in chunks rather than mashed; Jain pav bhaji, without onions and garlic [8] and with plantains instead of potatoes [9] Kolhapuri pav bhaji, using a spice ...
Popular dishes include puran poli, ukdiche modak, batata wada, sabudana khichdi, masala bhat, [135] pav bhaji, and wada pav. [136] Poha or flattened rice is also usually eaten at breakfast. Kanda poha [137] and aloo poha [138] are some of the dishes cooked for breakfast and snacking in evenings.
A spicy and sour soup usually made with tamarind, tomatoes, pepper and other south Indian spices. Usually eaten with rice. Vegetarian: Part of lunch Sajjige: a sweet dish: Vegetarian: Dessert Sakkara pongal: a sweet rice dish: Vegetarian: Festival Sweet dish Sambar: Lentil soup cooked with vegetables and a blend of south Indian spices (masala).
Upma, uppumavu, or uppittu is a dish of thick porridge from dry-roasted semolina or coarse rice flour. [1] Upma originated from South India, and is most common in Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Telangana, [2] Karnataka, Maharashtra, and in Sri Lankan Tamil communities.
Pav bhaji is a fast food dish consisting of a vegetable curry (Marathi: bhaji ) served with a soft bread roll (pav). [100] [101] Misal Pav is a dish made from curried sprouted lentils, topped with batata bhaji, pohay, chivda, farsaan, raw chopped onions and tomato. It is sometimes eaten with yogurt.
Rasam (Tamil-ரசம்) is a spicy South Indian soup-like dish. [1] It is usually served as a side dish with rice. In a traditional South Indian meal, it is part of a course that includes sambar rice. Rasam has a distinct taste in comparison to sambar due to its own seasoning ingredients and is watery in consistency. Chilled prepared ...
This mixture is then pressure-cooked for 15 minutes till the dal is cooked. The cooked dal is then flavoured with butter, chilies, cumin, cloves, cardamom, ginger and garam masala. [3] Some recipes substitute masoor dal for the moth dal, which is less commonly available in some regions than the other four dals.
Papadam can be prepared from different ingredients and methods. One popular recipe uses flour ground from hulled split black gram [9] mixed with black pepper, salt, a small amount of vegetable oil and a food-grade alkali, and the mixture is kneaded. A well-kneaded dough is then flattened into very thin rounds and then dried and stored for later ...