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Vepudu (fry): crispy fried vegetables, typically including okra (bendakaya), ivy gourd (dondakaya), potato (bangaladumpa), colocasia, and several additional local vegetables. Pappu koora (lentil-based dish): boiled vegetables stir-fried with a small amount of half-cooked lentils (dal).
Dhooska or Dhuska is a popular deep-fried snack eaten all over Jharkhand, India. The dish is one of the delicacies of Jharkhandi cuisine. The main ingredients in this savoury fried bread dish are powdered rice, powdered chana dal. The bread is then deep fried. [1] It is often served with any sauce or chutney.
Spicy. Ground chana dal and urad dal, deep fried flattened disk, masala, sprinkle with red chili powder on top. Daal Dhokli: Daal Dhokli is widely cooked and eaten all over Rajasthan and Gujarat. Very small dumplings of wheat flour are cooked along with green gram or pegeon dal and whole red chili and red mustard is used as tempering ...
Dahi vada (Fried dumplings soaked in yogurt and topped with salt, cumin, and cayenne pepper) Dhokla (steamed cake made primarily of rice flour) Handvo (steamed cake made of rice flour, beans, yogurts, and calabash) Kachori (a deep fried dumpling made of flour and filled with a stuffing of yellow moong dal, black pepper, cayenne pepper, and ginger)
Kuyteav – a soup with rice noodles and pork stock with toppings; Kuyteav kha kou – rice noodles in a beef stew or thick broth soup; Lort cha – rice pin noodles stir-fried in fish sauce, soy sauce and palm sugar, with garlic, bean sprouts and scallions or chives [6] Nem – many kinds of salads are made with this type of clear noodle
Sarva pindi, a spicy pancake, is a common breakfast, made from rice flour, chana dal, ginger, garlic, sesame seeds, curry leaves, and green chilis. [2] Pachi pulusu, a spicy, raw rasam made with tamarind, chili, and onions. Prepared mainly in summer. Kodi gudla pulusu, boiled eggs cooked in a tangy tamarind sauce combined with spices [5]
It is a combination of chana masala (spicy white chickpeas) and bhatura/puri, a deep-fried bread made from maida. [2] [3] [4] Chole bhature is often eaten as a breakfast dish, sometimes accompanied with lassi. It can also be street food or a complete meal and may be accompanied with onions, pickled carrots, green chutney or achaar. [5]
Poriyal (பொரியல்) = usually it means a dry stir-fried vegetable(s) with spices & grated coconut. The word 'Pori-பொரி' means “to fry (deep or shallow or stir or pan) with oil or any fat”. Because of the sputtering sound that we can hear while frying something, the word "pori" also got a rebused meaning "to sputter".