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To make methi thepla, you start by rinsing and chopping the methi leaves, and then adding them to a bowl with spices and millet flour. Stir the mixture well to release the leaves’ moisture and then add water and knead until the dough becomes soft and smooth. Divide the dough into even balls and let them sit for a few hours.
Gujarati Snack. Wheat flour, methi. Khandvi: Snack. Besan. Kombdi vade: Chicken Curry with Bread. Chicken. Kopra paak: Sweet coconut halwa/barfi: Halwa is soft, barfi more like cake. Koshimbir: a salad, usually served as a side: Kolim / Jawla: A preparation of dried fish named Kolim or Jawla found in coastal Maharashtra with onion and spices.
Gujarati cuisine is the cuisine of the Indian state of Gujarat. The typical Gujarati thali consists of rotli , dal or curry , rice , and shaak (a dish made up of several different combinations of vegetables and spices, which may be either spicy or sweet).
It is made up of besan (chickpea flour), whole wheat flour, methi , salt, turmeric, chili powder, fresh ginger, [2] green chilies, [2] and an optional bonding agent/sweetener such as sugar and oil. This dish can be eaten steamed or fried (after steaming).
Pak-Shastra (1878) in Gujarati; Culinary Jotting for Madras (1891), later republished as Vwyer's Indian Cookery. Mistanna Pak (1904) in Bengali; Bengal Sweets (1921) by Haldar [42] [43] Recipes-Of-All-Nations (1923) by Countess Morphy, has an Indian section that mentions gulgula, halwa, and khoa. Pak Chandrika (1929) by Maniram Sharma in Hindi
Gujarati thali prepared in Gujarati households has at least three fresh vegetable dishes, one dry dal or some sprouted pulses dish (ugaadayla mung, for instance), a wet dal, kadhi, kathor (a savoury), mithai, poori, rotis, steamed rice, chaash and papad. [2] Kathiawadi Thali is a variation of Gujarati Thali. [3]
Gajar Pak, [31] also called Gajrela, is a seasonal pudding-like sweet made from carrots. [32] It is popular in the North India. It is made by slowly cooking shredded carrots with ghee, concentrated and caramelized milk, mawa (khoya) and sugar; it is often served with a garnish of aromatic spices, almonds, cashews or pistachios. [33]
Fresh fenugreek leaves are an ingredient in some curries, such as with potatoes in Indian cuisines to make aloo methi (potato fenugreek) curry. [15] In Armenian cuisine, fenugreek seed powder is used to make a paste that is an important ingredient to cover dried and cured beef to make basturma. [16]