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Coconut chutney is a south Indian chutney, a side-dish or a condiment, [1] common in the Indian subcontinent. The condiment is made with coconut pulp ground with other ingredients such as green chillies, tamarind, salt, coriander and water. [1] Coconut chutney is made with both red chillies or green chillies. It is served with dosas, idli ...
Chammanthi podi—a dry condiment and coconut chutney [7] from the Indian state of Kerala. Coconut chutney—a South Indian chutney side dish and condiment, [8] it is common in South Indian states. It is made with coconut pulp ground with other ingredients such as tamarind, green chili peppers and coriander. [8] Coriander chutney—common in ...
A garlic chutney in South India prepared using red chili pepper. Chammanthi podi; Coriander chutney; Coconut chutney; Garlic chutney (made from fresh garlic, coconut and groundnut) Hang curd hari mirch pudina chutney (typical north Indian) Lime chutney (made from whole, unripe limes) Mango chutney (keri) chutney (made from unripe, green mangoes ...
Other prominent ingredients and combinations include coriander, capsicum, mint (coriander and mint chutneys are often called हरा hara chutney, Hindi for "green"), Tamarind or imli (often called meethi chutney, as मिठाई meethi in Hindi means "sweet"), sooth (or saunth, made with dates and ginger), coconut, onion, prune, tomato ...
chutney powder in a bottle. Chammanthi Podi is a dry condiment and chutney [1] from the South Indian state of Kerala.Usually, regular coconut chutneys would spoil the same day without refrigeration, so making Chammanthi Podi was a way to preserve the chutney for months.
Garlic chutney, also referred to as lahsun chutney, lahsun ki chutney, lehsun chutney and bellulli chutney, is a chutney, originating from the Indian subcontinent, made from fresh garlic, dry or fresh coconut, groundnuts and green or red chili peppers.
Punukulu or Punugulu is a snack and common street food in Andhra Pradesh, India. [1] [2] Punukulu is a deep-fried snack made with rice, urad dal and other spices. [3]They are often served with peanut chutney, known as palli chutney, coconut chutney, tomato chutney, verusanaga chutney or toordal chutney known as kandhi pachadi, or they can be served with capsicum peanut chutney.
It is possible to use red chilli paste to make the vada spicy. [3] Batata vadas are usually accompanied by green chutney or dry chutneys, such as Shengdana Chutney (chutney in dry powder made from crushed groundnuts) and garlic-coconut chutney. [2] Often, Jain batata vada recipes are a variation that replaces potatoes with raw bananas.