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Finger millet (Eleusine coracana) is an annual herbaceous plant widely grown as a cereal crop in the arid and semiarid areas in Africa and Asia. It is a tetraploid and self-pollinating species probably evolved from its wild relative Eleusine africana. [2] Finger millet is native to the Ethiopian and Ugandan highlands. [3]
Dosa with chutney and sambar with sauteed potato filling in a restaurant Dosa served with sautéed potatoes. Dosa is the anglicised name of a variety of South Indian names for the dish, for example, dosai in Tamil, dosey in Kannada, and dosha in Malayalam. The standard transliterations and pronunciations of the word in various South Indian ...
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Poached eggs sprinkled with matcha and salt, served on sourdough bread Millet porridge Roti john. Pain au chocolat [114] Pain aux raisins [115] Palm syrup [116] Palmier [117] Pan de yuca – served for breakfast or with tea in Bolivia [118] Pancake [67] Pandebono – a breakfast food in Colombia [119] Pesarattu is a special breakfast in Andhra ...
Here’s the simple and satisfying recipe to make tasty millet tots. Millettots01. Crunchy Millet Tots Ingredients: 1/3 cup minced yellow onion. 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil.
Ragi mudde, ragi sangati or kali, colloquially simply referred to as either mudde or hittu which means 'lump' or 'dough', is a finger millet swallow dish of India in the state of Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh (Rayalaseema region). [1] In Tamil Nadu, especially in western Tamil Nadu, it is also called ragi kali.
In South India, rice flour is used for dishes like dosa, puttu, Chakkuli [7] golibaje (mangalore bajji) and kori rotti. It is also mixed with wheat, millet, other cereal flours, and sometimes dried fruits or vegetables to make manni, a kind of baby food. [citation needed]. Rice flour is used to make bhakari in the Konkan region in western India.
An uttapam (or uthapam, uttappam, etc.) is a type of dosa from South India.Unlike a typical dosa, which is crisp and crepe-like, an uttapam is thicker, with toppings.The name is derived from the Tamil words appam and utthia or uttria, meaning "poured appam", because appam is cooked in a round-bottom pan, whereas utthia-appam is cooked on a flat skillet.