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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Jantikalu or Muruku for ICC



This month for ICC we have to make Khur Khur Muruku.... This are famous in many parts of India no specifics becoz I don't no much about that.. Anyways I never made them or never helped my mom in making them....

I have seen stars making them yesterday... I don't even have the Muruku maker with me so used my own tricks for making them. I have checked for Muruku maker in Indian shops near my place but couldn't get one so used plastic bags around 20 to make the Muruku's...


The plastic bags were keep on exploding with such a tight dough inside them. At last I succeeded in making Jantikalu. But it was fun making them.
When my husband saw them he was so excited and was praising for making them...Hmm that makes all my effort to vanish just like that.. :)


Ingredients

Raw Rice - 4 cups
Urad Dal - 1 cup



For Seasoning


1 tbs Cumin seeds
1 tbs Sesame seeds
Hing (Asafetida)
Salt to taste
Butter

1. Wash and drain the rice. Shade dry the Rice for 1/2 hr. Dry roast the Urad dal to light brown. Allow it to cool.If you are using more quantity, you can get it ground in rice mil, else use your mixie to grind both Rice and Urad dal.
2. First grind rice into a fine flour, keep it aside. then grind the urad dal to fine powder.
3. In a wide vessel, take both the flours along with salt. Mix well. Add cumin, Sesame seeds to the flour, mix well.
4. Whether you use Asafetida powder or the solid ones, you got to mix it in water, make sure it is dissolved before adding to the flour. If its not dissolved properly, when deep frying the muruku, there are chances for the hing to burst our due to air bubbles.
5. Mix in the hing to the flour and finally add the butter. Gather everything well and you will get more of a crumbling mixture. Now slowly add water and knead a dough which is little more softer than the puri dough.
6. Heat a kadai with oil enough to deep fry. Once the oil is hot enough, simmer to low flame.
7. Take the Muruku Aachu, wash and wipe it clean. Then divide the dough into equal balls. Fill the Muruku maker with the dough. You can either press it directly over the flames or press over a paper and gently slide it down the hot oil. But since the quantity mentioned here is less, you can press it directly over the kadai.
8.Cook over medium flame, using a slotted spoon, turn it over to other side to ensure both sides turn golden colour. You will know by seeing the colour that its cooked. Remove to a kitchen paper and store it in a air tight container.

4 comments:

  1. I appreciate your effort of making it without a muruku maker. Muruku looks so crispy and yumm :) great job

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  2. You have pioneered a contingency to do these.Well done.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Kudos to your efforts in your attempt without a murukku press. It looks crisp. Who cares about shape as long as it is tasty, isn't it ?

    ReplyDelete