Ingredients required:
Red chori beans - 1/2 cup
Rice - 1/4 cup
Red chillies - 10
Salt
Two onions, finely chopped
Oil - To make dosas
Soak chori beans and rice over night in plenty of water. These beans tend to double in their volume. This quantity makes around 10 - 12 dosas. Increase the quantity of the ingredients accordingly, if you need more dosas,.
In the morning, drain the water used to soak and wash the beans and rice thoroughly with fresh water.
Grind them into a coarse batter along with chillies and salt. Use only the amount of water required to grind the batter. Let the batter be on thicker side. It will take around a minute to grind the batter. If you wish, add the chopped onions to the batter.
To make dosas, heat a griddle or a shallow pan. When you sprinkle a few drops of water on the griddle, the water should sizzle and evaporate. This means the griddle is ready. Pour a ladle full of batter on the center of the griddle and spread it into a thin circle with the back side of the ladle. If you haven't added onion to the batter, now sprinkle some onion pieces on the dosa. Pour a tsp of oil along the edges of the dosa. Cook on medium flame till the bottom side turns brown. Flip it and again spread some oil along the edges. Let it cook on the bottom side. Then remove the dosa and repeat the process with the remaining batter.
Serve hot dosas with chutney.
the dosa looks very good! nice expt!
ReplyDeleteSuma,
ReplyDeleteWhat are chori beans, hmm I will google for it. Beans dosa's I guess this is the first time I heard. Thanks for the recipe
Thank you!! I have one more dal dosa to try.Looks delicious Suma:))
ReplyDeleteYou could send this to Nupur on next Monday for the letter "R"!!!
Looks great suma. I make a gravy & dry curry regularly. Will try your dosa very soon. Thanks for posting this healthy recipe.
ReplyDeleteyummy dosa...really delicious
ReplyDeleteHay that dosa is looking great...I love it...Nice healthy recipe...YUM!
ReplyDeleteoooooooh looks yum! Thanks for it, I just bought Red chori for the first time and didn't know what to make with it :) Now I know!
ReplyDeleteThanks
I am eager to try this. One doubt, without doing it and reading the words 'coarse grinding', I wonder, would this batter be thicker than a typical dosa batter? Also seems unlike dosa this does not need to be fermented? Thanks so much for posting this unique offering!
ReplyDelete