Coinciding with the Navratri season, here is one more dish associated with it and the fasting regimen. This halwa / sheera is prepared using amaranth flour / rajgira atta and seems to be a popular dessert fit for the season. Not a tricky one to prepare but patiently roasting the flour in ghee without burning it until it turns light brown is important.
The halwa can be prepared with either milk or water. It is rich because of the ghee and milk used and therefore eaten in small quantities. I used jaggery instead of sugar and 1/4 cup of it makes it not an overtly sweet dish but one can increase the sweetener by a couple of tbsp. more if one prefers a sweeter halwa. The consistency of this halwa would be smoother compared to the sooji halwa since flour is the base here.
Ingredients
1/4 cup ghee (I used less.)
1/2 cup rajgire ka atta / amaranth flour
1 and 1/4 cup milk
4 - 6 tbsp. sugar (I used jaggery instead.)
2 pinches of ground cardamom
Nuts to garnish
Directions:
* Heat ghee in a pan and add amaranth flour to it. Start toasting until you notice the aroma and the mixture changes to light brown color, about 6 to 8 minutes.
* Meanwhile, heat milk and sugar in a microwave or in a pan and keep aside. No need to boil the milk.
* Add milk and cardamom to the toasted flour gradually in small increments from the sides of the pan, stirring continuously and quickly to avoid forming lumps. Cook on low flame covered until the mixture thickens and the ghee starts to release along the edges.
* Garnish with slivered almonds / any other nuts and serve warm.
Comments
The halwa can be prepared with either milk or water. It is rich because of the ghee and milk used and therefore eaten in small quantities. I used jaggery instead of sugar and 1/4 cup of it makes it not an overtly sweet dish but one can increase the sweetener by a couple of tbsp. more if one prefers a sweeter halwa. The consistency of this halwa would be smoother compared to the sooji halwa since flour is the base here.
Ingredients
1/4 cup ghee (I used less.)
1/2 cup rajgire ka atta / amaranth flour
1 and 1/4 cup milk
4 - 6 tbsp. sugar (I used jaggery instead.)
2 pinches of ground cardamom
Nuts to garnish
Directions:
* Heat ghee in a pan and add amaranth flour to it. Start toasting until you notice the aroma and the mixture changes to light brown color, about 6 to 8 minutes.
* Meanwhile, heat milk and sugar in a microwave or in a pan and keep aside. No need to boil the milk.
* Add milk and cardamom to the toasted flour gradually in small increments from the sides of the pan, stirring continuously and quickly to avoid forming lumps. Cook on low flame covered until the mixture thickens and the ghee starts to release along the edges.
* Garnish with slivered almonds / any other nuts and serve warm.
Comments
Omg, how fabulous this halwa looks.. WOnderful dishes you have made out this incredible Amaranth flour. Incredibly delicious.
ReplyDeleteI am sure with ghee, milk and nuts, this version of sheera tastes rich and delicious.
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of the wheat flour halwaI made recently. Need to try this fasting recipe as it sounds wonderful.
ReplyDeleteOmg!! Your Amaranth flour innovations are really making me excited to try all your recipes.
ReplyDeleteNow this is yet another fantastic dish we can make with this flour..I have this stocked so all your recipes come handy! Fantastic pick for the theme Suma.
ReplyDeleteSuch a rich and creamy looking sheera. Loved your rajgira flour based recipes this week Suma. Learnt some unique and interesting dishes.
ReplyDeleteYour amaranth flour recipes are awesome! I think I need to buy some right away to try them all...the halwa looks so delicious and tempting
ReplyDeleteSuch a rich and creamy Sheera. Delicious
ReplyDeleteperfect recipe for fasting days. not yet tried. So creamy and delicious it looks.
ReplyDeleteI'm having a very bad throat infection and at this time if I want something is hot sheera going down my throat to relieve it of the pain. Fasting or not, right now I want this amaranth sheera badly. Wish you could pass me that bowl!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great dessert recipe with Rajgira. I never thought of using it to make sheera. I will try this soon!
ReplyDeletehalwa looks delicious suma, never tried halwa with gluten-free flours, love how simple it is to make!
ReplyDeleteThe taste of Rajgira Shira is to die for but like you say it is very heavy. I love your presentation Suma and of course the addition of jaggery.
ReplyDeleteRajgira halwa is super healthy and tasty recipe specially for fasting period. looks so tasty.
ReplyDelete