Ragi Dosa |
My mother-in-law used to make a drink called ragi malt, which was a watered down version of the ragi porridge that we all gulped down as a mid-morning beverage, if it can be called that. It sustained us in the gap between breakfast and lunch time and more importantly, stalled the temptation to indulge in unhealthy snacking in between. She also made ragi dosas for breakfast, following no particular recipe or proportion...just a mix of wheat and ragi flours. At times she simply added some ragi flour to leftover rice dosa batter to make ragi dosas or to regular wholewheat flour to make ragi-fortified rotis! Sometimes she added chopped onion, green chillies and green coriander leaves for added flavour and a hint of pungency. She always bought whole ragi grain, got it washed and thoroughly sun-dried before sending it to be powdered at the local mill. Just as she did with wheat that was cleaned and sun-dried before milling.
I found ragi porridge the perfect weaning food over Cerelac when I started my babies on semi-solids.
My friend Geetanjali, who keeps experimenting with healthy food options had recently made delicious ragi laddoos and also light as air cookies from ragi.
Ragi items with their dull brown colour don't look one bit appetizing...but I just think of the health quotient and try to include this cereal more often in our diet. Here I have adapted a ragi dosa recipe from an old newspaper clipping, that I often make for breakfast. The original recipe calls for soaking the ragi grains overnight and grinding them the next morning. But the most convenient option is to use readymade ragi powder that is available in all supermarkets and wholesale grain stores.
What you need:
1 cup ragi flour
1/4 cup wheat flour
1/4 cup black gram dal (urad)
1/4 cup green gram dal (moong)
1/4 cup Bengal gram dal (channa)
1 tbsp fenugreek seeds (methi)
A little cooking oil to smear on griddle
Salt to taste
Salt to taste
Serve with a chutney of your choice - coconut or onion or red chilli chutney.
PS: Half a cup of beaten curd may also be added to the batter.
3 comments:
Thanks for mentioning me (my culinary skills) in your post.
Geetanjali
We tried this receipe at home thanks to you, came out well for a surprise, better than what is sold at Hallimane. A slight modification we added equal portion of ragi and wheat flower and a portion of beaten rice
I'm glad whenever anyone tries out any of my recipes. I'm sure your modifications made it even better!
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