Pooris - deep fried bread
8 servings
Ingredients
Quantity | Ingredient | |
---|---|---|
⅓ | cup | Whole-wheat flour |
⅓ | cup | White cake flour plus xtra flour |
⅓ | cup | Fine grained semolina |
¼ | teaspoon | Salt |
1 | tablespoon | Vegetable oil |
Vegetable oil for deep frying |
Directions
Recipe by: Madhur Jaffrey - World of the East; Vegetarian Cooking Put the whole-wheat flour, the ⅓ cup cake flour, and semolina into a bowl. Add the salt. Dribble 1 tablespoon oil over the flours and rub it in with your fingertips. Add water, a little bit at a time, and gather the dough together to make a ball. As you need a fairly soft dough, the amount of water may well be around ½ cup plus 1 tablespoon. Knead the dough for 10 minutes or until it is smooth. Put the dough in a bowl and cover with a damp dishcloth. Set aside for half an hour.
Put the oil for deep frying in a wok and set it to heat on a flame that is slightly lower than medium. Knead the dough again and divide it into twelve equal parts. Keep the parts you are not working with covered with the damp dishcloth. Make a round ball out of one of the parts and then flatten it with your palm to form a patty. Sprinkle a little flour on it. Flour your work surface and roll out the patty into a 5½ inch round.
When the oil in the wok is very hot (it should not be smoking, though), pick up the rolled-out poori and take it as close as possible to the oil. Lay it over the oil, making sure that it does not double over. (If the poori sinks quietly to the bottom of the wok, the oil is not hot enough.) The poori will start sizzling. Using quick but very gentle taps with the back of a slotted spoon, keep pushing the poori slightly under the oil. Within seconds, it should balloon. Turn it over and cook the second side for a few seconds.
Remove with a slotted spoon and place in a bowl lined with paper towels. Cover the bowl with a plate or lid. Make all the pooris this way. (Keep an eye on the oil as you are rolling out the pooris. If it starts to overheat, remove it from the flame for a while.) Ideally, pooris should be eaten as soon as they are made. If you keep them tightly covered, you may eat them somewhat later at room temperature. They will have deflated but will still taste good.
Makes 8 large pooris.
Submitted By JIM WELLER On 05-07-95
Related recipes
- Deep fried bread
- Deep-fried whole wheat breads with cumin (puri)
- Dhakai paratha (flaky fried bread)
- Fried bread
- Indian bread
- Indian fry bread
- Indian fry bread #1
- Indian fry bread #2
- Indian frybread
- Oiled flat bread
- Poori (deep-fried, puffy bread)
- Poori (fried bread)
- Poori (whole wheat indian bread)
- Poori - fried puffed bread
- Puffy puris
- Puri (deep fried brown bread)
- Puris (fried bread puffs)
- Puris--indian crispbread
- Sherbanu's pooris
- Spicy poori