
After 15 minutes of struggling with it, I decided to use another achu and used the one with three star shaped holes in it. I squeezed it into the oil fully expecting it to be just as difficult to squeeze out....but no, that seems to be the one thing I did right....it slid out of the press quite easily and in another 15 minutes, I'd used up all the dough and had a dabba-ful of tasty, crunchy murukkus.

The murukku felt chewy when it was just out of the oil, but turned perfectly crunchy on cooling.
Here is Valli's recipe:
What you need:
Rice Flour 2 cups
Besan flour 1/2 cup
Fried gram flour - 1/2 cup
Sago - 1/2 cup
Salt to taste
Curd - 1/4 cup
Chilli powder - 1/2 tsp or as per taste
To make:
Soak Sago in Butter milk for 3 hrs, please ensure that you soak it enough else you may risk having the sago burst.
Mix all the flour together, heat 50 gms oil, mix to the flour along with salt and chili powder. Then add the buttermilk soaked sago slowly and knead to a chapati dough consistency
Heat oil for deep frying.In the murukku achu, add the dough. When the oil is hot, press down directly as as murukkus.
Cook on medium flame to ensure the murukku is cooked well.
Notes:
Ensure sago soaks in buttermilk well and is soft or else it will burst when you press it down in hot oil.
Cook on medium to ensure even cooking.
Fried Gram flour is fried channa dal that is available commercially. It is general sold as the dal, we have to powder it at home. This is also referred as chutney dal as it is used in making coconut chutney.
Alls well that ends well"all is well"After reading your post its good that you persevered the end result proved thta.Nice crunchy murukus.
ReplyDeleteMy 1st visit here,following your blog.
good that the final outcome was good.loe to read all those stories about thi months challenge, just posted mine
ReplyDeleteWonderful to jay..good that you were able to make it!
ReplyDeleteJay, I didn't see the id logged, pls delete that comment.
ReplyDeleteGood to see that you were able to make it..
Ha ha, serial lights - nice way of looking at the whole thing!
ReplyDeleteha ha ha lovely looking in the end
ReplyDeletecrispy crunchy murukku
ReplyDeletewww.foodlyrics.com
I didnt make it this time, murukku does look like serial light with all the sago ;)
ReplyDeletemurukku looks delicious..finally u did it right..murukke looks so perfect
ReplyDeletelooks nice and crispy...
ReplyDeleteGlad the end result was good!
ReplyDeleteHi,
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Looks crispy and tasty muruku.
ReplyDeletelooks so yummy!!
ReplyDeleteReg. your question on my Banana Flower Pachadi: It doesn't taste bitter at all. Instead it tasted so good and was so aromatic. Sorry for answering your question so late :)
As long the muruku taste gud...dont need to worry about the other things rite....looks gud..
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ReplyDeleteHello
ReplyDeleteI tried to make it 2nd time and unfortunately it dint happen the batter was not getting out of the muruku acchu..Please tell me what would have gone wrong tried adding water still dint help.