The chosen recipe for this month's Indian Cooking Challenge is Chorafali - A Gujarati snack. Having not seen or tasted Chorafali is not much of an issue when I have not even heard of the name before now. But that aspect of trying out an unknown snack was the challenge really. Lataji's step-wise recipe was very helpful for a newbie like me. The recipe called for besan and mathia flour. When I tried googling I came to know that mathia flour was the one used to make papad like deep fried crispy snack (Nasto) popular in Gujarat. However I used the mathia flour substitution given by Lataji. I halved the original recipe and here is my recipe and notes.
Ingredients:
Using Standard cup measurements
Besan/Chick pea/ Garbanzo beans flour - 1 cup
Urad dhal/Black gram dhal flour - 1/2 cup
Moong dhal flour - 1/2 cup
Salt - 1/4 tsp
Soda Bi-carb - a big pinch
Ghee - 2 tbsp
Lukewarm Water - To make the dough
Oil - as required to pound the dough and to grease while rolling
To sprinkle on the fried cholafalis
Salt - 2 tsp (Original recipe calls for black salt, but regular table salt worked fine for me)
Red chilli powder - 2 tsp
Method:
Making the dough:
Sieve the flours and the soda bi-carb together. In a small pan heat the 1/4 tsp of salt until warm and add to the sifted flours. Add the ghee and mix well. Now add the warm water slowly and mix well to form a stiff dough. The dough should be tight and not pliable.
Softening the dough:
Now comes the challenging part (well, for me). Oil a flat surface, I used a cutting board. Take lemon sized portion of the dough and place it on the oiled surface and beat with a wooden rolling pin. When all the dough (of the small portion) is flattened, apply oil over it and fold (or roll) it. Beat again with the rolling pin. Repeat the oil, fold and beat process until the dough becomes soft, pliable and lighter in color. Repeat with the rest of the dough in parts.
Rolling out:
Take a small lemon sized portion of the dough and roll it very thin. Cut into rectangles of size 1 in x 3 in (approx). It should be so thin that you should be able to see the surface (cutting board n my case). If you are not able to roll out thin then the dough needs more pounding.
Fry and Serve:
Heat the oil for deep frying in medium-high heat. Too much heat will make the cholafalis turn brown faster. Drop the cut out pieces in the oil and try to hold in down in the hot oil with the slotted spoon. This way the the cholafalis will try to puff up. (Remember making pooris, same concept). Turn over once and fry for few more seconds. Drain and remove with the slotted spoon to a plate lined with tissue paper to remove extra grease. Sprinkle the salt and chilli powder mixture as soon as it is out of the oil. Allow to cool and start munching. Can be stored in an air-tight container for a couple of days.
Notes:
1. If you do not have a wooden rolling pin use any hard object that would pound the dough well.
2. Always keep the dough covered to prevent drying out.
3. The thinner the dough is rolled and cut, the crispier your chorafalis would be.
4. I used homemade urad dhal flour and moong dhal flour. I dry roasted both lightly until it changed color. Allowed it to cool and used a mixer grinder to make fine flour.
5. Make sure the besan used is free of lumps.
Do check out all my fellow participators in the Challenge for this month in Srivalli's page.
Ingredients:
Using Standard cup measurements
Besan/Chick pea/ Garbanzo beans flour - 1 cup
Urad dhal/Black gram dhal flour - 1/2 cup
Moong dhal flour - 1/2 cup
Salt - 1/4 tsp
Soda Bi-carb - a big pinch
Ghee - 2 tbsp
Lukewarm Water - To make the dough
Oil - as required to pound the dough and to grease while rolling
To sprinkle on the fried cholafalis
Salt - 2 tsp (Original recipe calls for black salt, but regular table salt worked fine for me)
Red chilli powder - 2 tsp
Method:
Making the dough:
Sieve the flours and the soda bi-carb together. In a small pan heat the 1/4 tsp of salt until warm and add to the sifted flours. Add the ghee and mix well. Now add the warm water slowly and mix well to form a stiff dough. The dough should be tight and not pliable.
Softening the dough:
Now comes the challenging part (well, for me). Oil a flat surface, I used a cutting board. Take lemon sized portion of the dough and place it on the oiled surface and beat with a wooden rolling pin. When all the dough (of the small portion) is flattened, apply oil over it and fold (or roll) it. Beat again with the rolling pin. Repeat the oil, fold and beat process until the dough becomes soft, pliable and lighter in color. Repeat with the rest of the dough in parts.
Rolling out:
Take a small lemon sized portion of the dough and roll it very thin. Cut into rectangles of size 1 in x 3 in (approx). It should be so thin that you should be able to see the surface (cutting board n my case). If you are not able to roll out thin then the dough needs more pounding.
Fry and Serve:
Heat the oil for deep frying in medium-high heat. Too much heat will make the cholafalis turn brown faster. Drop the cut out pieces in the oil and try to hold in down in the hot oil with the slotted spoon. This way the the cholafalis will try to puff up. (Remember making pooris, same concept). Turn over once and fry for few more seconds. Drain and remove with the slotted spoon to a plate lined with tissue paper to remove extra grease. Sprinkle the salt and chilli powder mixture as soon as it is out of the oil. Allow to cool and start munching. Can be stored in an air-tight container for a couple of days.
Notes:
1. If you do not have a wooden rolling pin use any hard object that would pound the dough well.
2. Always keep the dough covered to prevent drying out.
3. The thinner the dough is rolled and cut, the crispier your chorafalis would be.
4. I used homemade urad dhal flour and moong dhal flour. I dry roasted both lightly until it changed color. Allowed it to cool and used a mixer grinder to make fine flour.
5. Make sure the besan used is free of lumps.
Do check out all my fellow participators in the Challenge for this month in Srivalli's page.
well presented ....lovely
ReplyDeleteKrithi,this luks perfectly crisp,puffed up and wow! very impressive and inviting clicks.Luv it.
ReplyDeleteOmg, super crispy and beautifully puffed cholafali..awesome snacks Krithi..
ReplyDeletemmmm.... this looks really really yummy and crunchy and crispy.
ReplyDeleteThey look superb..nice 2 munch them anytime
ReplyDeleteWonderful recipe.. looks perfect !!
ReplyDeleteIndian Cuisine
Your Cholafali has puffed up so beautifully! :) Awesome pics! Will be uploading my post soon.. :D
ReplyDelete-
Kavi | Edible Entertainment
looks perfect n nice pic!
ReplyDeleteNice recipe and well presented.
ReplyDeletePerfectly crisp & puffed ........Great presentation Krithi. Love the step by step explanation.
ReplyDeletethe best I've seen so far! :D Hey Krithi, you haven't linked it to Srivalli's linky toold yet dear. Just to remind you.. Here's her link... http://spicingyourlife.blogspot.com/2011/10/cholafali-recipe-gujarati-farsan-diwali.html
ReplyDelete-
Kavi | Edible Entertainment
Nice recipe and well-made Krithi..Lots of work gone to the yummy snack !
ReplyDeleteSo crispy and nicely puffed up !! Well presented !!
ReplyDeleteOngoing Event - CC-What's For Friday Dinner??
This looks delicious..Should try it some day...Thanks for the recipe dear.
ReplyDeleteCheck out my Giveaway and join in that..
http://yummytummy-aarthi.blogspot.com/2011/10/3-reason-to-celebrate-3-cookbooks.html
Absolutely perfect and u have done sooooooo good Krithi :)
ReplyDeleteCrunchy Munchy.....
ReplyDeleteI can have them for a snack bite tooo ..
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Sandhya
(http://www.sandhyas-kitchen.blogspot.com)
Wow.These look so crunchy:))
ReplyDeletelooks super inviting and marvelous..
ReplyDeleteThey look awesome!!
ReplyDeletewow-krithi looks sooo good; have eaten them before but have never tried in my kitchen;gotta make this
ReplyDeletelooks delicious and crunchy too ........
ReplyDeleteYours look perfect .
ReplyDeleteCrispy and yummy snack..beautifully presented..
ReplyDeletelooks delicious..lovely snack!!
ReplyDeletetoday i made this but cholafali didnot puff , flat cholafali . i am upset don't know reason .
ReplyDeleteNew to me too. Looks inviting Krithi.
ReplyDeleteVardhini
Event: Halloween Fiesta
hi krithi, i have never seen or eaten this before, but they look very crunchy and flavorful, anyway good luck in the challenge game
ReplyDeleteHi Kirthi, I happened to stumble on your bog! You have wonderful array of posts. This dish looks crispy and very tempting...I am sure I could polish off a bowl of it in one go!!
ReplyDeleteexcellent try with perfect result...hats off krithi..cliks are gorgeous too..;)
ReplyDeleteTasty Appetite
first time hearing abt this recipe.. but it looks very crispy and crunchy.. love the clicks :)
ReplyDeleteAwesome stuff. I gotta try this one!
ReplyDeletelooks superb!
ReplyDeleteI have never heard of this snacks but boy do they look crispy and perfect.
ReplyDeletewow wonderful
ReplyDeleteKrithi, you have got your cholafalis very perfectly!..they have puffed up so well..
ReplyDeletecrispy crunchy cholafalis...awesome clicks...perfect presentation
ReplyDelete