The beauty of this recipe is when it is cooked, you do not need any oil! Well, it could be due to my Aebleskiver pan - which is non-stick! :)
- ½ kala channa (or any lentil, soaked overnight)
- 1 cup soji (semolina)
- ¼ rice flour
- 1 tbsp corn flour
- 1 medium tomato
- 3 cloves garlic
- ¼-½ piece of ginger
- 1-2 serano chillies
- ½ red onion
- 10 springs of coriander leaves
- Salt - to taste
- A big pinch of turmeric
- 3 tsp lemon juice (I used fresh, but if you use bottled, then add just 2 tsps then taste. You don't want the batter to be too sour)
- ½ cup sour cream
- ½ cup yogurt
- ½ tsp soda bicarbonate
- 1 ½ tsp eno
- The day before you wish to make these, soak the kala channa. If you're using a split lentil, then you can soak these on the same day for 4 hours.
- In a bowl, add the soji, rice flour and corn flour
- After soaking the kala channa (or lentils) drain them, wash them, then puree them into a paste. Add to the flour mix
- Grind the garlic, ginger and tomato. Add to the flour mix
- Chop the onion finely, and add to the flour mix.
- Chop the coriander finely (and you got it -) add to the flour mix
- Add in the salt, turmeric, lemon juice, sour cream and yogurt to the flour mix and mix well. You may need to add a little water if the batter is too thick. The batter should be the consistency of cake batter (not runny, but not too thick)
- Heat the Aebleskiver pan.
- While it is heating, add in the soda bicarbonate and eno to the mix and blend in well.
- Put one tbsp of the mix in the center hole of the pan. After a minute, the batter will have puffed up, and you should be able to flip it over using two toothpicks or skewers.
- Cook on the other side for a minute too. (Test the Appey by piercing the center with a toothpick, and if it comes out clean, the Appey is cooked.)
- Fill all the Aebleskiver pan holes with the batter, and continue cooking these. One you have the hang of this, you won't have to check each one. You'll also need to flip them over quite quickly since they'll all be cooking at the same time, and you wouldn't want these to burn1
- Enjoy these hot! (I must have ate 20 or so while I was making these!)
You can even make these with leftover dosa/idli/dhokla batter and just add finely chopped vegetables. OR a sweet version with Nutella in the center! YUMMY! Watch this space! :))
Oh! Oh! Oh! And in Thailand, the sweet version of these is called kanom krok - and I'm so looking forward to making these too!
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