Boondi Laddoo /बुंदी चा लाडू/ బూంది లడ్డు
Photos by Amruta Nargundkar
It’s fascinating to watch those large
platters of the golden globes of the boondi laddoos – in front of Lord Ganesh
in calendar art; in the hands of random people dexterously rushing from here to
there in a wedding scene in Hindi films; in pooja thalis of filmy mums
returning from prayers at the temple or performing an arati on homecoming or
war bound heroes (always wonder why they have to have so many laddoos, for they
break off only a small piece to stuff in the blessed hero’s mouth and the rest
gets forgotten when the shot is cut)…
Then there are laddoos lying flush and snug
in a traditional red “tie-and-die” or bandhni print mithai box or a modern
bejeweled casket during festive seasons; laddoos filling deep and huge yellow-red
cellophane- wrapped baskets atop the shoulders of a train of turbaned gift
bearers; laddoos in a pyramid pile at the mithai wala; bright yellow (almost
fluorescent yellow) laddoos crammed inside general store candy jars; laddoos in
a white or brown paper packet distributed in schools on Republic Day; laddoos
that need replenishment just before the server reaches you at a sit down meal
(not to mention that for some reason the servers recommence after replenishing
starting from the person beside you)…
Motichoor, Tirupati prasad, shaadi key
laddoo; laddoos in thanksgiving and those for celebration, hard ones and soft
ones, big boondis and small boondis, laddoos orange, yellow, speckled with
green and red, dotted with sugar crystals, seeds and nuts and dried fruit;
flavoured with camphor, cardamom, cloves, saffron or occasionally chocolate and
vanilla; pure ghee laddoos and oil fried ones – occasionally one made in a
trans-fat medium (dalda!)…
The laddoo is as primordial an orb as the
earth, and as celestial a body as the moon.
The word laddoo itself is so sweet – even
Elmo from Sesame Street couldn’t stop saying ladduladduladduladduuuuu – don’t
believe me? Do watch the episode titled Rakhi Road to see what I mean!
I made these laddoos for my darling
daughter’s birthday today. As she wished.
And to think, there was a time, when as a
gangly teenager, she suffered her (almost) greatest embarrassment at school on
her birthday!
It so happened - the husband went to buy
some sweets for his darling daughter’s special day, and on a whim, bought a few
kilos of premium quality motichoors, thinking she would love to take them to
school. What was he thinking!
I suppose I must have greatly added to her
ignominy as well, when in my – everyone gives chocolates – you do something new
- you shouldn’t be scared to be different - what’s so shameful about following
your culture- why waste all these kilos of good mithai-poor people in India
don’t get to eat even dry and stale bread – I coerced the fourteen year old to
take the motichoors to distribute in class.
Now a lovely young lady who fortunately
doesn’t mind being affectionately called “laddoo” and still adores laddoos, this
child of ours has never forgiven us for this grave wrong.
But she does give us a bit of reprieve,
when she tells us that she never let the huge box reach the class room – disposing
of the uncool treats in several ingenious and not wasteful ways and places- one
of them we are sure, being her own tummy!
Boondi Laddoo
As I have said enough above, the laddoo
comes in various sizes, shapes, colours, textures and flavours. But our
favourites are the Marathi laddoo and the Tirupati laddoo which is a little
stiff and made with thicker syrup, as it is meant to last a while. It’s similar
to the Tirupati prasad laddoo, in texture, but the latter has a distinct
camphor flavour to it!
It has been my dream, shared by my
enthusiastic girls, to make boondi laddoos at home. So much so that on my
recent trip to India I even bought a boondi (jhara) ladle from Bharat Bhai
(remember him?) And I also researched how to get the effect of the edible
camphor and discovered that a mixture of ground cloves and black cardamom can
achieve this flavour…
Here goes the boondi laddoo…
Ingredients
2 cups besan
1 cup and a little extra water
A pinch of soda bicarb
1 tbsp rice flour
1 tbsp oil
A few drops of yellow food colour
To deep fry
Oil +2-3 tbsp ghee (to cheat the flavour)
For the syrup
2 ½ cups sugar
1 ¼ cup water
For the garnish
2-3 tbsp chopped cashews
2 tbsp raisins (I didn’t use any- as one of
my girls detests them)
2 tbsp misri or crystal sugar
½
tsp freshly ground green cardamom
1-2
ground cloves
Method
Sift the besan and mix in the rice flour,
colour and the oil. Add the water gradually making a smooth paste making sure
there are no lumps. Keep covered for about 15-20 minutes.
In another pan, add the sugar and water and
let it come to a boil, then turn the heat down and let the syrup simmer till it
almost reaches a one thread consistency. Turn the heat off and add the cardamom
and clove powder to the syrup. Keep it warm.
In a flat kadhai or wok, heat the oil and
add the ghee, to give it flavour.
Now add a pinch of soda bicarb to the batter and mix well.
Test the batter by dropping a few drops
into hot oil. If the drops fall into little balls with tails, the batter is too
thick. If the balls are too light and full of holes and is oily, the batter is
too watery. The perfect batter will fall into drops into the oil and form round
boondis that are light and crisp. Adjust the consistency of the batter and then
hold the boondi ladle (jhara) over the hot oil and pour some batter into it. Gently
tap the sides of the ladle with a spoon, nudging the drops to fall into the
oil.
Fry the boondis, batch by batch, until
golden and remove them from the oil using a perforated spoon and drain in a
bowl lined with kitchen paper. Once the excess oil is drained, add the boondi
to the sugar syrup.
Fry the cashews in a little ghee and add to
the boondi and syrup mixture. Add the misri or crystal sugar and raisins.
Let the boondi soak in the syrup for about
an hour or so, until it cools down completely and seems very dry and fluffed.
Grease your hands with a little ghee and roll the mixture into uniform sized
balls or laddooooos!
Store in an airtight box, if any remain to
see the light of the day.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Welcome weary web wanderer!
I hope you have found whatever you were looking for!
I would love to know what you thought of my recipes and posts- so why don't you drop a line?!