Sunday 7 July 2019

Kaatil (Killer) Kaju Katli

Kaatil (Killer) Kaju Katli



These kaju katlis were made to celebrate my younger daughter’s birthday. This is one of the very few mithais she really enjoys. I make many types of burfis, but had never tried to make kaju katlis at home.
I looked around some recipes on the Internet, but most of them had ghee or milk or milk powder, so I had to devise this recipe, which turned out perfect in the very first attempt.
Ingredients
2 cups cashew nuts (yielded 250 gms of cashew powder)
1 cup (200 gms) caster sugar
½ cup (120 ml) water
4-5 green cardamoms, powdered
1 tsp rose water


Method
Grind the cashew nuts in a mixer batch by batch, taking care not to let it become oily. Sieve the cashew meal or powder and grind the remaining larger pieces again till you get a uniformly fine powder.
In a heavy bottomed pan dissolve sugar in half a cup (100 ml) cup of water and bring it to boil. Allow it to form a syrup of two thread consistency.
Add cashew nut powder, cardamom powder and rose water and mix with a spatula. Leave it to cool a little and harden without covering the pan.
When it is sufficiently cool, knead the dough for 4-5 minutes, until you get a smooth and oily dough. Place this ball of dough between two large sheets of slightly greased butter paper and roll out into a thick rectangular shape.
Remove the top sheet of butter paper and with a spatula or dough cutter shape the rectangle more accurately, then replace the top sheet and roll the dough into a uniformly thin sheet. This should be about 5 mm thick.
Remove the top layer of the butter paper and trim the ends of the rolled cashew dough sheet into a neat rectangle, and then further cut it into diamond shapes or squares.
I did not use any ghee or milk, nor any silver virk –as I wanted to make this a vegan kaju katli, but this was better than the best kaju katlis I have ever tasted.
It wouldn’t be overstating to call these killer or kaatil katlis.