By Suguna Vinodh/ May 2016 / 25 Comments
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I am a great fan of fermented foods. When the legendary Chithra Viswanathan had posted a picture of this morkali in a forum, I was instantly hooked. The unique thing about this recipe is that the batter for this recipe is naturally fermented. These days, the morkali we know is the “instant” morkali made with a batter of rice flour and sour curd.
CV was very generous to share her family recipe and this is the story behind this amazing recipe.
Whenever amma ground rice for sevai (string hoppers) withpuzhungarisi (par boiled rice), amma used to reserve some of the batter for making morkali. The batter was usually fermented for 24-48 hours. One can even ferment it upto 36 hours. The batter stays good and does not rot. When amma was bedridden in her final years, my sister used to have this batter in the fridge at all times, so she could make it at moments notice. However small an amount, the recipe can be made with just enough batter. If made the right way, it just glides down the throat. Its easily digestible too because of the fermentation.
Recipes like these are hard to find. We are slowly losing the art of fermentation in this busy world. Just a little bit of planning and you will have a wonderful and heathy dish that you can make for your loved ones. Here is the recipe for naturally fermented morkali. Its the wonderful soulfood as they say!
Wash and soak the par boiled rice (I used Idly rice) in water for 24 hours. Drain the soaked rice and grind the rice along with coconut and a cup of water. Grind the ingredients in a mixie to a fine paste. Do not grind it to a watery mixture. Grind it to a thick paste. Mix in the salt and set aside to ferment in a draft free place. I allowed it to ferment for 24 hours.
After the time, the batter would smell sour and little foamy. The batter did not foam a lot for me like idli batter does. It foamed very little. Add in about a cup of water to dilute. It should be a thin batter (consistency of a light sauce, thinner than the dosa batter).
Now the tempering! Its a simple traditional tempering that goes in for making the Kali. Traditionally curd chillies (mor milagai) is used. I did not have mor milagai. So used dried red chillies.
Heat oil in a pan and add in the mustard seeds. Let it splutter. Add in the split urad dal and split chana dal. Let it slightly brown. Add in the curry leaves, red chillies and asafoetida. Fry briefly for a couple of seconds. Add in the batter. Stir on a medium flame.
Keep stirring the batter. It will keep thickening. Keep stirring until it has thickened well and does not stick to the pan anymore.
Switch off the flame and remove it to a plate. Let it cool. Cut into cubes and serve.
Morkali – Fermented Morkali Recipe
Naurally fermented morkali recipe. Traditional mor kali recipe made using fermented rice batter.
- Total Time: 48 hours 10 mins
- Yield: 3 1x
Ingredients
Scale
For the batter
- 1 cup parboiled rice ( I used idli rice)
- 1/4 cup coconut
- 1 teaspoon salt
For tempering
- 2 tablespoon peanut oil
- 1/2 teaspoon mustard seeds
- 1 teaspoon split white urad dal
- 1 teaspoon split chana dal
- 2–3 dried curd chillies (mor milagai)
- 2 sprig curry leaves, chopped
- 1/4 teaspoon asafoetida (hing), perungayam
Instructions
- Wash and soak the par boiled rice in water for 24 hours. Drain the soaked rice and grind the rice along with coconut and a cup of water. Mix in the salt and set aside to ferment in a draft free place for 24 hours.
- After the time, the batter would smell sour and little foamy. Add in about a cup of water to dilute. It should be a thin batter (consistency of a light sauce).
- Heat oil in a pan and add in the mustard seeds. Let it splutter. Add in the split urad dal and split chana dal. Let it slightly brown. Add in the curry leaves, red chillies and asafoetida. Fry briefly for a couple of seconds. Add in the batter. Stir on a medium flame.
- Keep stirring the batter. It will keep thickening. Keep stirring until it has thickened well and does not stick to the pan anymore.
- Switch off the flame and remove it to a plate. Let it cool. Cut into cubes and serve.
Notes
Optional:
For garnish, I have used sliced green chillies, red chillies, curry leaves and coriander leaves.
- Author: Kannamma - Suguna Vinodh
- Prep Time: 48 hours
- Cook Time: 10 mins
- Category: Main dish
- Cuisine: Tamilnadu