May 20, 2006

Rava unniappam (Sooji mini pancakes)

I can't take it any more. I am reading about so many recipes with this unniyappam pan and so many different names. But what happened to the sweet delicacy called unniappam (or unniyappam or sweet mini pancakes) which I love, made with the same pan?

Small tea-shops you find at every corner in Kerala smell of this in the evening tea-time. They make it and store in large glass cases to test small kids, I think.

You can be groomed to become a well-behaved child every single day, but you know, you can’t help but ask your parent to buy you this, when you pass the tea-shop and will end up crying because parents normally like to deny anything you ask, especially from a shacky tea-shop.

Since it is fried in oil, at home, my mom would make it only when there were like hundreds of people, so she wouldn’t have to ‘waste’ the oil. The end result being, you can get your hands on only one or two of these, while your ‘brutal’ cousins and other relatives are having unniyappam chaakara in their mouths.I made it with Sooji or Rava.(There is another version with Rice flour and coconut which I will post later sometime)

The first thing you need is a special skillet as you can see from Indira’s recipes. Don’t worry, you don’t have to go to India but you can buy the pan (Western version) here.

Recipe:Mix 1 cup of Sooji with 1 tsp of ghee.Add enough milk to make it a thick mixture. The mixtures should be of thick consistency, a little thicker than idli batter. Mix in 1/4 cup mashed small banana.Add 1/4 cup jaggery crumbs heated with ¼ cup water and strained - 1/4 cup
OR if adding sugar, add brown sugar -1/2 cup.Mix everything together (try to make the mixture fluffy with air bubbles) and let it sit for one hour.

We need to fry this in oil (Mostly at temples,they fry this in ghee). Use any vegetable oil. Pour oil into each impression. Fill oil upto 3/4th full in each impression. Heat the oil.

When it starts to smoke, pour the batter into each impression filled with oil. DO NOT COVER the skillet. After 5 or 6 minutes, flip the uniappam to the other side and cook. (I couldn’t take good pics, but follow the steps in the recipe, and make it the same way except we don’t cover and we pour oil filling half of each impression.)Serve with hot tea or coffee. The smell of jaggery in oil is heavenly. I used brown sugar i.e. why the light brown colour, if jaggery is used it will be dark brown in colour.

3 comments:

Inji Pennu said...

12 Comments:
At 20/5/06 7:22 PM, Indira said...
I could smell them frying, from here.:) Heavenly!
Sounds easy, certainly will try them.
Hey, thanks for the mention. When I wrote that post, I had no clue about the Danish eble..... something pan.:) I'll edit my post and include the link.

At 20/5/06 9:48 PM, Menu Today said...
Hi IG,
Your Rawa Unniappam looks so delicious!!!! Can I have one??

At 21/5/06 9:05 AM, RP said...
How did you sense that I ordered this pan yesterday from Amazon? I got free super saver shipping! So it should reach me in 5 to 9 days. Can we use any banana in the unniyappam recipe? (I am thinking of the ones we get in american grocery stores)
Can you also post the unniyappam(with maida) and the neyyappam recipe when you get time? Pretty please...

At 21/5/06 11:55 AM, Sumitha Shibu said...
My mouth is watering....!

At 21/5/06 12:35 PM, Nandita said...
That looks super LG ! We call it appam i guess, but like your mum , i too find deep frying a pain- so will just be content with your pics alone :)

At 21/5/06 1:05 PM, indosungod said...
IG thats a great treat, I have tasted it once while visiting Kerala, yummy!!

At 21/5/06 1:41 PM, Linda said...
Oh, these look wonderful! I am going to have to get one of those pans...

Made your green peas gravy for lunch today and it came out great - thanks so much!

At 21/5/06 5:30 PM, BDSN said...
HI LG,

Is Uniappam same as paniyaram? bcoz the sweet paniyarams my mom makes look like these...well i dont know what it is made of...i should certainly try urs..they look delectable...

At 22/5/06 7:59 AM, indianadoc said...
Thanx for visiting my blog...this rava version of unniappam sounds interesting...probably next time I can try this!

At 22/5/06 8:48 AM, indianadoc said...
hmmm...u r right...I included it first in the hope of making some silver!! But now I retain it for the sake of appearance even when it has not added anything to my purse!!! Probably I should reduce a few links...

At 22/5/06 9:24 AM, Krithika said...
When I saw the pic I wanted to reach out and grab one! Yum ! I didn't know that you could make this with Sooji. I've always made this with Soaked, ground rice. This sounds easy. Will definitely try this.

At 22/5/06 2:21 PM, L G said...
indira: When I saw that in my early years in U.S, I seriously thought uniappam is eaten by white people too! :)

menutoday:Of course!

rp:Ah!RP,Amazon told me :). I think ideally small bananas are used.But you can what we get here too.

sumitha: :)

nandita: Hmm..that made me thinking.

isg:Yeah, I think it is an exclusive Kerala delicacy

linda: great:)

bdsn: I dont know actually. Never had paniyaaram. Is the recipe same?

indiandoc: thanks :)

krithika: yeah,we can make it with sooji too.thanks.

Unknown said...

Hi Inji

I would love to cover some of your food articles in our online magazine ( soon to be on print) www.friedeye.com. TO brief you up, Im food editor and I would love to carry the home cooking of kerela flavour to North-East india and all over india.

LEt me know. need your permission before publishing. Mail me your opinions @sanjeeta.sanjeeta@gmail.com

Unknown said...

Hi Inji

I would love to cover some of your food articles in our online magazine ( soon to be on print) www.friedeye.com. TO brief you up, Im food editor and I would love to carry the home cooking of kerela flavour to North-East india and all over india.

LEt me know. need your permission before publishing. Mail me your opinions @sanjeeta.sanjeeta@gmail.com