Try telling the people in
Tamil Nadu, that their staple food
iddlis are not theirs but
imported from Indonesia.
Kakka Kakka, a Tamil film, which I loved, for the major part because of Surya ;) has an amusing scene. In that while the
villain is questioning the lady, the co-villain interrupts the main one and asks, "
anne pasikkathu, iddli saappittu varenne?" (Brother, I am hungry, can I go and eat some
iddlis).
At such a tense moment, I burst out laughing. The dialog was so natural, accurately
tamilian, cleverly put into the whole scene, it was amusingly ticklish.
Iddlis are taken for granted in Tamil culture.
This post is not about
iddlis, but about the stringy
idiyappoms. Though as usual like we are proud of everything
Malayalee, we are proud of
Kerala's 'own'
idiyappom too. Now tell that to the
Konkanis, the
Srilankans (it is called Indiappa....hmm...), the Malaysians etc. These food delicacies have legs, I say. They travel, roam the World, get stuck in various forms and shapes, in various cuisines and in hearts, we defend it as our own.
Idiyappam or String hoppers is a plain rice noodle made fresh. You can use double boiled rice or parboiled or raw.

Roast any rice flour in low flame, stirring constantly until it is just warm to touch. Boil water , add salt and add slowly to this rice in very low heat until it takes on the texture of wet clay. You are going to play with these.
Idiyappam press is similar to a cookie press, but it has an additional filter that will have very tiny holes. Make small balls and press the flour out to a steamer or your
idli steamer.

At our home, we add fresh grated coconut between the layers of an
idiyappam. First layer of strings, a little bit of coconut, second layer of strings, then a little bit of coconut.

Steam for around 10 minutes like idlis. You dont separate the strings as in a noodle, it is like rice steamed cake, with the texture of strings. Egg curry is a complimentary accompaniment with this breakfast dish.