It is a pleasant evening. Houses are being spruced up for
Diwali. There is frenzied shopping going on in the market. We, too, are imbued
with the festive spirit. Though there is mindful buying at our end. Houses
around us are decorated with lights. Different colours, different shades and
some blinking alternately while some in different patterns intrigue our kids.
Post dinner we go to the terrace and walk around. Kids are very excited as they
spot and count the houses shining bright. A group of bats fly overhead towards north, flapping
their giant wings. They meld into the darkness. There is chill in the air…..a
series of crackers go up making patterns in the dark sky, leaving behind a
trail of white smoke. We scurry indoors before the smoke suffuses the air and
pollutes it. Crackers are such a
nuisance …….such a spoilsport.
Yesterday I made Semolina Laddus. A recipe that is extremely
popular yet made every year in every household during festivals. A recipe that
does not leave you guilty as it has very less sugar and very less fat. The
laddus are mildly sweet, juicy and flavourful.
Semolina / Sooji / Rava Laddu
Ingredients
2 cups Semolina (Sooji)
1 cup desiccated coconut
½ cup powdered sugar
2/3 cup milk
½ cup cashews halved
10-15 almonds chopped into small pieces
1/3 cup golden raisins
10 -12 green cardamoms (seeds removed and crushed fine)
1 tablespoon ghee (clarified butter)
Method
Take a thick bottom steel wok. Add ghee, cashew halves and
almonds. Roast on low flame and turn off the heat when the cashews begin to
change colour. Add raisins. Stir for few minutes. Transfer the mixture to a
plate.
Take Semolina in the wok and roast on low flame. Turn off
the heat when it becomes dry and gives out a sweet aroma and just begins to
change colour. Add powdered sugar, desiccated coconut and cardamom powder. Stir
well.
Add milk to the mixture. Add 1/3 cup and stir so that the
mixture is evenly moistened. Now add remaining 1/3 cup slowly. Test if the
mixture can be rolled into balls. Add more milk only if the mixture feels dry
and does not come together.
Make balls / laddus when the mixture is warm enough to be
handled. Make lemon size laddus by pressing the mixture tightly.
Let the laddus cool. Store in an airtight container.
Refrigerate the laddus.
delicious laduus beautiful clicks
ReplyDeleteI hope you, your family and your community all enjoy the rapidly approaching Diwali celebrations. Fireworks of all kinds have been banned in Australia for a long time now so no crackers here. Your delicious semolina laddu are very easy to veganise using non dairy milk (sesame milk in my case) and coconut oil to swap out the ghee with very little change in the taste. Thank you for sharing this delicious recipe with us all. Healthy celebration food is a most wonderful way of sharing with family and friends and knowing that they will be eating well at the same time as enjoying themselves :)
ReplyDeleteyummy looking rava ladoos .its an instant helper too
ReplyDeleteYes Preetika, these come together so quickly.
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