Hey everyone, I hope you are having an incredible day today. Today, I will show you a way to prepare a special dish, samosa. One of my favorites. For mine, I will make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Samosa is one of the most well liked of recent trending foods on earth. It is appreciated by millions daily. It is simple, it’s quick, it tastes yummy. Samosa is something that I’ve loved my whole life. They’re nice and they look fantastic.
These stuffed savory pastries are a traditional Indian favorite. Lamb meat and spices are cooked together to create a mouthwatering filling for the easy to make dough. The recipe may seem complex, but it's actually fairly simple. A samosa (/ s ə ˈ m oʊ s ə /) is a South Asian fried or baked pastry with a savory filling like spiced potatoes, onions, peas, chicken and other meats, or lentils.
To get started with this recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can have samosa using 22 ingredients and 18 steps. Here is how you can achieve that.
The ingredients needed to make Samosa:
- Take Samosa Dough:
- Take all-purpose flour (maida) 260 grams
- Take ajwain carom seeds
- Get salt
- Get + 1 teaspoon oil 45 ml + 5 ml
- Make ready water to knead the dough, around
- Take Samosa Filling:
- Get medium potatoes 500-550 grams
- Make ready oil
- Make ready cumin seeds
- Make ready fennel seeds
- Make ready crushed coriander seeds
- Make ready finely chopped ginger
- Prepare green chili chopped
- Get hing asafoetida
- Prepare +2 tablespoons green peas
- Get coriander powder
- Take garam masala
- Take amchur dried mango powder
- Get red chili powder or add more to taste
- Take salt or to taste
- Make ready Oil, for deep frying
The triangular shaped flaky pastry filled with spicy potato, chicken or lamb filling is a popular snack not only in India but in several countries of the world. Because samosa is so so common in India (you literally get samosa and chai at every other street corner), I always considered it to be a quintessential Indian delicacy. Samosas are savory fried pastries traditionally stuffed with spices, potatoes and other veggies. (For other variations, you can also stuff them with paneer, cheese and jalapenos.) They're a common street food in the northern and western regions of India and a key component of another popular dish, samosa chaat. Flaky and tender fried samosa are one of the most popular recipes in North Indian cuisine.
Instructions to make Samosa:
- Start by making the samosa dough. To a large bowl, add flour, ajwain (carom seeds), salt and mix well.
- Add the oil and then start mixing with your fingers. Rub the flour with the oil until the oil is well incorporated in all of the flour. Do this for 3 to 4 minutes, you don't want to rush this step. Once incorporated, the mixture resembles crumbs.
- Press some flour between your palm- it should form a shape (& not crumble) - means oil is enough and well incorporated.
- Now, start adding water, little by little and mix to form a stiff dough. Don't overwork the dough and don't knead a soft dough. It should just come together and form a stiff dough. I used around 6 tablespoons of water here.
- Cover the dough with a moist cloth and let it rest for 40 minutes. I usually soak a paper towel in water and then squeeze out all the water and then cover my dough with that. While the dough is resting, start working on the filling.
- Boil potatoes until done. 8 to 9 whistles on high heat with natural pressure release if using stove-top pressure cooker or if using Instant Pot, high pressure 12 minutes with natural pressure release on a trivet with 1 cup water in the bottom of the pot.
- Peel the skin and them mash the potatoes. Set aside. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a pan on medium heat. Once the oil is hot, add the cumin seeds, fennel seeds and crushed coriander seeds. - - Let the seeds sizzle for few seconds and then add the chopped ginger, green chili and hing. Cook for 1 minute.
- Add the boiled & mashed potatoes and green peas to the pan. Mix everything together. I use my potato masher to combine the spices and seasonings well with the potatoes and peas.
- Add the coriander powder, garam masala, amchur, red chili powder and salt. Mix to combine. Once it's all well incorporated, remove pan from heat and let the filling cool down a bit.
- Once the dough has rested, give it a quick knead. Then divide the dough into 7 equal parts of around 58-60 grams each. - - Start working on a piece of dough, keep the remaining dough balls covered at all times with a moist cloth else the dough will dry out.
- Roll one dough ball into a circle-oval kind of shape, around 6-7 inches in diameter and then cut it into two parts
- Take one part and apply water on the straight edge/side. I usually mix some flour with water so that it forms a nice glue. - - Now bring the two ends of the straight edge together and pinch them to form a cone. See step-by-step pictures above for a better idea. Pinch the pointed ends to make it a perfect cone shape.
- Fill the samosa with the potato filling, around 1 to 2 tablespoons. Don't overfill the samosa.
- Now again apply water all around the circumference of the cone as you have to seal it. Pinch the opposite side (side opposite to where you pinched to form the cone) to form a plate (see step-by-step pictures above). Then pinch the edges and seal the samosa.
- Your samosa is now ready. Repeat the same process with remaining dough. Always remember to keep the filled samosa covered with a moist cloth while roll and fill the others. You will get 14 samosas.
- Now heat oil in a kadai on low heat. To check if oil is ready, drop a small piece of dough into the oil. It should take few seconds to come up to the surface. That means the oil is ready. - - Drop the shaped samosas into the oil.
- Fry on low heat. After around 10-12 minutes, the samosa will become firm and light brown in color. At this point, increase the heat to medium and fry until it gets nicely browned. - - Don't overcrowd the kadai/wok, fry 4-5 samosas at a time. And each batch will take around 20 minutes since we fry on low heat so be patient.
- Once you finish frying one batch, lower the heat again to low and wait until the temperature of the oil drops and then add the second batch. - - Enjoy hot samosas with cilantro chutney or sweet tamarind chutney!
Samosas are savory fried pastries traditionally stuffed with spices, potatoes and other veggies. (For other variations, you can also stuff them with paneer, cheese and jalapenos.) They're a common street food in the northern and western regions of India and a key component of another popular dish, samosa chaat. Flaky and tender fried samosa are one of the most popular recipes in North Indian cuisine. They feature a pastry-like crust but are filled with savory potatoes and peas for a hearty, delicious snack. This step-by-step guide will help you to make the flakiest, tastiest, absolutely best Punjabi samosa from scratch! Samosa is a potato stuffed deep fried snack very popular in India, Middle East & Asian countries.
So that’s going to wrap it up for this exceptional food samosa recipe. Thank you very much for reading. I am confident you can make this at home. There’s gonna be interesting food at home recipes coming up. Don’t forget to save this page in your browser, and share it to your family, friends and colleague. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!