Pootharekula/Poothareku is a famous dish from Andhra Pradesh, a southern state of India. The history of the sweet goes about three centuries back when a woman in the village of Atreyapuram prepared a sweet by adding sugar and ghee to the leftover rice starch. As the name says, 'Pootha' means coated and 'rekula' means sheets, it is sweet with rice sheets coated with sugar. Now it has become a source of income for many families in the villages of the Telugu states. This dish is also familiarly known to be the 'paper sweet' across the country.
Authentically the rice sheets are prepared in a hot inverted pot. It is seasoned well with oil before the usage. The rice batter is well diluted. A thin cloth is dipped in the batter and is put over the inverted pot with flame under. Instantly the rice sheets form and are stuffed with ghee and sugar.
Here is an easy recipe to prepare pootharekula at home.
Preparation
Time: Resting time - 3 hours
Cooking time - 10 minutes
Preparation time - 20 minutes
Total time - 3 1/2 hours
Quantity: 12 pieces
Let us now check out the required ingredients to make the sweet.
Ingredients
Procedure
- Firstly we need to prepare the rice sheets out of the batter. To get thin and crispy rice sheets, the rice batter needs to be very watery (say buttermilk consistency).
- Place Aappam Kadai on the stove.
- Pour the rice batter on the Aappam Kadai and a make a thin layer, remove the excess batter.
- Now take a rice sheet, apply the melted butter over it. Place another sheet and apply butter over it.
- Spread out the powdered sugar, cardamom, and badam over it.
Tips and Tricks:
- Consistency of the batter is very important, it needs to be very watery to get thin rice sheets.
- Season the Kadai well with oil every time before you pour the batter.
- Advisable to prepare the rice sheets on low flame for better results.
- Grind the nuts coarsely for a crunchy taste.
- You can substitute sugar with caned sugar/ brown sugar/ jaggery.
Roasted and ground black sesame with jaggery.
- Also, you can stuff aloo masal to enjoy the hot and spicy pootharekula.
Try preparing at home with various variations and enjoy the taste of Pootharekula.
Hey you know similar kind of sweet is native to Turkey called Baklava which is almost forty layered similar nut stuffed, sweetened by honey syrup..
ReplyDeleteWe find Turkey desserts at INDISKA MAGIC at Harrington road chetpet.
yeah it is a similar kind of dish, the difference is that pootharekula has got only two layers and being wrapped out as
Deleterolls.
Super dish..looks yummy..wanna try it out...
ReplyDeleteThank you...
DeleteMay I know which rice is used here?
ReplyDeleteIndians use full boiled, half boiled rice to the max..
Even people use sticky rice to...
I have used raw rice here
ReplyDeleteThank you.
Delete