Zafrani Phirini | Saffron Almond Indian Rice Pudding

Zafrani Phirini | Saffron Almond Indian Rice Pudding… some desserts become your signature and this is one of those. I have been making phirini or rice pudding for years. Each time I try and simplify the process just a little more since I am always short on time. This time I really fast tracked the method {I’m quite proud of the result if I may say so myself} and it’s been highly praised by everyone who’s tasted it.I’ve made this 3 times already and each time the result is consistently good and consistently delicious. The better half calls it ‘out of this world good’ which is tall praise. He says it’s heavenly. I thought I must share it with you. The recipe uses very basic pantry ingredients and just needs some TLC! To make it special, I used a generous pinch of saffron. Saffron makes everything special. Festive too. I served it on Diwali. It’s a really really nice make ahead dessert. I shot it here with these beautiful Daniel Wellington watches I was recently gifted. I loved the way the colours and frame came together. So festive and pretty!This version of the rice dessert is ‘phirini’ which is an Indian rice pudding traditionally made of ground rice. The rice kheer is another similar variant but is made of  whole rice simmered until soft. The textures and flavours vary vastly once cooked. Phirini is always served cold while kheer can be served either hot or cold. We prefer phirini at home.The Zafrani Phirini | Saffron Almond Indian Rice Pudding is vegetarian, it’s egg free and gluten free too. I’ve done a  Tropical Coconut Milk Rice Pudding in the past as well. If you’re looking for a vegan option, then maybe you can use this recipe as a base and play around with it. Either which way, this creamy rice pudding is a delicious way to end a meal. Also a great ‘mid day snack‘ too if you are like my better half!The last time I shared the recipe I dry ground the rice a little with the almonds. This time around I made it a step shorter. Simpler actually. Instead of washing and drying the rice overnight, I just dumped the drained washed rice with almonds and a little milk into the jar of the blender. Soooooo much simpler, and definitely creamier too.This is by far the simplest way to rice pudding from scratch that I have discovered. The almonds that get ground with the rice elevate the taste of the pudding. The almonds act as a thickener too so the pudding gets thicker quicker. I let it set to a wobbly pudding. You can cook it some more if you like a thicker set variation. Try and set it in earthenware cups or kulhads. The earthiness is amazing. Try it!

Print

Zafrani Phirini | Saffron Almond Indian Rice Pudding

Rich, creamy and delicious, this Zafrani Phirini | Saffron Almond Indian Rice Pudding is a delectable end to a meal. Egg free and gluten free, a generous dose of saffron makes the dessert shine.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 4 hours 35 minutes
Servings 8 people

Ingredients

  • 2 litres full cream milk
  • 1/2 cup basmati rice rinsed
  • 1/2 cup whole almonds
  • 1 tin condensed milk
  • 1/4 tsp pinch saffron strands
  • Slivered almonds & pistachio saffron strands and organic rose petals to garnish

Instructions

  • Place drained rice, whole almonds and 1 cup milk in jar of blender. Process until rice and almonds are well ground.
  • Stir this into the rest of the milk, and pour into a heavy bottom pan.
  • Stir in condensed milk
  • Place over low heat, and begin cooking, stirring almost continuously else the rice tends to get lumpy, and the condensed milk will catch the bottom of the pan.
  • Cook for about 25-30 minutes, STIRRING OFTEN, until the rice is cooked and the phirini/pudding is thick.
  • Take off heat and add a generous pinch of saffron. Stir well.
  • The phirini/pudding will continue to thicken as it cools. You might need to add a little milk as the absorption quality of rice differs. Once it gets to room temperature, ladle into earthenware bowls, individual serving bowls etc to set. Garnish with saffron strands, almond/pistachio slivers, rose petals etc.
  • Serve chilled.
  • Note : Can be made a 2-3 days in advance.

Mango Coconut Pudding … a celebration of Alphonsos

“If you wait for the mango fruits to fall, you’d be wasting your time while others are learning how to climb the tree”
Michael Bassey Johnson

Mango Coconut Pudding …when you can’t get enough of the mango season, and you can’t stop yourself from bringing together favourite flavours! These were everything they look like and more … delicious, delicate, flavourful, smooth, satisfying, elegant, sublime. I think it’s just one of those puddings that were meant to be …The better halves office in Bombay sent him a box of the most delicious Alphonsos. This variety of mangoes is possibly the most famous one across the globe, and most coveted. It is also most pursued by lovers of the fruit for the very short season that it shows up for.How better to explain Alphonsos than in Sejal Sukhadwala’s poetic and charming words as he writes in The Guardian “As anyone who’s tasted an Alphonso mango knows, its short season, from now until the end of June, is a major cause for celebration. Often making an appearance on “1,000 things to eat before you die”-type lists, this Indian variety has become more and more popular in the UK. It’s easy to see why. Alphonso’s voluptuous shape and sunshine-yellow skin reveals succulent saffron-coloured flesh that’s smooth and buttery: imagine a cross between peach, nectarine, apricot and melon with notes of honey and citrus. But better.”And I’m one of those people who find it hard to leave good enough alone. That mango was phenomenal but I wanted to do a dessert with it. Being summer, more of my fruit based desserts are quick and simple, often light puddings or a panna cotta. I did a series of desserts with mango juice not so long ago. Take a look!IMHO, if there are mangoes, it calls for a celebration. The good thing about the king of fruits is that it is so versatile. You can practically enjoy it at every meal. Our mornings and sometimes evenings are spent lazily sipping a Mango Fresh Turmeric Buttermilk Lassi these days. What’s not to love about fruit in season? More importantly, what’s not to love about mangoes? My entire childhood was spent climbing mango trees and eating mangoes!Aam ki chutney or a quick mango pickle also rule the roost. Aam panna or a Mango Cooler is one of the best things ever to keep the heat at bay. There’s no end to how versatile this fruit can be. For today, let me share my current favourite Mango Coconut Pudding. Like all good things in life, there is a small story behind how they came to be.

The Mango Coconut Pudding inspired by a popular dessert in Hong Kong, the Chinese Mango Pudding. The pudding is said to have Indian origins, and it seemed apt since the better halves company is Hong Kong based. This is my take on it, topped also with phalsas {a native Indian summer berry, drewia asiatica} and fresh mint.And before I leave you with the recipe, just sharing the announcement for my 7th Food Styling & Photography Workshop with Darter at Dirty Apron, New Delhi. All details can be found here, or click the image below.

Print

Mango Coconut Pudding

Mango Coconut Pudding ...when you can't get enough of the mango season, and you can't stop yourself from bringing together favourite flavours! These were everything they look like and more ... delicious, delicate, flavourful, smooth, satisfying, elegant, sublime. I think it's just one of those puddings that were meant to be.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 4 hours 15 minutes
Servings 6

Ingredients

Mango Coconut Pudding

  • 400 g mango from 4-5 Alphonsos
  • 250 g single cream
  • 400 ml coconut milk
  • 4 tsp gelatin
  • 1/2 cup raw sugar

Topping

  • 1 mango diced
  • 1/4 cup phalsa berry
  • Few sprigs fresh mint

Instructions

  • Sprinkle the gelatin over 100ml coconut milk, and leave to soften. Stir.
  • Place mango and 200ml coconut milk in a blender. Blend to a smooth puree.
  • Place remaining coconut milk plus cream with sugar in a heavy bottom pan. Simmer until small bubbles appear at the edges. Stir in the gelatin, then mango puree.
  • Stand until it becomes slightly cool, then strain into glasses. Leave to set for a few hours or overnight.
  • Top with unsweetened cream, diced mango, phalsa berries and fresh mint. {Can be made 2-3 days in advance}

3 ways with Watermelon – Pizza Cooler Salad #summer #healthy #inspiration #raw

“Summertime is always the best of what might be.”
Charles Bowden

When summer hits you splat in the face before time, with temperatures over 40C already kissing you in early April and May, it’s only summer fruits you can turn to. These days I’m mesmerized by watermelons. They’re available in plenty {read falling off carts, piled high on roadsides, rolling off shelves} and are great to chomp on summer through. Use them simply as nibbling off the rind, or get a little creative with them. It’s a real fun fruit to play with, and you can do so much and more with them.

Here are a few very simple ways to enjoy natures bounty. My most recent and fun way was with this watermelon pizza inspired by @curlew_and_dragons post on Instagram. One look at it a few days ago, and that’s just all I wanted to do.Here’s what I did – Cut horizontal 1/2″ slices/circles, then cut them into pie slices. I had some left over whipped mascarpone that I added chia seeds to, and plumped it up. I piped it on to make things look fun. I used a melon baller on a few kiwis, threw on some diced mangoes, used some very precious foraged mulberries, and some fresh mint. That’s the only herb that seems to be surviving happily in this heat. I did this again with with mangoes, melons balls, phalsa berries, litchis and goat cheese. A drizzle of maple syrup too!

Served on the side was a watermelon kiwi lime cooler – watermelon {seeds included}, all the leftover kiwi, a dash of lime, some rock salt, a little brown sugar. Chilled and yum! Use a powerful blender like the Thermomix or Artisan Power Plus Blender with Thermal Control Jar from KitchenAid {my new favourite helper in the kitchen}, and life is a breeze!

Once you get the hang of the spiralizer, you are going to want to get all your vegetables in a twirl, quite literally. It’s really addictive and such a pretty way to serve salads. Once you figure it out, salads will never be the same again. I loved the way this one turned out, or rather twirled out. The flavor combination was great and it looked so pretty. Recipe follows.

Print

Greek Spiralizer Salad

Prep Time 15 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings 2

Ingredients

For Salad

  • 1 zucchini
  • 1 cucumber
  • 1/4 watermelon balled
  • 1/2 cupwalnuts (toasted roughly broken up): 1/2 cup
  • 1/2 cup feta : 1/2 cup crumbled
  • Fresh mint

For Dressing

  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • Salt to taste
  • Freshly ground pepper

Instructions

Salad

  • Set up the KitchenAid Stand Mixer with the spiralizer attachment with the medium sized noodle blade fitting.
  • Put the zucchini through it, followed by the cucumber. You could even do 2 cucumbers instead.
  • Place in a large bowl with remaining ingredients except feta, pour over salad dressing and toss gently to mix. Adjust seasoning if required. Scatter over with crumbled feta and fresh mint.
  • hill for an hour before serving to allow the flavors to mature.

Dressing

  • Place everything in a bowl, and whisk to mix with a fork. Taste and adjust the seasoning.

The above picture says it all. Put everything one by one into the tube of the Kitchen Aid cold press juicer, and wait for the magic to happen!
Watermelon Kiwi Ginger Mint Cooler
1 small watermelon
2 kiwis
Juice of 2 limes
2″ piece mango ginger {or 1/2 ” piece plain ginger}
Handful of fresh mint leaves

Chop up the watermelon and kiwi to 1″ pieces. Scrub the ginger well, and roughly break up.
Gradually feed through chute of the KitchenAid Slow Juicer Attachment with mint, running the KitchenAid Stand Mixer at speed Once the juice is extracted, stir lime into it. Add a dash of honey and black rock salt if desired. Chill well before serving.

Wholewheat Walnut Garlic Coriander Bread … new flour in town & I’m loving it! #EkNayiAadat with #Aashirvaad

“There is not a thing that is more positive than bread.”
Fyodor Dostoevsky

Walnut Garlic Coriander Wholewheat Bread, another favourite artisan bread. It’s 100% wholegrain, the dough is beautiful, the bread tastes as good as ever… and it uses a beautiful new wholewheat flour mix from Aashirvaad that we’ve have used at home forever! For those who know me and follow me, I am still pretty obsessed with my #makehalfyourgrainswhole passion. I win some, I lose some, yet I LOVE experimenting.As you can see above, I bake a whole lot with wholewheat flour. So when this new variant of wholewheat flour, Aashirvaad Sugar Release Control Atta showed up at home I was pretty excited. We’ve used Aashirvaad Atta at home forever and ever. A lot of folk I talk to get their own grains and have them milled with a mix of lentils, fenugreek seeds etc. I tried that once but I found it difficult to sustain. We do use a lot of wholegrain flour at home.This new variant from makes me happy. The day it came, I baked bread! It was a 60% wholegrain loaf that turned out yum! Pretty too! It tasted just like what we use normally, so a little surprising that a stepped up variant is so within reach now. The GI value of the grain mix is 53, and the blend contains a portion of lentils, fenugreek and oats too!Nothing better than fresh home baked bread, and the success of the 60% bread made me bold enough to try a 100% wholewheat version. It didn’t disappoint. At all. Of course I like added flavour to my breads so in went some omega-3 rich walnuts, loads of fresh coriander, and a drizzle of fine quality extra virgin olive oil. That’s all a good bread needs in our home! Fresh herbs, nuts and olive oil and a wholegrain base!This Walnut Garlic Coriander Wholewheat Bread is bursting with goodness of the new wholewheat flour. Use herbs and nuts of your choice, play around with ingredients, but do make this. It’s healthy, it’s addictive, and bread baking is therapeutic. Above all, it’s so good for a 100% whole grain bread!! This is my new favourite wholegrain flour, and I’m loving it! There is so much and more you can do with it.  Maybe wholewheat pita bread. All you need is falafals and hummus, a crisp salad, and you have a healthy balanced delicious meal! Or maybe bake wholegrain crackers! So YUM!! Serve them with some fun home made dips and you’re good to go!What would you make with a flour like this?  I mean other than including it as an everyday pantry staple of course! I’ve used it quite a bit the last week or so. As basic dough for chapatis/flatbread, also for stuffed tandoori parathas. It behaves and tastes just like the regular flour. That it’s even healthier is a bonus. The low GI makes it diabetic friendly and an ideal pantry staple! I’m next thinking wholegrain chocolate chip cookies or cheese crackers.Oh, and did I tell you I baked a batch of Wholewheat Dark Chocolate After Eight Mint Cupcakes with the same flour mix two days ago? It’s a one bowl no brainer recipe filled with wholegrain goodness that I carried to the “Facebook: A Place to Connect” event at New Delhi. I was speaking there on Facebook Live, and you can catch me and my Aashirvaad Sugar Release Control Atta cupcakes on the link here!I’ll share that recipe soon as a WHOLE lot of folk have been asking me for it. Until then, here’s another peep into how good and moist the cupcakes were.

Now time for the Walnut Garlic Coriander Wholewheat Bread. This is just a new way of thinking food, or rather #EkNayiAadat with #Aashirvaad!

Print

Walnut Garlic Coriander Wholewheat Bread

Nothing better than fresh home baked bread, and this Walnut Garlic Coriander Wholewheat Bread is bursting with goodness of this new wholewheat flour . It has great flavour. Use herbs and nuts of your choice, play around with ingredients, but do make this. It's healthy, it's addictive, bread baking is therapeutic and above all it's so good for a 100% whole grain bread!!
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 40 minutes
Servings 1 loaf

Ingredients

Walnut Garlic Coriander Dough

  • 2 cups Aashirvaad Sugar Release Control Atta
  • 1 tsp yeast
  • 1/2 salt
  • 1 tsp honey
  • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 cup water {approximately}
  • 1 tsp garlic powder {or 4 cloves minced}
  • 1 cup fresh coriander, finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup walnuts, finely chopped

Topping

  • 4-5 walnut halves
  • Few sprigs fresh coriander
  • Himalayan pink rock salt
  • Extra virgin olive oil to drizzle over

Instructions

Walnut Garlic Coriander Dough

  • Add the wholewheat flour/Aashirvaad Sugar Release Control Atta, yeast, salt,garlic powder, honey and extra virgin olive oil to bowl of your stand mixer fitted with dough hook.
  • Stir to mix on speed 2, then knead for 5-7 minutes on speed 4 until the dough is smooth and elastic.
  • Add a few spoons of wholewheat flour if the dough is too wet, or a tbsp or two of water if too dense. We're looking for a soft dough.
  • Make a smooth ball, drizzle over some olive oil, and cover the bowl with cling-wrap or a damp kitchen towel. Place in a warm, draft free place for an hour or two until the dough doubles in size.
  • Form into a ball, drizzle over with a little olive oil, cover the stand mixer bowl with cling-wrap or a wet kitchen towel. Leave to rise in a warm, draft free place for an hour or two until doubled.
  • Preheat oven to 200C.
  • Take off the cling wrap or kitchen towel, add the finely chopped fresh coriander and walnuts to the same bowl and knead again briefly to mix.
  • Form into a loaf and place on a parchment lined baking sheet.

Topping

  • Paint top gently with damp fingers and sprinkle over some Himalayan rock salt and finely sliced garlic, push in walnut halves, and maybe add a sprig of fresh coriander.
  • Leave covered with a kitchen towel until the oven preheats to 200C. {20 minutes}
  • Bake for approximately 30-35 minutes until golden brown and done. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies & Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl- going Tropical with Chumbak

“I’m a man of simple tastes. I’m always satisfied with the best.”
Oscar Wilde

When the Tropical Collection from Chumbak comes knocking at your door, how  can you not fall in love with it? It’s fresh, it’s tropical, it’s everything you can celebrate spring with, a line you can usher summer in with as well! It’s an inspiring line, and immediately nudged me to do something fun. Take a look….

I played with the collection endlessly. It brings alive the child in you. You can’t take us Indians out of the our beloved tropics {for long at least}and you can’t take tropical out of India, so the collection is a sure win. I love the crisp, colourful feel, the energy it shares, the vibrancy it spills. The collection is inspired by tropical elements like palm leaves, pineapples, flamingos and the like.Here’s what I was inspired to do – Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies & Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit BowlWhen we were young, my dad scooped or rather balled out watermelons and musk melons on our birthdays, then served the fruit chilled in fruit bowls. For some reason, just looking at the collection took me right back there, and before I knew it I was carving a fruit bowl. It’s the funnest thing to do for a pool party, kids birthdays, an evening pick me up in summer, or an anytime fresh healthy snack.I used kiwi stars, halved gooseberries and watermelon balls. I thought I’d throw in strawberry hearts too but forgot the in the fridge. Gah! Summer will see stone fruit galore, so the fun will double. You could do a stone fruit and berry inspired bowl. Or maybe set a watermelon granita in the melon bowl, freeze, slice and serve! No dearth of ideas when your life is flooded with inspiration.

Chumbak had a #spotthepineapple fun campaign to launch the collection. How can you be tropical and not have pineapple? So I figured I’d do a pineapple strawberry smoothie too. I freeze both strawberries and pineapple chunks, so this smoothie is the easiest thing ever. Throw in a cup of each, a cup or two of water, some sweetener, a dash of lime juice into the blender. Whirrrrrrrr it up and you’re good to go.That’s what the coming summer is going to ask for. Quick fresh foods that will keep the spirit light and happy. See how beautifully they paired with the Chumbak Tropical in the light of the afternoon setting sun? Such pretty hues that go so beautifully with the bougainvillea too. Same colours, tropical feel, and I am all set! There’s plenty of choice…

With a range of cushion covers that explode in bright colours, I think this is the best time for a summer makeover! Vibrant, vibrant, vibrant is all I think! Pineapples, flamingoes, elephants, flowers, geometric patterns {♥♥♥}, I want to redo my place! Oh and the sweet little owl too stepped out from a smitten golden ex Diwali into a rustic rainbow coloured creature. Can you imagine that the ullu {owl in hindi} went tropical too? I fell in love with this little fellow, toes and all!The other thing I really liked are the cookie jars. Spacious, clean lines, good quality airtight jars, and beautifully patterned, the counter tops will never be the same again. Even though I am not a gold person, I really like the golden cookie jar too. It fits in so well with the rest. And of course there is PLENTY MORE to the collection. I just picked a few.My all time favourite is of course the palm leaf pattern line. That has my name written all over it. It is fresh, understated, almost like each piece has been hand painted. The teacups are a generous size and stand tall. The pitcher is a winner and I would LOVE for it to sit on my counter. It pours well, it’s easy to clean and is an ideal size for milk or juice. Heck, it even doubles up as a stunning flower vase! It’s lovely to begin the day with for breakfast. Quick granola and fruit parfaits, omelette, toast, a glug of milk from the jug, coffeeeeeee … the leaf pattern is my kind of pattern. For salads too. The interesting bit is that the leaf pattern fits in to every time of the day, every meal too. From a crisp beginning in the morning for breakfast, to a soothing, lilting sun-downer feel, with calming, soothing hues. 

Even the coordinated leaf platters are darling. I just find the leaf pattern very very refreshing, something anyone would love to own, serve on, put out for guests, hang on their wall as part of a   plate collection. I shot with it a lot as you might notice. You can see I shot it the most. With flowers {poppies} for breakfast, with milk for breakfast too, with onion flowers just like that, then with the Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies & Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl . That’s how versatile and handy it is. The great thing is that it pairs with almost every colour and meal. I’m thinking chilled lemonade through summer!

Print

Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies & Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl

Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies, and a Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl are quick, inspired, no cook, tropical fruit based recipes for summer! Inspired by the Tropical Collection from Chumbak.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Total Time 15 minutes
Servings 3 people

Ingredients

Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies

  • 1 1/2 cup frozen strawberries
  • 1 1/2 cup frozen pineapple chunks
  • 2 cups chilled water
  • Raw sugar as required
  • Juice of 1/2 a lime

Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl

  • 1 small watermelon
  • 1 kiwi
  • 1 cup cape gooseberries
  • Fresh mint to garnish

Instructions

Strawberry Pineapple Smoothies

  • Place all ingredients in jar of blender and process until smooth. taste and adjust seasoning adding more sugar if required.
  • Garnish with slices of fresh strawberries.

Watermelon Kiwi Gooseberry Fruit Bowl

  • With a melon baller, scoop out balls of watermelon. gently remove any remaining flesh to take a bowl out of the skin. Carve the edges with a sharp fruit knife if you like.
  • Peel and slice the kiwi. Stamp out stars with a small cookie cutter.
  • Halve the cape gooseberries.
  • Toss them all and put into the watermelon bowl. Chill. Scatter fresh mint over it. Serve chilled.

Note

  • Run the left over watermelon and kiwi in a blender to make watermelon juice. Add a dash of honey, fresh lime and rock salt. Serve chilled.

Thandai Indian Rice Kheer … Holi time of the year

Thandai Indian Rice Kheermy version of serving up Thandai in an Indian rice pudding, or kheer as locally called. Flavoured delicately, this indulgent rice pudding hits all the right notes. Sweetened gently with jaggery, the flavours of almond, cardamom and saffron just shine. The texture of broken simmered rice is what adds body to this delectable kheer or pudding.The underlying inspiration comes from Dolphia who inspired, coerced and pushed me to shoot saffron. That’s one of the reasons this kheer came to be. The other reason of course was that the better half has bitterly complained over the last few days that I haven’t made a kheer in years!  As much as I love stirring a good kheer, for some reason it hadn’t happened yet…

Then yet another trip into Old Delhi, some Kashmir saffron bought to please Dolphia and the hub {in no particular order of course} meant that the kheer was simmering away gently quite soon. The recipe of course inspired by the season, all the Thandai kind of stuff I make at this time of the year. Thandai is a spice and nut blend, with ingredients that include almonds, melon seeds, fennel seeds, poppy seeds, green cardamom, saffron, rose petals, sometimes whole pepper too. It is popularly served up as a milk cooler, often with a local bhaang or intoxicant, on Holi. There are a million versions, every household laying claim to their recipe. Mine changes all the time!

Sometimes, a theme helps me find direction, and this time around the prettiness of the colours got to me. Spring is like that, and so is every visit into the heart of Old Delhi!

First I did a Saffron Almond Chia Thandai for  Olive Tree Trading and that really set the mood. So much colourful prettiness and so much inspiration. That’s just how this time of the year is. I’ve dried loads of organic rose petals, so you’ll see me using those a lot.And so to cut a loooong story short, I finally made the Thandai Indian Rice Kheer. And it came out finger licking good. It’s a quick one, one I figured out as I went along. It’s the first time I’ve ground almonds with rice {an earlier version had the Thandai nut mix}. 
For some reason, I loved this simpler version. Here it is, the Thandai Indian Rice Kheer.

Print

Thandai Indian Rice Kheer

Flavoured gently, this indulgent Thandai Indian Rice Kheer hits all the right notes. Sweetened gently with jaggery, the flavours of almond, cardamom and saffron just shine. The texture of broken simmered rice is what adds body to this delectable kheer or pudding.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 5 hours 35 minutes
Servings 8 people

Ingredients

  • 1.5 litres full cream milk
  • 1/2 cup malai/cream optional
  • 1/2 cup basmati rice rinsed, dried
  • 1/2 cup whole almonds or 1/4 ​cup ​thandai mix​ + 1/4 ​cup ​whole almonds
  • 1 1/2 cup khaand/ jaggery granules/​/palm sugar​
  • Seeds of 5 green cardamoms crushed
  • pinch saffron

Garnish

  • Saffron strands, almond slivers, pistachio bits, rose petals etc.

Instructions

  • Dry grind rice and almonds to a coarse breadcrumb like texture in a coffee grinder.​ You can add the cardamom seeds here if you like.​Stir the above into cold milk with the jaggery, cardamom seeds and cream if using.
  • Put over low heat and cook for about 25-30 minutes, STIRRING OFTEN, until the rice is cooked and the kheer thick.
  • Taste and adjust sweetness if required. Take off heat and add a generous pinch of saffron. Stir well.
  • The kheer will continue to thicken as it cools. You might need to add a little milk as the absorption quality of rice differs. Once it gets to room temperature, ladle into earthenware bowls, individual serving bowls etc to set. Garnish with saffron strands, almond slivers, pistachio bits, rose petals etc.
  • Serve chilled.
  • Note: Rinse, drain and d​ry the rice overnight, else dry in microwave for 1 minute.
Please wait...

Subscribe to my newsletter

Want to be notified when the article is published? Do enter your email address and name below to be the first to know.
Exit mobile version