Monday, March 16, 2009

Dosa Review

Dosa are like crepes made from a fermented rice and dal batter instead of flour and eggs. They are cooked to a golden crispiness on an oiled griddle. Typically they are served with a thin stew called sambar, and coconut chutney. There are many variations. Often the dosa are filled with something: spiced potatoes, chutney, sometimes paneer, sometimes meat. But I'm not an expert. My first dosa was in Chicago at a south indian restaurant on Devon St. It was, I believe,   a mysore masala dosa, which has potato and something spicy inside. It was huge, impressive looking, but very hot for my palate at the time. It would be years before I considered dosa again. My current dosa fixation was born when I ordered the simplest dosa on the menu at Namaskar, a nearby indian restaurant. The Sada Dosa arrived loosely rolled, measuring perhaps 30" long, nearly overhanging the edge of the table! So crisp, so simple and satisfying, with a bowl of sambar and chutney; I thought of it for days and weeks afterward. Then a friend made masala dosa for us at her home. Homemade, these were just 9" in diameter, but we ate several in a sitting, hot off the tava. I could eat these every day! Then, on a saturday in February we drove 40 minutes to Dosa Temple in Ashland, MA. Yes, Dosa Temple. But our pilgrimage was not rewarded in the way I imagined: I had planned to order multiple dosas at the dosa temple! But Saturday, we now well know, is buffet time, and no menus were offered. We saw no choice but to be swept into the buffet line with everyone else, loading our plates with idlis (dosa's steamed, cake-like cousins, which deserve a separate post), vadas, manchurian gobi and other sticky-handled buffet offerings. Eventually a waiter came by and dropped two small, evenly golden dosa on our table. Complimentary dosa! But only two. We plan to return to Dosa Temple at an off-buffet time.

Inevitably, we made some dosa batter ourselves.  There is a good recipe in Wild Fermentation, but we also consulted Yamuna Devi's the Art of Indian Vegetarian Cooking. 
Here is our batter after several days of fermentation (aided and accelerated by placing the bowl above an electric space heater set on low):

Not perfect, our dosa-- the first one had the proper golden-ness, but was a bit thick; the last one was undercooked, not golden enough, and maybe too lacy! We'll have to try again.

In the meantime, these are one thing I am quite content to eat in restaurants, cooked to perfection on a 30" tava!

1 comment:

Dig said...

When making dosas you need to also use ghee. :)
You might want to visit youtube and look up the dosa recipe by Manjula's kitchen. She's awesome at describing the East Indian dishes of her heritage. :) I am sure that you will be successful after watching her technique. :) Good luck and thanks for the awesome blog. :)
Loved your cake log. Never saw one with those awesome faux mushrooms. Very creative indeed. :) Have a great life. Therese