Sunday, December 9, 2012

Mysorepak

Mysorepak is a traditional south indian sweet which has a porous and melt in the mouth texture. It is made using a generous amount of Ghee. It has just three ingredients and takes just about 20 to 30 minutes to prepare it. The traditional Mysorepak has three beautiful layers, the top and bottom layers are light brown in colour and the middle layer is little dark brown.




The beauty of Mysorepak is that even after we have poured it in the greased plate its cooking process in not over. Because of the heat which gets trapped inside it the cooking process continues. Many a times people face lot of problems with the preparation of this traditional sweet. Its just that the art of making it has to be perfected.  Here I have tried to explain the procedure as far as possible.  For making a perfect Mysorepak first you will have to perfect the art of sugar syrup and its stages.  Thats it and life becomes easy as far as Mysorepak is concerned. And please try to use a non-stick pan as far as possible.

The tamil version for this recipe is here in my other blog Classic Chettinad Kitchen.

Ingredients

Gramflour (Besan) - 1 cup
Ghee - 1 + 1/4 cup
Sugar - 1 1/2 cup
Water - 1/4 cup
Milk - 1 tb.sp




Method
  1. Sift the gramflour so that it becomes free of lumps.
  2. Grease a tray and keep it ready.
  3. Heat 1/4 cup ghee in a non-stick pan. Heat just till the ghee melts and the gramflour and roast till you get a nice aroma. Roast it on medium or low heat.
  4. Add sugar in a non-stick pan and add water till it just covers the sugar. Maybe about 1/4 cup or little less should be enough here.
  5. Heat it over medium heat till the sugar dissolves. 
  6. Side by side heat ghee in another vessel in low heat.
  7. Add the milk to the sugar syrup and allow the scum to surface up, remove it with a help of a ladle. Reduce the heat and make a sugar syrup of one string consistency. Here is a nice post on stages of sugar syrup written by Chitra of Ratatouille - Anyone can Cook, which will be very useful here.
  8. At this stage add the roasted flour and keep stirring, do not stop stirring or distract your attention from the pan.
  9. Once the flour gets incorporated well with the sugar syrup add 1 the ghee one ladle at a time.
  10. Every time you add the hot ghee it will become frothy and go back to its normal stage again. 
  11. In the whole process never stop stirring.
  12. When you are finished with the last ladle of ghee. Keep stirring, it will become frothy and set back. Again after a few seconds it will froth again and move around in a single mass. It will also slightly start changing its colour. This is the right stage you have to pour it in the greased tray.
  13. Smooth the surface without pressing it to hard, because this is the time when the air bubbles form in between to make it porous, so don't press it too hard. 
  14. If you like sprinkle some sugar crystals on top and cut it into pieces.
  15. Don't remove them from the tray at this stage, let it cool down and then remove it from the tray and serve. 




Points to remember


  • Very important point to remember is that once you start with the process do not divert your attention till you are finished with it.
  • As far as possible try to make it in a non-stick pan.
  • The stage of the sugar syrup is very important. If  you are a first timer with making sugar syrups then maybe you can have a trial session of the stages of sugar syrup with about 1/4 cup of sugar before you begin with the process. It will be worth the effort and lot of knowledge will be gained.
  • Keep all the things measured and ready and then start.
  • Remove it as soon as it starts changing it colour otherwise the mysorepak will become very dark in colour and give a burnt taste.
  • Last but not the least, follow each and every step to the wee bit.











14 comments:

  1. wow delicious recipe,came out perfect...

    ReplyDelete
  2. wow! so crispy and perfectly done
    http://great-secret-of-life.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. Stunning and prefectly done mysorepak, loving that beautiful texture.

    ReplyDelete
  4. all time fav..yummy.
    BTW plz viist my space n check out my new FB page.Thanks in advance..
    Maha

    ReplyDelete
  5. Lovely clicks. came out perfect and looks tempting.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This has defintely turned out like the traditional one. looks perfect

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mysore Pak, the king of South Indian sweet, came out very well to you...nice post...I'm following you...

    ReplyDelete
  8. perfectly done n beautiful luking mysorpak..great fan of dis.....
    BTW Iam back to blogging n im ur new follwer too.PLZ visit my space if gets sum time n plz check out my new FB page dear..Hope u vl clik on like on FB page dear.Thanx in advance...
    Maha

    ReplyDelete
  9. WOW Mysorpak...

    http://vegetarianmedley.blogspot.com/

    ReplyDelete
  10. Lovely blog!!!!great clicks!!!
    Happy to follow you, I would be glad, if you stop by mine too!
    Good Food Recipes

    ReplyDelete
  11. Delicious mysore pak Lakshmi. My favorite sweet.

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for taking your valuable time to go through my blog.
Your comments, feedback, suggestions are most valuable to me. It keeps me going.
If you have any queries please leave it here. I will try to answer it as soon as possible.

Sheermal

Sheermal or Shirmal is a saffron-flavored slightly sweet traditional leavened flatbread that is found in various countries on the Asian sub...