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were simply forming balls and dropping them in the fryer.
...The Ashoka chef of not actually using water to create the batter but by leaving the dry ingredients for 4 or 5 hours the Gram flour seems to draw the liquid content from the vegetables particularly the onion.
Okay so the onions had gone nice and soft over the 4 hours and were easy to form into balls or disks to cook. I'm still stuck with the same problem of the onions not really being cooked through. The texture is almost rubbery but that is probably down to the long cook time at a low heat.Someone mentioned the turmeric burns very quickly, is that true of other spices like ground coriander and garam masala? For these ones I used 1 large onion with 1 tsp garam masala, 1 tsp cumin seeds, 2 tsps ground coriander, 1 tsp paprika, 2 tsps madras curry powder and 1/2 tsp chilli powder. Could adding too much spice be the reason they cook and go dark so quickly? Is this a classic case of less is more?
But either way, the vegetables or if only onions should be slightly crisp and not cooked all the way through for that wonderful crunch texture when biting into them....
chriswg , I made some Onion Bhajis last night and although they looked great fromt the out side the inside was ' mushy ' do you know what causes this.
Quote from: emin-j on September 20, 2009, 11:26 AMchriswg , I made some Onion Bhajis last night and although they looked great fromt the out side the inside was ' mushy ' do you know what causes this. Hi EminJ, That will almost certainly be not long enough in the pan. Incidently, both you and ChrisW, do you pan fry these or deep fry them?RegardsBob