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Quote from: 976bar on September 20, 2009, 11:52 AMQuote 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?RegardsBobHi 976bar , I deep fry mine in the deep fat fryer and usually cook until light golden brown as they continue to colour once out of the fryer but I have not yet succeeded to get anywhere near BIR
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
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.
I'm still somewhat tickled by this thread a) I am pretty sure that most BIRs do not add potato to their onion bhajis :b) I am pretty sure that most BIRs do not grate their onions (or, indeed, their potatoes :) I think they simply finely slice them.c) In my opinion, the onion bhaji mixture (i.e. primarily onions, gram flour and minimal spices) should be AS THICK as possible (not thin!). I (as someone else suggested to do) simmply add the ingredients (with no additional water) and leave the mixture, for a while, to allow the gram flour to absorb the moisture from the other ingredients.d) Avoiding "sponginess in the middle", is, IMHO, primarily due to a typical BIR "dual cooking process". Pre-cook them (say, at 160C, for a couple of minutes), allow to cool, then fry them again, prior to serving.
Next time you make a batch try starting off with the batter as runny as possible so it still sticks to the onion and potato.
Whats the thinking behind the ' dual cooking ' process then.