Chana Dal & Sweet Potato Tikki. These crisp outside and soft on the inside tikkis (patties) are made with chana dal (bengal gram lentils) and sweet potatoes. These are fragrantly spiced with cumin, cloves and ground garam masala. The sweet potato does not make them sweet at all, rather gives them an earthly bite. I paired these skillet fried tikks with a simple paneer & kale pulao, spinach raita (yogurt), micro greens and raw vegetables to make a colorful indian super food bowl.
Having grown up in my grandmother's vegetarian household, lentils were used a dozen ways from sweet to savory dishes and these tikkis appeared on special occasions. The lentils were ground on sil-batta (stone) with spices to which finely chopped onions, raisins and herbs were added. Sweet potatoes were not used rather grated regular potatoes and a handful of boiled lentils went in for texture in each bite. These tikkis are great with parathas & green chutney or pulao & raita alike. They can be tucked inside burger buns for a vegetarian sandwich or served over a bed of greens.
A few things to be kept in mind when you make these:-
- When making tikkis with lentils, the most important thing is the water quantity when you cook them. More water will turn them mushy while less water with leave the lentils dry and chewy. Please refer to the water quantity in the recipe.
- Its best to use your hands to mix. Unless you are using a sil batta (stone grinder), leave out the blender or processor. If the lentils are cooked properly, you will be able to a make a soft tikki mixture very easily. And the texture of hand mixed is absolutely unmatched.
- Since onions and chopped cilantro etc go in the recipe, keep in mind that after sitting for a half and hour or so, the mix will loosen a bit since the raw vegetables will release their moisture due to salt. So if the tikki mix feels a bit dry in the beginning, don't worry.
- These tikkis have texture, they are soft to bite into but you will taste whole lentils grains here and there.
- I add roasted besan to the tikki mix. Not for binding or anything, these don't need a binder because the starches in the lentils are enough. Roasted besan(chickpea flour) lends a nice smoky taste and does make this recipe fool proof.Plus its delicious.
- There is no need for a coating of any flour etc when you skillet fry them. Fry them patiently, that's all. If your tikki mix is right, they will not fall apart or anything.
Chana Dal (Bengal Gram Lentils) & Sweet Potato Tikki
Ingredients
For Boiling the Lentils
- 1 +⅓ cup chana dal (bengal gram lentils)
- 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
- 1 small bay leaf
- 2 cloves
- 1 small whole black cardamom (skip if not available)
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ½ cup water
For the Tikki Mix
- 200 g sweet potato(boiled, peeled and cut into small chunks)
- 1.5 tablespoon ginger garlic paste (or simply add 5 garlic cloves and 1 inch piece of ginger to a mortar & pestle and pound to a paste)
- ½ cup finely chopped onions
- 2 thai bird green chilies or 1 serrano (adjust to taste) ,see notes
- ¼ cup finely chopped cilantro
- ½ tablespoon finely chopped ginger
- 1 tablespoon finely chopped golden raisins (optional)
- 1 tablespoon garam masala (used homemade or store bought, make sure its not more than 3 months old)
- 2-3 tablespoon roasted besan (gram flour)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- Oil or ghee for pan frying
Instructions
Prepare/Boil The Lentils
- Wash the lentils 2-3 times under a running stream of water and soak for 2-3 hours.
- Drain and discard the water in which you soaked the lentils.Add the soaked lentils to a pressure cooker, add cumin, bay leaf, cloves and black cardamom along with salt and ½ cup water.
- Close the lid of the pressure cooker and place it on stove. Let the stove be on high till the first whistle. After that, reduce the stove to low medium and cook for additional 2-3 whistles. After total 3-4 whistles, switch off the stove and let the pressure release naturally.
- Open the lid, do not mix at once while the lentils are hot, they will turn into a mush. Take 1-2 lentil grains and press between your thumb and finger, if the grain is pressed easily and dosent feel hard, the lentils are cooked. If not, add 2-3 tablespoon water and cook for one more whistle.
- The lentils should not disintegrate, they shoud be cooked through but retain their shape after boiling. Pick out and discard the bay leaf, clove and cardamom, Cover the cooker and let the lentils cool down for a bit, dont let them become cold. We want to make the mix while the lentils are still warm.
Make the Tikki Mix
- In a wide dish(avoid a deep bowl), add the cooked warm lentils and boiled sweet potato. Mix gently breaking the lentils and poatoes for about 2-3 minutes. Mix in the ginger and garlic, onions, green chilies, raisins, ginger and garam masala.
- Gently using your hands start squishing to combine everything together. Gently mix for about 3-4 minutes, if some lentils remain whole, thats okay.
- Once mixed, add the salt and 2 tablespoon of roasted besan. Mix again, you will be able to make a soft ball with the mix. If you feel its too wet, add another tablespoon of besan but dont add more than 3 tablespoon total. Cover and let the tikki mix rest for 20 minutes.
Shape & skillet fry tikkis
- Oil your hands and divide the tikki mix into 10 or 12 equal portions.
- Roll the portions into a balls, flatten the balls slightly and shape them using your palm and fingers into well rounded patties.
- Make all the tikkis this way and place on a plate. At this point you can refrigerate them for up to 3 days. Or place them on a single layer on a parchment lined cookie sheet and freeze them for 6 hours. After they are frozen, place in a zip lock and store frozen for one month.
- Warm up a 12 inch heavy cast iron wide skillet or griddle on medium. When nicely hot (not too hot) add 1-2 tablespoon oil or ghee and place 3-4 tikkis at a time, don't overcrowd. Let tikkis crisp up for 5-6 minutes on one side. Don't add a lot of oil in the begnning,they will break. Once they are crisped on one side, drizzle 1-2 tablespoon of oil or ghee on (uncooked) top and flip to crisp on second side.
- Pan fry the tikkis with patience. Its takes 7-8 minutes to fry a batch on both sides.
Notes
- When making tikkis with lentils, the most important thing is the water quantity when you cook them. More water will turn them mushy while less water with leave the lentils dry and chewy. Please refer to the water quantity in the recipe.
- Its best to use your hands to mix. Unless you are using a sil batta (stone grinder), leave out the blender or processor. If the lentils are cooked properly, you will be able to a make a soft tikki mixture very easily. And the texture of hand mixed is absolutely unmatched.
- Dont leave out the green chillies, this is the only heat in this recipe. Garam masala adds a warmth, but do add at least one sharp green chili for heat.Â
- Since onions and chopped cilantro etc go in the recipe, keep in mind that after sitting for a half and hour or so, the mix will loosen a bit since the raw vegetables will release their moisture due to salt. So if the tikki mix feels a bit dry in the beginning, don't worry.
- These tikkis have texture, they are soft to bite into but you will taste whole lentils grains here and there.
- I add roasted besan to the tikki mix. Not for binding or anything, these don't need a binder because the starches in the lentils are enough. Roasted besan(chickpea flour) lends a nice smoky taste. Plus its delicious.
- There is no need for a coating of any flour etc when you skillet fry them. Fry them patiently, that's all. If your tikki mix is right, they will not fall apart or anything.
Sowmya
A wonderful and unique combination of channa dal and sweet potato. Great recipe 👠Wonderful presentation. The pictures look captivating.