Hey everyone, it is Brad, welcome to our recipe site. Today, we’re going to prepare a distinctive dish, pathrode (patra). It is one of my favorites food recipes. This time, I am going to make it a bit unique. This will be really delicious.
Pathrode (Patra) is one of the most well liked of recent trending meals in the world. It is easy, it’s fast, it tastes delicious. It is appreciated by millions every day. They are fine and they look fantastic. Pathrode (Patra) is something that I’ve loved my whole life.
Pathrode or patrode recipe explained with step by step pictures and video. This pathrode is a mangalore style spicy steamed rolls prepared using rice and colocasia leaves. This Karnataka style Pathrode or patrode are also called by name patra vadi in other states.
To begin with this recipe, we must prepare a few ingredients. You can have pathrode (patra) using 12 ingredients and 17 steps. Here is how you cook it.
The ingredients needed to make Pathrode (Patra):
- Make ready 20 Colocasia leaves (Patra leaves)
- Make ready 3 cup Rice, soaked for about 6 hours or overnight
- Make ready 15 piece dried red chillies
- Make ready 2 tbsp coriander seeds (sabut dhaniya)
- Take 2 tsp cumin seeds (sabut jeera)
- Take 1 cup shredded coconut
- Take 1 piece tamarind, lemon sized lump
- Prepare 1/2 tsp Fenugreek (methi) seeds
- Get 1 salt, to taste
- Get 1 water, as needed
- Make ready 1 stick butter
- Get 2 tbsp oil (optional)
This snack is quite popular across regions. The process is similar but few ingredients might vary. In Monsoons, leafy vegetables are avoided. Few days back I had posted a detailed recipe for Pathrode also known as patra or alu vadi in Gujarat and Maharashtra.
Steps to make Pathrode (Patra):
- Prep the colocasia leaves. Wash them well, and pat dry.
- Flip the leaves over, and strip off the thick spines of the leaves. The sap from these stems can cause throat itches and irritation. They are also fibrous, and quite unpleasant in the mouth. It is alright of the leaves are slightly damaged.
- Blend all the other ingredients (rice, coconut, red chillies, coriander, cumin, tamarind, salt, fenugreek, little bit of water to help blend) into an almost fine paste. The paste should have a spreadable consistency, and a grainy texture.
- IMPORTANT: Taste the paste at this time - there's no fixing the paste later. The leaves themselves have a very mild flavor, so the flavors on the paste ought to be a bit strong. You should be able to taste the zing from the tamarind, the heat from the chillies, and the salt a bit stronger than you normally would like.
- Now for the messy and fun bit. Ensure that you have a clean, dry workspace. Lay the biggest colocasia leaf you can find, face down on the surface. Smear a dollop of the prepared paste on the entire leaf.
- Lay another (smaller) leaf on top of the first leaf, again, face down. Smear a dollop of the spiced paste on this leaf too.
- Repeat with about 5 or 6 leaves.
- Once that's done, begin rolling all the leaves into a tight cylinder. Do this by folding the wider sides of the leaves inwards and then rolling from the bottom of the leaves toward the pointy sides. Make sure that the roll is tight, and not much of the spice paste oozes out. A little of the paste should be visible from the outside, it gives the final dish a great look and great taste.
- Keep the roll aside, and prepare similar rolls with the rest of the leaves. You should be able to prepare about 4-5 rolls.
- Prepare a water bath for steaming the rolls. Note that you need to steam the rolls, and not boil them.
- Once the water starts boiling, place the rolls into the hot steam, and close with a tight lid.
- Let the rolls cook in the steam for about 30 minutes.
- Once you remove from the steam, let it cool down a bit, and use a sharp knife to cut smaller cylinders out of these rolls.
- OPTIONAL: If you have some of the spice paste left over, smear a light layer on top of the pieces of pathrode, and lay on a hot griddle. Drizzle oil or ghee on top to shallow fry the pieces. Fry until there are brown spots all over. This happens from the sugars in the coconut and rice caramelizing. This is optional, and the pieces taste great as is.
- Serve with a dollop of butter on top of each piece, and enjoy the dish hot!
- NOTE: If you have an itchy throat while you eat this dish, drink a glass of buttermilk or have some yogurt. If the dish is cooked right, you should not have an itchy throat. The tamarind should take care of the itchiness from the leaves.
- OPTIONAL: If the ingredients disintegrate when you steam them, no problem. Roughly shred everything. In a pan, take some oil. Once the oil is hot, add some mustard seeds, black gram (urad dal split), red chilli flakes, curry leaves. Once the mustard seeds splutter, and the shreds of pathrode, and add some sugar. Toss for a minute and serve hot!
You can see the recipe for pathrode here. In that post i had mentioned that i usually serve the pathrode in three ways. First way is to just serve the steaming hot sliced pathrode with a dollop of butter / coconut oil. Second way is to tawa fry sliced pathrode pieces with little. I wanted to make alu vadi since a long time and am so glad that I finally got to make it.
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