Padhir Peni is one of those status symbol sweets of Karnataka. If Padhir Peni is served at a wedding, it usually means the family is well off, has good taste and can flaunt it. Marriages or big functions in Karnataka are not complete without Peni. Ingredients for Poori: Ingredients for Padhir: Ingredients for Sugar Syrup: Method: 1. Mix maida, salt and ghee in a bowl. Add baking powder and mix well. 2. Blend it till flour resembles fine bread crumbs. 3. Add the almond paste little at a time, sprinkle water and knead very well to a thick dough. 4. Cover and set aside the dough for a few minutes. 5. Rub rice flour and the ghee together in a flat plate for 5 to 10 minutes till it becomes shiny and soft. 6. Divide the dough into even sized balls. 7. Roll out each ball into thin chapati. 8. Apply little butter paste on top and put one more chapati on top. 9. Repeat the process to obtain 3 in one pile. 10. Apply paste on top of the 3rd and roll from one end. 11. Divide the roll into 3 by pressing and breaking it with hand gently. 12. Gently press and make a ball in such a way that inside filling is closed and sealed. 13. Roll it into a flat thick circle. 14. Deep fry in moderately hot oil or ghee till crisp and brown on both sides. Keep heat medium throughout for crispy, flaky pooris. 15. Remove from fire. 16. Prepare sugar syrup by adding sugar to a pan and just sufficient water to immerse the sugar. 17. Heat the pan. Wait for the sugar to dissolve and then get sticky. When it is about 1 string consistency, switch off. 18. Dip each fried poori quickly into the hot sugar syrup, tap off excess syrup and pile on a plate. 19. Serve warm or at room temperature. Notes for Padhir Peni There are multiple versions of the Padhir Peni recipe. Some use maida and fine semolina (sooji), some use just maida like the one here and some use just semolina. Don’t let pooris soak in the syrup. Let the sugar syrup soaked pooris cool down completely before storing them in airtight containers. Instead of dunking the poori into the syrup, one can dust these with powdered sugar or top them with sweetened slightly thickened milk or even Badam milk for a different taste. These are best eaten the day they are made or within 2-3 days. Related Articles Food in Ancient India Food in Vedic Period Recipes in Vedic Period Indian Food Indian Desserts Indian Sweets Indian Sweet Recipe Indian Fried Sweets Karnataka Cuisine North Karnataka Cuisine |