Punugulu also known as Punukulu is a traditional deep fried Snack from Andhra Pradesh. Crispy, crunchy and fluffy Punugulu are also a popular street food & you will find them made fresh on the streets of Andhra Pradesh & Telangana. In this post I share how to make delicious punugulu at home from scratch. If you have premade Idli or dosa batter you can also use that following my recipe.
Contents
About Punugulu
Punugulu originated in the coastal regions of Andhra Pradesh and pretty much made in every Telugu speaking home. The traditional way is to soak and grind the lentils & rice to make a thick batter.
This is fermented and spiced with green chilies, cumin seeds and ginger to impart a bunch of flavors. To add flavor and texture fresh cut onions are also added.
Portions of the thick fluffy batter is then dropped gently to the hot oil. The batter fries up to round crispy balls that are extremely delicious and addictive. Punugulu are served with a chutney.
However these can be made instantly with leftover idli dosa batter. A lot of Telugu speaking people usually make these with leftover over-fermented idli-dosa batter as they taste tangy.
While Punugulu can be made with lentils & rice or with just white flour (refined flour), the traditional and the standard version is made with urad dal and raw rice. The maida version is similar to Karnataka Goli Baje & Mysore bonda with a few differences.
At home we also make these with green gram (mung beans) and also only with urad dal using the Medu vada batter. Each of these taste so much different.
If you are making these for the first time, read my pro tips below.
How to make Punugulu (Stepwise Photos)
1. To make these you will need either 2 cups leftover thick idli or dosa batter or you have to make fresh batter. If you are using leftover batter, scroll down and start from step 4. If you want to make fresh batter, rinse & soak ¼ cup urad dal and ¾ cup raw rice for a minimum of 4 hrs.
2. Rinse the dal well and add it to a grinder jar. Also add half teaspoon cumin seeds and 1 to 2 green chilies. If you make these for small kids, you can also skip the chilies or add them chopped later. Pour 3 tablespoons water. Grind this to a smooth thick batter. Transfer this to a bowl.
3. Rinse the soaked rice and drain the water. Add the rice to the same grinder. Grind to a slightly coarse batter. Mix it with the urad dal batter thoroughly. Add salt as required to taste. If you want you may ferment this batter for 4 to 6 hours.
4. Check the consistency now, the batter should be thicker & of dropping consistency. Refer the pic below. This is the right consistency.
OPTIONAL STEP : If you feel the batter is runny, powder 2 tbsps of poha / attukulu and mix well with the batter to make a lump-free batter. Set side for 10 mins. Alternately you can add 2 tablespoons of semolina or rice flour to thicken the batter. But the ones made with poha are really light and crunchy. Now adjust the consistency of batter, if required add very little water. Check by making 1 to 2 punugulu, if they are hard need to add little water.
Fry the Punugulu
5. To the batter, add ½ teaspoon cumin seeds (skip if you added to the batter while grinding). If you want add half cup chopped onions, chopped green chillies and ¾ teaspoon ginger to the batter. Mix and taste test for salt.
6. On a medium flame, heat oil in a kadai for deep frying. Test if the oil is hot enough by dropping a quarter teaspoon batter. It should sizzle and come up to the surface. This is the right temperature. Shape the batter to round balls with your fingers and drop them gently in the hot oil. Do not disturb them for a few minutes. Then later stir with a slotted spoon and fry them until golden and crisp.
Remove punugulu to a cooling rack or steel colander. Serve punugulu hot with chutney. We served it with Garlic chutney. Coconut chutney, Ginger chutney and Tomato chutney also go well.
Pro Tips
There are no specific measurements followed to make the batter. But it must be thick and not runny. Punugulu can be made with fresh ground batter or with leftover fermented idli dosa batter.
Usually many people love them making with sour batter as the fritters taste slightly tangy. Most times I make them with the fresh batter.
They can be made plain just with some cumin and green chilies added. I prefer to add chopped onions, chilies, cumin and coriander leaves.
The right consistency of the batter is the key to making punukulu that are crispy and not oily. Not too thick and not too thin. Thick batter makes your fritters rock hard, while the thin runny batter, makes them oily and soggy too.
If the batter turns runny, many people add few spoons of rice flour or semolina. But my personal experience – they turn hard when additional rice flour is added.
With semolina the fritters turn flat and do not absorb the moisture in the batter. So I usually use poha or atukulu. Just powder and add a bit to the batter to bring it to consistency. They turn out super crunchy and light.
Recipe Card
Punugulu Recipe
For best results follow the step-by-step photos above the recipe card
Ingredients (US cup = 240ml )
- 2 cupsidli dosa batter(thick or ¼ cup urad dal and ¾ cup raw rice)
- 2tablespoonspohaor semolina or rice flour (optional)
- Salt to taste , only if required
- oil to deep fry as needed
- 2green chilieschopped
- ¼cuponionchopped
- ½teaspooncumin seeds
- ¾teaspoonginger(grated, optional)
Instructions
Make batter for Punugulu
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You can skip steps 1 to 5 if using idli dosa batter. Rinse urad dal and rice separately multiple times till the water looks clear.
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Soak them for at least 4 hrs separately. Later drain and rinse the dal and rice. Add dal to a grinder along with 3 to 4 tablespoons water. If you want you can also add green chilies and cumin to the grinder at this stage or add them chopped to the batter directly later before frying.
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Grind dal to a smooth thick batter. Do not make it runny. Transfer this to a mixing bowl.
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Grind rice to a thick and slightly coarse batter, adding water only as required. Mix it well with the dal batter. Check the consistency now, it has to be thick of dropping consistency.
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If you want you may ferment the batter for 4 to 6 hours. This is optional.
How to make Punugulu
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If the batter is runny, add powdered poha/ attukulu or rice flour or semolina. Set this side for 10 mins. It becomes thicker after it is soaked. Now adjust the consistency, if required, you may add very little water or can proceed as it is if the consistency is right. Check by making few fritters, if they are hard you need to add little water.
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Add cumin, chopped chilies, ginger and onions to the batter.
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Heat oil in a kadai on a medium flame.
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To test drop a small portion of batter to the hot oil, the batter has to sizzle and rise to the surface but not sink. This is the right temperature.
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Shape the batter to round balls with your fingers and drop them in the hot oil.
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Do not disturb them for a few minutes. Later using a slotted spoon, stir and fry till golden and crisp. Remove punugulu to a cooling rack or steel colander.
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serve them warm with your favorite chutney.
How to make maida punugulu
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Mix 3/4 cup maida, 3 tbsp rice flour, 3 tbsp curd, 1 green chili, 1 small onion, 1/2 tsp. chopped ginger, salt as needed and 1/4 tsp soda. Set this aside for 30 to 45 minutes.
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Heat oil and drop small portions of the batter in hot oil. Fry until golden.
NUTRITION INFO (estimation only)
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