By Sourish Bhattacharyya
The flying dosa of the ITC Grand Chola's Madras Pavilion |
Three of the all-day restaurant's 14 specialty dosas |
The restaurant's colourful dispenser of filter coffee does a pretty good job of making the brew do the 'metre dance' |
THERE’S nothing like a perfect dosai and idli to give your day that rejuvenating special pep, especially
when you’re alone in a city, commuting between your hotel and your place of
work. And when the idli is as light
as the flying idli at the ITC Grand
Chola’s Madras Pavilion, your day won’t get just a special pep, but a very
special pep.
It takes a lot of courage on the part
of a ‘North Indian’ hotel chain to lay out an elaborate ‘South Indian’
breakfast in a city that swears by its dosai
and idli, pongal and thayir sadam. ITC
Grand Chola’s Senior Executive Chef Ajit Bangera and his team have taken up the
challenge with the seriousness it deserves. It would have been foolish not to
do so. A dosa or an idli gone wrong would lead to serious
consequences for the majestic hotel.
But the hotel has taken its chances
by getting a little playful with its 14 specialty dosas, without compromising the authenticity of the original breakfast item. The fillings of the specialty
dosas are as diverse as feather-light
scrambled eggs (my personal favourite), or tangy soy nuggets (this dosa was invented for a guest recovering
from a throat operation and therefore in need of a high-protein diet), or the
sweat-inducing Nellore chillies, or roasted garlic, or even sprouts. Normally,
when fillings such as these used, they ooze oil and make the crust soggy. The
beauty of these dosas is that their
crust doesn’t lose their crispiness despite the unusual fillings.
But the star of the table, without
doubt, is the ‘flying idli’ (Philippe
Charraudeau’s name for it has been inspired by its lightness!), which is as
white as truth and simply melts in the mouth. At the core of the idli is the fragrant, lily-white, short-grained
rice known as Ponni, which was developed by the Tamil Nadu Agricultural
University in 1986. The lightness of the rice variety carries on to the idli. It also reflects the effort and the
care that has gone into the idli. It
shows in the recipe that I have added at the end of this post. Try it out at
home and see if your idli flies.
MADRAS PAVILION’S FLYING IDLI
INGREDIENTS
Ponni rice, 1 kilo
Urad dal, 300gm
Salt to taste
METHOD
Soak idli rice and urad dal separately
for two hours.
Wash the rice and dal at least six to seven times.
Make sure the idli rice and urad dal
appear clean when you add water to them. No milky residue must be left over
before you put the two in the grinder.
Grind the urad dal to a very fine paste.
Grind the idli rice to the consistency and texture of semolina.
Mix the two well along with salt.
Let the mixture rest for 12 hours at an
ambient temperature of 28-30 degrees Celsius.
Now line the idli tray with a clean cloth and pour over the mixture into the
mould.
Steam the idlis for 20 minutes per batch. Serve steaming hot with chutney, podi (‘gunpowder’), ghee and sambhar.
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