Diwali

23 recipes found

Bhel Puri for a Party 
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Nov 15, 2024

Bhel Puri for a Party 

Bhel puri — a type of chaat made with puffed rice, chutneys and various toppings — is the ultimate entertaining dish, whether you are hosting or bringing a dish to a potluck. Most of it can be prepared in advance, leaving mostly the assembly which allows you to really put on a show for your guests. You can make a good chaat with store-bought chutneys and bhel mix. But it’s the homemade chutneys and fried tortilla strips that make this exceptional, providing the sweet-salty-fresh-crunchy combination that is the hallmark of chaat. The ingredient list is long, but after you make the chutneys, you are 80 percent of the way there. When you have the components prepared, set them out in bowls, invite all your guests to gather around, and make your chaat live, tasting and tossing for everyone to see.

1h 30m8 servings 
Kalakand 
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Oct 25, 2024

Kalakand 

This no-bake dessert, or mithai, is commonly found in sweet shops across South Asia. Kalakand is typically made by cooking milk and sugar until the milk almost solidifies — a process that takes many hours. This version uses a shortcut: condensed milk and grated paneer. The use of these two ingredients cuts cooking time down to about 10 minutes. Top with any mix of nuts to balance the sweetness and add texture. The result is a milky, decadent, soft and chewy dessert that is fantastically and complexly sweet. Kalakand does need a minimum of 2 hours in the fridge to set, which requires some planning ahead. It keeps in the fridge for up to a week in the rare case of leftovers. If soft, crumbly paneer is not available, opt for ricotta.

2h 20m18 to 20 pieces
Ice Cream Peda
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Oct 25, 2024

Ice Cream Peda

Peda, a fudgy, milky South Asian sweet, is a staple of mithai shop cases. In this recipe, the founder of Malai Ice Cream, Pooja Bavishi, smartly uses melted ice cream as a base, incorporating milk powder, cardamom and salt for a snackable treat that’s toasty and nutty in flavor and aromatic with spices. The melted ice cream gives the peda its rich texture and subtle, sweet undertow and makes the dough easy to handle and shape. If the dough starts to dry out as you are shaping the balls, just knead it again until smooth.

1h 10m24 pieces
Badam Burfi Bark
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Oct 25, 2024

Badam Burfi Bark

This modern take on badam burfi, from the latest cookbook, “Desi Bakes” (Hardie Grant, 2024), by the food writer Hetal Vasavada, layers the classic South Asian almond confection over tart, Barbie-pink, ruby chocolate in bark form. The chocolate is not only a photogenic topping; it — along with freeze-dried strawberries — also tempers the sweetness of the burfi and compliments the cardamom. This recipe sidesteps the hardest parts of making burfi — it gets pressed into a pan, meaning no need to do any individual shaping — while still producing a beautiful, portable treat. A little salt brings out the best from this nutty, fruity, floral confection.

1h 10mOne 8-inch pan
Prasad
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Oct 24, 2024

Prasad

Popular during Diwali, prasad or parsad embodies the evolution of religious food in Indo-Caribbean communities. Sweetened clumps of farina with the texture of very moist pound cake are garnished with a combination of coconut, raisins, fruits and nuts. Served in small paper bags that turn translucent with ghee, prasad is punctuated with the crunch of almonds, cashews and roasted chickpeas. The addition of mixed essence, a flavoring in Caribbean desserts that is available at Caribbean markets or online, and evaporated milk makes this an Indo-Caribbean version of the confection.

40m8 to 10 servings
Onion Bhajiya (Spicy Fritters)
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Nov 2, 2023

Onion Bhajiya (Spicy Fritters)

On Diwali, people in India light up their homes, say prayers and go door-to-door exchanging boxes of snacks and sweets. In the northern part of the country, some people fry fresh onion bhajiya, or crispy onion fritters, as an appetizer or snack for visiting guests. Palak Patel, the author of “The Chutney Life: 100 Easy-to-Make, Indian-Inspired Recipes” (Abrams, 2023), included her mother’s recipe in her cookbook, which represents Ms. Patel’s life as an Indian American. Her mother is from Raipur, where the street food is dipped in cilantro chutney, but her children and husband like to dip the fritters in ketchup. Depending on the region, bhajiya can also be called pakora or bhaji. They’re often eaten as a snack during monsoons and served with masala chai.

45m20 to 24 bhajiya (serves 4 to 6)
Gulab Jamun
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Oct 20, 2023

Gulab Jamun

Gulab jamun is a South Asian dessert of fragrant, syrup-soaked rounds of fried dough. Gulab means “rose water” in Persian, and jamun means “black plum” in Hindi-Urdu, a reference to the sweet’s shape. The dough, traditionally made with khoya, a type of dried milk, is combined with flour and whole milk to form a soft and sticky dough. (Nonfat dry milk powder is used here.) Shaping the jamun takes a little practice — optimally, they should be smooth with no visible cracks, so they don’t fall apart in the hot oil — but the more you roll, the easier it gets. Once fried, the jamun are soaked in a rose water, cardamom and saffron syrup. Serve warm, drizzled with a little of their syrup and a side of vanilla ice cream, if you like. 

5h 45mAbout 14
Coconut Laddoos
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Oct 19, 2022

Coconut Laddoos

These round treats are a coconut lover’s dream — and best of all, they’re just three ingredients. Coconut laddoo is a type of mithai, or sweet, typically found in South Asian shops and served for celebratory occasions. While many types of mithai are milk- or nut-based, this one lets the coconut do all the talking, and a little bit of cardamom provides a floral edge. This particular variety is a crowd favorite at Jayasri Sweets in Herndon, Va., and the recipe comes from the shop’s owner, Jayasri Gampa. This recipe works best with fresh coconut (frozen is fine); dried coconut doesn’t have enough moisture for the mixture to hold together.

30mAbout 16 laddoos
Caramel Badam Burfi
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Oct 19, 2022

Caramel Badam Burfi

Badam burfi, a rich, fudgy treat made of almonds, milk and sugar, is a classic Indian sweet. This version, developed by Ashvin Patel, who runs Surati Farsan Mart in Artesia, Calif., incorporates caramel for an even more decadent sweet that tastes somewhere between mithai and a candy bar. These treats are eaten throughout the South Asian subcontinent for celebrations both big and small, from Diwali to a good score on a test. They travel well and can be frozen for at least a few weeks. If the almond base seems a bit dry, kneading it with your hands will help incorporate the milk mixture more completely.

2h 20m35 (1½-inch) pieces
Chaat Party
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Chaat Party

The beauty of chaat — a category of tangy, sweet, fiery and crunchy Indian snacks — is that it’s built for customization. The only common denominator is that alchemy of flavor sensations, often driven by a combination of sweet-and-sour tamarind chutney, a bright herb chutney (like this cilantro-mint chutney or this green chile chutney) and cooling raita. Otherwise, base ingredients and toppings (and even those chutneys!) can all be interchanged. This spirit is the driving force behind Maneet Chauhan’s chaat party, from her cookbook, “Chaat” (Clarkson Potter, 2020), a choose-your-own-adventure spread that allows eaters to build a chaat suited to their tastes: More crunch! Less spicy! More sweet! More herbs! It’s entirely up to you. This is a great way to entertain, and also a quick, no-cook dinner. Use this list as a starting point for ingredients, but feel free to get creative. If you are able to get banana leaves, spread them out over the table before arranging everything else on top for a bright pop of color.

10mVaries
Aloo Samosas (Potato Samosas)
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Aloo Samosas (Potato Samosas)

Filled with a Punjabi-spiced potato and pea mixture, these samosas prioritize convenience without compromising flavors or textures. Use store-bought spring roll wrappers to make a big batch when you have time, then freeze the samosas to fry and serve as near-instant snacks for iftar, at parties or intimate gatherings with chai, or as low-fuss everyday cooking. With a crispy exterior and a filling citrusy with coriander and sweet from peas, these vegan samosas are perfect any time. 

1h 30mAbout 42 samosas
Keema Samosas (Chicken Samosas)
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Keema Samosas (Chicken Samosas)

In Pakistan, home cooks have varied takes on samosa fillings — this one combines spiced ground chicken with cilantro and green chiles for freshness — but most agree on store-bought spring roll wrappers for the shells. Convenience aside, these ready-made pastry sheets are the key to unparalleled crispness. Samosas are commonly assembled in big batches and frozen uncooked so they’re ready to fry anytime. 

1h 30mAbout 42 samosas
Cilantro-Mint Chutney
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Cilantro-Mint Chutney

This vibrant green chutney from Maneet Chauhan’s “Chaat” (Clarkson Potter, 2020) is as easy to make as it is versatile. The combination of mint, cilantro, green chiles and lime juice makes for a fresh and bright sauce, but the mango pulp is especially key, giving the chutney a slightly creamy texture and a subtly sweet flavor. This chutney has a lot of uses in Indian cuisine — a building block for chaat, or a dipping sauce for pakora, for example — and it can also be used as a sandwich spread or marinade. It lasts up to two weeks, refrigerated, in an airtight container, but it will start to lose its vibrancy and flavor after a week — best to make it one batch at a time to enjoy that day.

10m4 servings
Green Chile Chutney
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Green Chile Chutney

In her cookbook, “Chaat” (Clarkson Potter, 2020), the chef Maneet Chauhan refers to this bright, spicy chutney as a “workhorse staple in the Indian pantry.” She uses it primarily in chaat, but also drizzles it on top of roasted vegetables, dollops it onto soups and spoons it over scrambled eggs. This chutney “makes virtually any Indian recipe taste better,” she said, with its harmony of lively, complex flavors, such as chaat masala and asafetida. Like a lot of chutneys, it also includes toasted dal, which brings nuttiness and a little texture.

10m4 servings
Tamarind Chutney
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Tamarind Chutney

There is nothing quite like the tangy, sweet and sour sensation of tamarind, the main ingredient in this essential Indian chutney. In chaat, a category of spicy, savory, tangy and crunchy Indian snacks, tamarind chutney provides the pungent, pucker-inducing element that makes those dishes so craveable. In this recipe, from Maneet Chauhan’s cookbook, “Chaat” (Clarkson Potter, 2020), the tamarind flavor is sweetened with jaggery, dates and raisins, and brightened up with ginger, with deep umami coming from the chaat masala. It’s possible to find high-quality store-bought tamarind chutney, but nothing beats the vibrant flavors of a fresh batch made at home.

20m4 servings
Chocolate Burfi
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Chocolate Burfi

Burfi is a very sweet Indian candy — similar to fudge, but slightly earthier and more milky — that is typically made with some combination of milk, sugar, ghee and flavorings. In Indian culture, burfi is often given as a gift, accompanying any kind of celebration: a birthday, a holiday, even a simple get-together of friends. This recipe, adapted from Raja Sweets in Houston, caters to those looking for an accessible entry point to the world of burfi; it offers a slight variation on the basic formula by adding a layer of cocoa-infused khoya (the name for the milky base).

3h16 pieces
Peanut Laddoo Buckeye Balls
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Peanut Laddoo Buckeye Balls

Here’s a simple, no-bake sweet that riffs on peanut laddoos, a bite-size Indian confection made of ghee, sugar and nuts, with a chocolate coating inspired by buckeyes, the peanut butter and chocolate treat popular in Ohio. It was dreamed up by Hetal Vasavada, the blogger and author of the dessert cookbook “Milk & Cardamom,” which combines the traditional Indian flavors she grew up with and the Western sweets she encountered as an American kid in New Jersey. The cardamom, ghee and jaggery provide both an interesting twist to the traditional flavor combination and a slightly grittier texture, which Ms. Vasavada likens to that of a Butterfinger candy bar.

25mAbout 15 balls
Shrikhand (Sweet Strained Yogurt)
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Shrikhand (Sweet Strained Yogurt)

Shrikhand is a creamy yogurt-based dessert from western India made simply by straining yogurt and sweetening it. The yogurt is traditionally strained by pressing it between newspaper (to soak up extra whey), but if you can find thick, full-fat Greek yogurt at the grocery store, then the process is even simpler: Hang it in a mesh strainer over a bowl for a day, and let the excess whey drip out. You can substitute slivered almonds for pistachios, if that's more your speed, or even skip the nuts altogether for a smooth shrikhand flavored only with sugar, cardamom and a celebratory sprinkle of saffron threads.

Serves 6 to 8
Mint Chutney
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Mint Chutney

In Desi cooking, mint chutney enlivens eggs, kormas, biriyanis, sandwiches and many other dishes, adding a sour, spicy and fresh cooling sweetness. Where it really sings, though, is as an accompaniment to samosas and chaats. Use Greek yogurt if you want a creamy chutney. Depending on preference, you can skip the raw garlic.

5m3/4 cup
Gajar Halwa (Carrot and Cardamom Pudding)
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Gajar Halwa (Carrot and Cardamom Pudding)

The recipe for this Indian dessert comes from the North Carolina chef Cheetie Kumar, and it instantly transports her to her mother’s kitchen around Diwali, the air rich with the aroma of fragrant carrots, caramelized milk and cardamom. The carrots are cooked down to be incredibly tender, but they still maintain some texture; the milk becomes jammy. If eaten warm, it’s like a really decadent warm cereal or oatmeal; if served cold, it’s like rice pudding, cool and sweet. The crunch of the toasted nuts make it the perfect meal-ender or tea time snack. If your carrots are bland, increase the sugar accordingly; the sweetness of the carrots makes a huge difference in the finished pudding. Some people prefer a looser halwa, but Ms. Kumar loves the caramelized notes that emerge when the pudding is cooked a little longer.

1h3 to 4 servings
Nasi Biryani
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Nasi Biryani

Because of its vibrant multiethnic population, Singapore is one of the few places where biryani — a dish with origins in the Indian subcontinent — is regularly eaten for Lunar New Year. This recipe is from Shila Das, a second-generation Singaporean of Indian and Vietnamese descent who grew up celebrating the festivities. You first prepare chicken curry as you’ll use its sauce in this dish and serve the chicken with it. As a prolific home cook, Ms. Das has been tasked with making this dish for annual Lunar New Year potlucks. She learned how to make it from her father, who prepared it for Diwali.

1h6 to 8 servings
Gajak (Peanut-Sesame Brittle)
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Gajak (Peanut-Sesame Brittle)

This recipe for gajak — an Indian treat that’s like a cross between peanut brittle and sesame candy, but with more nuanced flavor — comes from the North Carolina chef Cheetie Kumar, who always had it at Diwali and loves the way the flavors magically coalesce after the mixture sets for 45 minutes. Peanuts and sesame are found together in sweet recipes all through Northern India, and even appear as co-stars in savory dishes in the states of Gujarat and Maharashtra in chutneys and stuffed in eggplant. Jaggery adds some savory undertones that you can't get from regular sugar. You can find it online, at Indian grocery stores or some larger Asian supermarkets (look for blocks or balls, rather than granulated jaggery). It’s crucial to have your ingredients ready before starting; the gajak comes together fairly quickly but the sugar can burn if you don't watch it carefully. Cutting the brittle when it’s warm will yield pretty, uniform pieces, but it can also be broken once it has hardened into uneven, rustic chunks.

1hAbout 24 pieces
Gajar Halwa (Glazed Carrot Fudge)
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Gajar Halwa (Glazed Carrot Fudge)

30mSix servings