DIY Food

How to Make Mulaku Bajji (Jalapeño Fritters with Mint Chutney)

It's always more fun to DIY. Every week, we'll spare you a trip to the grocery store and show you how to make small batches of great foods at home.

Today: Aysha of The Malabar Tea Room shows us how to bring home the heat from an Indian street fair with these crispy jalapeño fritters.

Mulaku Bajji

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The best thing about visiting an Indian street fair is undoubtedly the food. There are crispy pappads as big as your face, sprinkled with cayenne pepper -- a little greasy, but very delicious. And then there are the fried bajjis -- vegetables dipped in a gram flour batter and fried to crispy perfection.

Most common of these is the mulaku bajji, a bajji made with a large green pepper similar to a jalapeño. Served with a mint chutney, it has the perfect balance of textures and flavors: the spicy pepper against cool mint yogurt, the crispy shell with a soft center. Served with a cup of hot chai, it's the next best thing to an evening at a fair. 

Jalapenos

To make the mulaku bajji, made here with jalapeños, you can choose to leave the stalks on your peppers if are pretty (mine weren't!). If you'd like to make the peppers less spicy, slice them open and remove the seeds, then soak them in cold water for a few minutes to remove the spice. For another variation, consider stuffing the peppers with either paneer or ricotta before frying.

Mulaku Bajji

Serves 7

For the bajji:

jalapeños (roughly 250 grams)
cup gram flour
1/4 cup corn flour
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/3 cup water, plus more if needed
cups vegetable oil

For the mint chutney:

cup mint leaves
cloves garlic
green chiles
tablespoons yogurt
splash lime juice
Salt, to taste

Mint Leaves and Garlic

To prepare the peppers for the bajji, wash and drain them by making a small slit and letting the liquid flow out, then remove the stalks if you desire, then set them aside on a paper towel to dry. In a large bowl, mix the flours, baking soda, and cayenne pepper together. When combined, pour in the water and stir until the batter is flowing and smooth. If lumpy, add more water and set aside.

Gram Flour

In a deep-bottomed pan, heat the oil. Once hot, carefully remove 2 teaspoons of the hot oil from the pan and stir into the batter. Dip each jalapeño into the batter, until fully-coated, then lower the floured pepper into the pan of hot oil.

Bajjis

Deep-fry the coated peppers on a medium flame until golden, then transfer them onto a paper towel to drain.

To make the chutney, grind the mint leaves, garlic, and green chiles to a fine paste. Then stir in the yogurt, lime juice, and salt. Serve the chutney with the fritters and enjoy! 

See the full recipe (and save and print it) here.

Photos by Aysha | The Malabar Tea Room

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  • Leilani
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  • Aysha | The Malabar Tea Room
    Aysha | The Malabar Tea Room
An Indian food-writer with a penchant for cookbooks with obscure ingredients, Aysha spends most of her time adapting recipes from the world over in her small-town south-Indian kitchen with her mother, and recording the successful experiments at www.malabartearoom.com. When not tinkering about in the kitchen, she can be found reading up on possible Game of Thrones theories that will bring back Jon Snow.

5 Comments

Leilani May 3, 2015
Looks delicious, I will try this tonight!
 
john April 29, 2015
The peppers pictured are not jalapeno. They look more like Anaheim.
 
witloof February 11, 2015
Gram flour? Do you perhaps mean graham, or whole wheat, flour?
 
Aysha |. February 16, 2015
hi, gram flour is chick pea flour!
 
Aysha |. February 16, 2015
i guess nobody calls it that outside India! oops. Thanks for bringing it to my attention, will change it.