Cheese

Daulat ki Chaat

November 29, 2016
3.8
4 Ratings
Photo by James Ransom
  • Makes 4 small bowls' worth
Author Notes

Churning milk with 2 sticks or a wooden whisk in a circular bowl for hours under the moonlight is the original, if romantic, method of creating this magical dessert. This version (using electric beaters) gives you comparable results in about half the time—and more recently, Indian chefs have used nitrogen to speed up the process in restaurants or at home.

I suspect the recipe has strayed considerably from its original, but I like the subtle colors and flavors of this version, a combination of many I have tried. If you shut your eyes, it may even conjure up visions of a busy marketplace teeming with the smells and sounds of life in a historic old marketplace.

Note on bura: Bura may be difficult to source, but you can easily make your own at home. This is a good guide: http://www.rachnas-kitchen.com/how-to-make-tagar-or-boora-sugar-at-home/

Hear Chef Maneet Chauhan on her love of chaats on this episode of our food-meets-music podcast Counterjam. —Lathika George

Continue After Advertisement
Ingredients
  • 1 liter whole milk
  • 250 milliliters heavy cream
  • 1 teaspoon cream of tartar
  • 2 tablespoons bura (or boora, an unrefined powdered brown sugar; see note above)
  • Few saffron strands mix with 2 tablespoons milk
  • A few tablespoons kurchan, to serve
  • 2 sheets varq (edible silver)
  • 2 tablespoons chopped pistachios
  • 1 tablespoon finely ground pistachios
Directions
  1. To make the kurchan: Cook 1 cup milk down to an almost-dry clotted consistency over low heat so it doesn't burn. It should end up with a slightly crumbly texture and no color.
  2. Combine milk, cream, cream of tartar, and bura in a large bowl, and refrigerate overnight.
  3. Whisk the cold milk mixture with an electric mixer with a whisk attachment, stopping occasionally to remove the froth onto a platter with a wide spoon (and not allowing the cream to be beaten into stiffness—you're looking for steady but soft froth here). When the platter is full of the clouds, drizzle with saffron milk and top with crumbled kurchan and sheets of varq. (Alternatively, spoon the froth into smaller shallow dishes.)
  4. Shake over the ground pistachios with a sieve and top with the chopped pistachios.
  5. If you can't serve immediately, keep refrigerated and serve within a few hours.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

Recipe by: Lathika George

Author of The Kerala Kitchen, Hippocrene Publications.

4 Reviews

Keka D. September 14, 2017
"Boora" stands for "bhoora" or brown
Alice K. December 2, 2016
Would it be possible to start the kurchan with canned evaporated milk to reduce the cooking time?
Manav P. November 9, 2018
That'd make it terribly sweet unless you have unsweetened condensed milk
Alice K. November 11, 2018
Yes, there is evaporated canned milk, which is unsweetened, not to be confused with sweetened condensed milk.