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Dosa
Dosa at Sri Ganesha Restauran, Bangkok (44570742744).jpg
Dosa with sambar and chutney
Type Pancake, crepe
Place of origin India
Region or state Udupi, Karnataka
Serving temperature Hot
Main ingredients Rice and black gram
Variations Masala dosa, rava dosa, ghee roast dosa, neer dosa and many more

A dosa is a thin pancake in South Indian cuisine made from a fermented batter of ground black gram (lentil) and rice. Dosas have now become popular elsewhere in South Asia. Dosas are served hot, often with chutney and sambar.

History

Dosa Classic
Plain dosas with condiments
Butter Dosa served with coconut chutney and sambhar
Butter Dosa served with coconut chutney and sambhar

Dosas originated in South India; their exact birthplace in that region is a matter of conjecture. According to historian P. Thankappan Nair, dosa originated in the town of Udupi in present-day Karnataka. However, according to food historian K. T. Achaya, references in the Sangam literature suggest that dosa (as dosai) was already in use in the ancient Tamil country around the 1st century. Achaya states that the earliest written mention of dosa appears in literature of present-day Tamil Nadu, in the 8th century, while the earliest mention of dosa in the Kannada literature appears a century later.

In popular tradition, the origin of the dosa is linked to Udupi, probably because of the dish's association with Udupi restaurants. The Tamil dosai is softer and thicker. The thinner and crispier version of dosa was first made in present-day Karnataka. A recipe for dosa (as dosaka) can be found in Manasollasa, a 12th-century Sanskrit encyclopedia compiled by Someshvara III, who ruled from present-day Karnataka.

After the Independence of India, South Indian cuisine became gradually popular in the North. In Delhi, the Madras Hotel in Connaught Place became one of the first restaurants to serve South Indian cuisine. It arrived in Mumbai with the Udupi restaurants in the 1930s.

Names

דוסה
Dosa with chutney and sambar with sauteed potato filling in a restaurant
Paper Masala Dosa
Dosa served with sauteed potatoes.

Dosa is the anglicised name of a variety of South Indian names for the dish, for example dosai in Tamil, dosey in Kannada and dosha in Malayalam.

The standard transliterations and pronunciations of the word in various South Indian languages are as follows:

Language Transliteration Pronunciation (IPA)
Kannada: ದೋಸೆ dōse IPA: [d̪oːse]
Malayalam: ദോശ dōśa [d̪oːʃa]
Tamil: தோசை dōsai [t̪oːsaɪ̯]
Telugu: దోశ dōsa [d̪oːʃa]

Nutrition

Dosa is high in carbohydrates and contains no added sugars or saturated fats. As its key ingredients are rice and black gram, it is a good source of protein. A typical homemade plain dosa without oil contains about 112 calories, of which 84% is carbohydrate and 16% protein. The fermentation process increases the vitamin B and vitamin C content.

Preparation

A mixture of rice and black or green gram that has been soaked in water is ground finely to form a batter. Some add a bit of soaked fenugreek seeds. The proportion of rice to lentils is generally 3:1 or 4:1. The batter is allowed to ferment overnight, before being mixed with water to get the desired consistency. The batter is then ladled onto a hot tava or griddle greased with oil or ghee. It is spread out with the base of a ladle or bowl to form a pancake. It can be made either to be thick like a pancake, or thin and crispy. A dosa is served hot, either folded in half or rolled like a wrap. It is usually served with chutney and sambar. The mixture of black grams and rice can be replaced with highly refined wheat flour or semolina.

Serving

Dosa can be stuffed with fillings of vegetables and sauces to make a quick meal. They are typically served with a vegetarian side dish which varies according to regional and personal preferences. Common side items are:

  • Sambar
  • Chutney
  • Idli podi or milagaipodi: a lentil powder with spices and sometimes desiccated coconut, mixed with sesame oil or groundnut oil or ghee
  • Indian pickles
  • Potato Curry

Variations

Masala dosa is a roasted dosa served with potato curry, chutney and sambar, while Saada (plain) dosa is prepared with lighter texture paper dosa is a thin and crisp version. Rava dosa is made crispier using semolina. Newer versions are Chinese dosa, cheese dosa, paneer dosa, pizza dosa and so on.

Though dosa is typically made with rice and lentils, other versions exist.

Types of dosa
Name Key ingredients
Masala dosa Roasted and crispy dosa, Served with potato curry, chutney or sambar.
Oats dosa healthy, crisp and lacy instant dosa made with oats.
Wheat dosa dosa made with wheat flour batter.
Set dosa very spongy, soft and light, served in a set of 3 dosa per serving.
Plain dosa Dosa has lighter texture can be crispy too.
Ghee roast (Nei Dosai in Tamil) Plain Dosa cooked with Ghee instead of oil and usually with no filling.
Egg dosa (Muttai Dosai in Tamil) A thicker base of Dosa topped with beaten egg, or beaten egg is added to batter before cooking.
KaRi dosai A Tamil Nadu specialty with a dosa of thicker base topped with cooked meat, usually chicken or mutton.
Paneer dosa spiced paneer filling inside the dosa.
Palak dosa layered with palak (spinach) paste inside the folds of dosa.
Mini soya dosa soya milk and wheat flour
Pesarattu (green dosa) green gram
Adai dosa From Tamilnadu a dosa-like dish prepared from a combination of toor dal, rice, curry leaves, red chillies and asafoetida. The batter is not fermented. Usually eaten with jaggery or aviyal.
Light white dosa rice and coconut
Kadapa karam dosa Rice flour fermented overnight and mixed with sodium carbonate. The topping is a mixture of onion and chili paste (called yerra karam) and a chutney made with tomato and flour made in a gravy of curd. It is also occasionally topped with fried gram powder.
Onion rava dosa Semolina, rice flour,onion
Ragi wheat dosa Ragi, whole wheat flour
Rava dosa rava or sooji (semolina)
Benne dose butter ('benne' in Kannada) ('vennai' in Tamil)

Predominantly famous as "Davanagere benne dose" associated with Davanagere district in Karnataka.

Neer dosa watery rice batter
Vodu dose or Kappa roti Vodu dose or Kappa roti is made from unfermented rice, fenugreek seeds, grated coconut, thinly flattened rice and sometimes leftover cooked rice. It is cooked on an earthern pan with a rounded bottom. It is fluffy and appears like a bread. It is cooked without the use of oil.
Amboli, ghavan, dhirde In coastal parts of Maharashtra, variations known as amboli, ghavan and dhirde (or dhirade) are thin rice crêpes prepared with fermented batter, while dhirde is prepared with unfermented batter.
Buttermilk dosa Semolina, maida, buttermilk
Jaggery dosa Rice flour, maida, grated coconut, jaggery
Garlic cheese Dosa Plain Dosa with thinly chopped garlic,coriander and grated cheese as a filling

Masala dosa

Masala dosa is a hotel recipe which tastes different from common home-made dosa. It is served with potato curry, chutney with or without filling or sambar.

Related foods

  • Uttapam: a dosa-like dish made from the same batter. Unlike a dosa, which is crisp and unlike relatively soft crepes, it is a thick pancake mostly topped with diced onions, tomatoes, cilantro or cheese. Uttapam is sometimes characterized as an Indian pizza.
  • Pesarattu: in Andhra Pradesh, a dosa-like preparation prepared from green gram, which is typically served with a ginger and tamarind chutney
  • Adai: From Tamilnadu a dosa-like dish prepared from a combination of toor dal, rice, curry leaves, red chillies and asafoetida. The batter is not fermented. Usually eaten with jaggery or aviyal.
  • Appam/aappam/hopper: a pancake prepared from a combination of patted rice batter. The center is thicker and the outer rim is very thin. Served with sweet coconut milk.
  • Chakuli pitha: batter contains more black gram and less rice flour
  • Apam balik: made from a mixture of flour, eggs, sugar, baking soda, coconut milk and water.
  • Jianbing: dosa-like dish made in China
  • Bánh xèo: a dosa-like dish made in Vietnam.
  • Chebab: a Middle Eastern rice pancake
  • Injera: an Ethiopian dish made with fermented batter of teff grains- a gluten free grain grown in the high lands of Ethiopia.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Dosa para niños

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