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Home » Recipes » Indian Breads

Fiber and Protein Fortified Poori

Modified: Aug 15, 2024 by Madhuram · 36 Comments.

5 from 1 vote
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Yes, you read it right. I'm going to share my recipe for fortified poori. What does fortify mean? It means to add one or more ingredients to (a food) to increase its nutritional content. Those who have been following my posts for the past few days would know by this time that I have become a fan of The Sneaky Chef (which by the way is on sale on Amazon and I have ordered my copy yesterday). I'm finding ways to sneak healthy ingredients in my son's diet.

I have been preparing beans and lentil chapathis for long time now. But until recently it did not occur to me to follow the same method with puri also. Actually the reason is, in the past 5 years I had made pooris only once because my husband is a diet freak and I'm addicted to puris. He doesn't eat more than half a poori and I cannot limit my intake. Recently only I introduced poori to my son and guess whose gene he has inherited? Unfortunately mine! The book talks about adding white bean puree and chickpeas puree in some recipes. So I thought why not follow this in our poori recipe also.

Since I have decided to feed my son something deep fried in oil, I might as well make it a little more healthy by adding some protein and fiber rich beans. First I tried it with chickpeas and then with white beans (cannellini). Both came out very well and the pooris did not taste any different. The key here is the color of the beans. They both blend with the color of the whole wheat flour, so there is no change in the color of the pooris also, unlike the spinach pooris and tomato pooris. But I'm guessing here that kids might be interested in colorful pooris also. Usually my son finds out any different taste, but he couldn't get it this time, he was as usual eating one poori after the other, asking for more.

I also make it a point to prepare pooris only twice a month and I make it only for him. I have a very very small frying pan, which my mother got from India. It holds very little oil, so I cannot make big pooris. I roll out the dough into one big circle and cut shapes using cookie cutters. If I use a big frying pan, I'll be tempted to fry pooris for myself. It will also need more oil, than I would be frying some papads and vadams too, which I would end up eating all by myself. So this small pan is a real savior.

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Recipe

Fiber & Protein Fortified Poori Recipe

Madhuram
Chickpeas and white beans puree are mixed with whole wheat flour to prepare fiber and protein enriched pooris.
5 from 1 vote
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 10 minutes mins
Cook Time 10 minutes mins
Total Time 20 minutes mins
Course Tiffins/Main-Course
Cuisine Indian
Servings 24 Small Pooris
Need To Convert Measurements?Check out the Baking Measurement Chart!

Ingredients

  • ¼ Cup White Beans Or Chickpeas (I Used Canned Beans)
  • ½ Cup Whole Wheat Flour
  • 1 Teaspoon Semolina/Rava
  • A Pinch Salt
  • As Required Water
  • As Needed OilFor Frying (I Used Sunflower Oil)

Instructions

  • If using canned beans, drain and rinse the beans first. If using dry beans, soak the beans overnight and cook it.
  • Heat the oil in a frying pan.
  • Puree the beans with little water. I used Magic Bullet's small jar. The beans should be blended thoroughly without any lumps.
  • Now mix the puree with the other ingredients. Add water little by little because the dough for poori should be firm, otherwise the pooris will absorb way too much oil.
  • By this time the oil should be hot enough.
  • Since I make pooris in a small frying pan, I divide the dough into 2 balls. Roll out each ball into a big thin circle and then cut out different shapes using small cookie cutters and fry them one by one.
  • If using a bigger pan for deep frying, you may choose to divide the dough into 6-8 medium size balls. Roll out each into a thin circle and then fry it one by one.

My Notes

  1. The pooris puffed up nicely. It looked exactly like pani pooris, but it did flatten after sometime. I don't know if bigger size pooris would also puff up like this because we have added beans.
  2. The first time I made the chickpeas poori, my blender was not working. So I had to mash it with my hands and potato masher. So it did have some tiny unmashed beans and the poori became a little red in those areas. Otherwise both the pooris were white in color. So you may notice small red spots in the first picture. But this did not stop my son from eating it! The second picture is the white beans poori.
  3. ¼ cup of chickpeas has 3.5gms fiber and 3gms protein. ¼ cup of white beans has 3gms fiber and 3.5gms protein. Also both the beans have considerable amount of Iron and little Calcium too. If I had prepared poori with ½ cup of whole wheat flour alone, my son would have got only 4gms fiber and 5gms protein. Now that I have added some beans he gets additional 6.5gms nutrition.
  4. If there is a "Five and Below" store near your place look for the book Deceptively Delecious by Jessica Seinfeld. This one is also similar to the Sneaky Chef with lots of recipes to include healthy foods in kids' meals. I got it for $5 in that store, the retail price of which is $20. Both the books have vegetarian and meat dishes, but I don't mind it because it's the methods which I'm interested and the photos are good and we can also get inspired to create our own sneaky recipes. Initially I thought of going to the copy place to make copies of necessary recipes from The Sneaky Chef and return the book to the library. But when I saw the price ($7.99 and plus free shipping if you are ordering something else, which I was going to anyway) I had to order it, because it's way more cheaper than driving to the copy place, spending another 15-20 minutes there and money.)
Did You Make This?Please leave a comment on the blog or share a photo on Instagram.

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Comments

    5 from 1 vote

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    All commentsQuestions
  1. Aparna says

    January 08, 2018 at 3:28 pm

    5 stars
    Have you tried these with Chickpea Flour. wondering if it will come out as good ?

    Thanks

    Reply
    • Madhuram says

      January 10, 2018 at 8:25 pm

      Chickpea flour doesn't have gluten, Aparna, so it will not fluff up like regular pooris.

      Reply
  2. NSG says

    October 07, 2010 at 5:02 am

    wow! chickpeas/beans puri sounds good. Will try them soon.

    Sometimes i add spinach, silken tofu when preparing dough for puris/chapatis.
    Either or both can be used.
    Spinach gives beautiful green color along with fibre and iron.
    Tofu gives loads of protein. You wont even realize you are using tofu. I feel tofu makes chapatis softer. Reduce water to minimum when using tofu.

    Reply
    • Madhuram says

      October 10, 2010 at 6:54 pm

      I too add tofu/spinach while preparing chapathis but haven't tried it in puris. You could also add mashed avocados while preparing chapathi dough; it gives very soft chapathis.

      Reply
  3. DP says

    May 12, 2009 at 3:19 am

    They are so cute!!!

    Reply
  4. PREETI says

    February 02, 2009 at 8:14 pm

    Do you know how long we can store them for?

    I'm not sure Preeti, because I make it just enough for the day.

    Reply
  5. PREETI says

    February 02, 2009 at 1:00 pm

    They are out of this world and so healthy. I just made a batch of pooris and I am eating my 5th one. Yummy.
    Thanks a lot

    You're welcome Preeti and thank you for taking the time to comment here.

    Reply
  6. Namratha says

    December 22, 2008 at 3:00 pm

    You are awesome Madhu, I have got to tell my mom about this...brilliant recipe 🙂

    Thank you very much Namratha.

    Reply
  7. vanamala says

    December 17, 2008 at 10:41 am

    So sweet start poori..remeber my childhood days...lovely recipe 🙂

    Reply
  8. TBC says

    December 17, 2008 at 9:39 am

    Madhuram- glad the dosa recipe worked for you. 😀

    About this so-called chef you mentioned- he has been known to lift content from different food blogs without asking/giving credit where it is due. Indira's Mahanandi was one of the first blogs to report this. There have been some instances recently too (I forget the names of the blogs now).
    Needless to say, I have no respect for him or what he does!
    Got to go now... will catch up with u later...

    Wow! I was not aware of this. Actually I saw the link for rava dosa in Asha's blog. She had prepared it in that style and I followed from there to his website.

    Reply
  9. Sharmi says

    December 16, 2008 at 10:04 pm

    this is a very healthy idea. Today I had to make pooris just because my son has to eat something. He is a choosy eater too. how did you make that star shape? looks so cute. can I use cookie cutters to make pooris?

    Thanks Sharmi. I use cookie cutters to make poori and chapathis. Gingerbread man, heart, christmas tree shape everything comes out well with the poori.

    Reply
  10. Sunshinemom says

    December 16, 2008 at 8:49 pm

    Love the star, and the idea of fortified pooris 😛
    It is ages since I made pooris:)! I make pooris only when my daughter or son crib, and I remember making pooris in different shapes when they were kids - just to get them to eat it!

    Reply
  11. Bharti says

    December 16, 2008 at 7:07 pm

    Love the fortified poori idea. But honestly I love the star shaped poori even more! It's SO cute! My hubby doesn't touch puris as well..so I must have made them like twice in the last 10 years! I get my fill of these when I visit friends homes! So glad you got a chance to try out the pink pasta and thanks for your kind comments.

    Me too Bharti and I also go to the south indian restaurant just for pooris and vadais.

    Reply
  12. PG says

    December 16, 2008 at 10:33 am

    I forgot to mention, the star looks so good! a very good idea. never thought about it with puris.

    Reply
  13. PG says

    December 16, 2008 at 10:29 am

    that's a wonderful idea. I got this idea from Jugalbandi actually, to add soaked daals into poori and i modified it to add ground daal powder to make it easier for me.
    I never made pooris in winters, but i broke this rule a couple of days, also for my son, and of course the house was smelling like anything. Hubby makes a faoce when he hears about them too. But, he eats them still and likes them too! 😀
    I could eat pooris every day, I love them too.

    Reply
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Madhuram's Eggless Cooking

Hi, I'm Madhuram!

Founder and Creator of Eggless Cooking, sharing my passion for eggless baking since 2008. Alongside my husband, who handles the tech and photography, we’ve created a trusted space for delicious egg-free and vegetarian recipes that anyone can enjoy.

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