Cracked Wheat and Moong Dal Crepes (Dosa without fermentation)

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Cracked Wheat Moong Daal Crepes

My grandmother used to prepare this moong dal dosa with raw rice and it was my favorite. I substitute the rice with either cracked wheat or corn grits and it tastes equally good and is healthy too. Technically this is adai I guess because it uses spices, coconut, lentils and not urad daal. Also the batter does not require fermentation. Since the batter has to be in the consistency of dosa batter, very smooth and thin, it qualifies for dosa. You would be surprised that these dosas doesn't taste anything like wheat. Nobody can guess it's made of cracked wheat.

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Cracked Wheat & Moong Dal Crepes Recipe

Prep TimeCook TimeMakes
4 Hrs30 Mins12 Medium Size Dosas.
AuthorCategoryMethod
Tiffins/Main-CourseFermenting/Cooking
Cracked Wheat and Moong Dal Crepes (Dosa without fermentation)
5.0 from 1 reviews
These paper thin savory crepes are made with cracked wheat and moong dal and the batter does not need fermentation.
Ingredients:
  • 1 cup Cracked Wheat
  • 1/2 cup Yellow Moong Dal
  • 1/4 cup Masoor Dal (Red Lentils)
  • 2 and 1 Green And Red Chilies
  • 1 tablespoon Grated Ginger
  • 1/4 cup Grated Coconut
  • 1/4 cup Cilantro
  • 2 tablespoons Tomato Puree
  • As Per Taste Salt
Procedure:
  1. Soak the cracked wheat in 1 cup water. Soak the daals and chilies together in another bowl with 1 and 1/2 cups water. I used the fine variety of cracked wheat. It had the texture of semolina. If you happen to have only the coarse variety run it in a blender/processor for a couple minutes before soaking. Soak everything for at least 3-4 hours.
  2. Drain the dal in a colander and reserve the water. Blend together the daals and chilies with some of the reserved water until smooth.
  3. Then add the soaked cracked wheat, coconut, ginger, tomato puree. Add water as needed to get a smooth batter.
  4. Transfer the batter to a bowl, add salt and mix well. The batter is ready to make the dosas. No need to ferment it.
  5. Heat a tava. Sprinkle some water to check if the tava is hot enough. Take the batter in a ladle and pour it on the pan and spread it into a thin circle with the back of the ladle.
  6. It takes about 2 minutes for the batter to cook. If you want it crisp you can wait for another minute or until you see a reddish thin crust in the middle. You could either use little oil to top the dosa or use a non stick spray like Pam and spray it lightly in a circular motion on top of the dosa. Using the non stick spray effectively requires some practice. You have to press the nozzle with very light pressure, otherwise there's going to be an "oil rain" on the dosa. Since the batter is thin, unlike the regular adai batter this one cooks well even without oil. Flip it and cook the other side for another minute.
  7. Turn it over once again and roll it just like shown in the picture or serve it as it is.
My Notes:
  1. You could use 3/4 cup of moong dal itself instead of 1/2 cup moong dal and 1/4 cup masoor daal. I usually do it like that but this time changed it a little bit.
  2. The tomato puree in the batter is optional. I got this idea from another blogger Ashwini. I usually prepare this adai without tomato and that's good too. But the tomato makes it little tangy and also gives a nice color to the dosa. You could use one small tomato chopped instead of the puree. If adding chopped tomatoes grind it together with the daals itself, otherwise it may not blend properly.
  3. This dosa is good either soft or crispy. If you want it soft take it a minute early.
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