Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (2024)

By manjulabharathkumar@gmail.com

Pholourie is a deep fried spicy chickpea snack which is a very famous street food eaten in Trinidad and Tobago. This version of Pholourie is noramally refered to as dhal and flour Pholourie. These fried snack is served with either a mango chutney or tamarind chutney. This is completely different from Indian Pakodas as flour and yeast is added to this.As per Wiki Pholourie is originated from Fulfuri which is a bengali pakoda. There is a famous Bhojpuri Song “Pholourie Bina chutney kaise bani” ( How to make Pholourie without chutney??) of Sunder popo .I heard the song he he funny they are right now I can’t skip the chutney 😛 .

I have tried Tirini cuisine last month for my stuffed breads theme and learned a lot about the cuisine and it similarity to Indian cuisine . I wanted to do this Trini street food for the mega marathon and letter P was something I decided very early.This is such an amazing snack to have , and Yeah I won’t recommend skipping the chutney as they both are happy couple when had together is happiness ever after. I made Tamarind Chutney which is called Tambran chutney in Trini. I have some nostalgic memories surrounding Puliyanga which I will share in some other post.The chutney traditionally is made differently,but the chutney was super yummy combo with Pholorie. Moving on to the recipe.

P forPholourie with Tambran Chutney

Theme~ Street Food Recipes

Recipe Adapted from Here

Ingredients

For Tambran Chutney

  • Fresh Tamarind – 10-15 Nos
  • Sugar – 3 tbsp
  • Pepper -1 tsp
  • Coriander leaves – 1/4 cup
  • Garlic -2 clove
  • Habanero Chilli – 1 No
  • Salt to taste

For Pholourie

  • Chick peas/ Channa dal – 1/2 cup
  • All Purpose Flour – 1/2 cup
  • Dry Active Yeast – 1 1/2 tsp
  • Turmeric pd – 1/4 tsp
  • Cumin seeds – 1/4 tsp
  • Habanero chilli – 1 or 2
  • Garlic – 2 Cloves
  • Salt to taste
  • Water – 1/2 cup
  • Oil for frying

Method

For Tambran Chutney

  • Break the tamarind and remove the skin and veins from it.
  • In a sauce pan put the tamarind and pour water till the tamarind are immersed.
  • After It boils for a while and cooks well the seeds starts coming out and the tamarind mushes.
  • Remove all the seeds from the tamarind pulp.
  • In a mixer put coriander leaves , garlic,habanero Chilli with some water make a coarse paste.
  • Add sugar, salt, coriander mixture,pepper pd and mix them well.
  • Cook the chutney for 5-6 mins till it thickens.

For Pholourie

  • Soak chick pea dal in water overnight or 5 hours at least. Drain the water fro the dal.
  • In Mixer put the dal, chillies,garlic and blend it till a smooth paste. Transfer it to a bowl.
  • In a bowl take luke warm water add dry yeast to it and wait till it froths up.
  • Add flour, turmeric, salt,yeast mixture to the dal and mix them well.
  • Cover and keep the batter in a warm place for proofing about an hour.
  • After the batter rises mix them well.
  • Heat oil in a pan , add a spoon of batter to the hot oil and fry till golden brown.
  • Do the same for rest of the batter. Serve them hot with Tambran chutney.

5.0 from 10 reviews

Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food

Prep time

Cook time

Total time

Pholourie is a deep fried snack eaten in Trinidad and Tobago and they are a famous street food.

Author: Manjula Bharath

Recipe type: Street Food Recipe

Cuisine: Trini Cuisine

Serves: 20

Ingredients

For Tambran Chutney

  • Fresh Tamarind - 10-15 Nos
  • Sugar - 3 tbsp
  • Pepper -1 tsp
  • Coriander leaves - ¼ cup
  • Garlic -2 clove
  • Habanero Chilli - 1 No
  • Salt to taste

For Pholourie

  • Chick peas/ Channa dal - ½ cup
  • All Purpose Flour - ½ cup
  • Dry Active Yeast - 1½ tsp
  • Turmeric pd - ¼ tsp
  • Cumin seeds - ¼ tsp
  • Habanero chilli - 1 or 2
  • Garlic - 2 Cloves
  • Salt to taste
  • Water - ½ cup
  • Oil for frying

Instructions

For Tambran Chutney

  1. Break the tamarind and remove the skin and veins from it.
  2. In a sauce pan put the tamarind and pour water till the tamarind are immersed.
  3. After It boils for a while and cooks well the seeds starts coming out and the tamarind mushes.
  4. Remove all the seeds from the tamarind pulp.
  5. In a mixer put coriander leaves , garlic,habanero Chilli with some water make a coarse paste.
  6. Add sugar, salt, coriander mixture,pepper pd and mix them well.
  7. Cook the chutney for 5-6 mins till it thickens.

For Pholourie

  1. Soak chick pea dal in water overnight or 5 hours at least. Drain the water fro the dal.
  2. In Mixer put the dal, chillies,garlic and blend it till a smooth paste. Transfer it to a bowl.
  3. In a bowl take luke warm water add dry yeast to it and wait till it froths up.
  4. Add flour, turmeric, salt,yeast mixture to the dal and mix them well.
  5. Cover and keep the batter in a warm place for proofing about an hour.
  6. After the batter rises mix them well.
  7. Heat oil in a pan , add a spoon of batter to the hot oil and fry till golden brown.
  8. Do the same for rest of the batter. Serve them hot with Tambran chutney.

Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (14)

Check out the Blogging Marathon page for the other Blogging Marathoners doing BM# 87

Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (15)Loading InLinkz ...

Related

Previous Post: « Orange Sondesh Recipe | Orange Sandesh | Orange Rasmalai ~ Bengali Sweets

Next Post: Qatayef with Qishta Karsan Recipe | Middle Eastern Street Food »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (16)Priya Suresh says

    Am yet to make some pholourie its in my to do list since a long, and that tambran chutney is just prefect to munch those cutie looking fritters without any fuss. Those pholourie looks prefect is shapes Manju, you nailed it amazingly.

  2. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (17)Vaishali says

    Excellent fluffy pakodas, would love to try them with that tongue tickling tamarind chutney..I am great fan of tamarind chutney and this chutney sounds lip smacking. Beautifully presented bookmarking the post.

  3. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (18)harini says

    Such a unique way to make these fritters. Love that chutney as well.

  4. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (19)Sandhiya ThirumalaiKumar says

    Pholourie looks so crispy and with that tambran chutney, it must be delicious, Manjula. As usual the pictures are so inviting and wanna dig into that right now !!!

  5. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (20)Srividhya Gopalakrishnan says

    Both the chutney and the pholourie is so inviting… Love the lighting in this picture. I am just staring at it for a long time now. Great pick for P.

  6. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (21)Sharmila Kingsly says

    Chutney and pholourie makes the perfect combination.. Perfect snack!!

  7. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (22)Gayathri Kumar says

    That is an amazing street food from Trinidad. The fritters and the spicy tangy chutney looks like a perfect pair.

  8. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (23)kalyani says

    such a lovely pick ! and that combo seems to be a rocking one.. good one…

  9. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (24)Mayuri Patel says

    Pholourie with tambran look so tempting. This has been on my list of to do since I was doing a research for Caribbean cuisine. Lovely pick for street food as they are quite popular in that part of the world.

  10. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (25)Srivalli says

    We all loved the pholourie when I made it couple of months back..I had this for the themes and I skipped it a couple of times, and finally ended up making it. Gosh, it was so good, though I skipped the tamarind chutney..will surely try it together next time..lovely pictures manjula..

  11. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (26)Pavani says

    That’s a very interesting pakoda recipe. Adding yeast sure made them fluffy and puffed. That tamarind chutney sounds like the best accompaniment to those yummy Pholourie.

  12. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (27)sapana says

    Pholourie sounds like an interesting version of chickpea fritters and much more airy too. I could finish them all with the tempting tamarind chutney.

  13. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (28)Sandhya Ramakrishnan says

    What an amazing recipe and love to see how the different cuisines have siilar recipes with slight variations. The Pholourie looks super tempting!

  14. Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (29)Padmajha PJ says

    Very interesting recipe Manjula. Nice to note about yeast being used to make these Pholourie. It must have given them such an airy texture. And that chutney is finger licking good!

Pholourie with Tambran Chutney Recipe |Trinidad Street Food - Desi Fiesta (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between tamarind paste and tamarind chutney? ›

Tamarind paste is made by soaking tamarind pods in water and then grinding it to a paste. While tamarind chutney uses other ingredients like dates, jaggery powder and spices along with the tamarind paste to form the chutney.

What is the difference between Guyanese Bara and pholourie? ›

How can you tell your bara from your pholourie? Both are fritters, made from ground chickpea flour. Bara are sometimes flattish and pan-fried, but often they are deep-fried just like pholourie, and the resulting golden orbs are almost identical in appearance.

What is Trinidad signature dish? ›

When you think of Trinidadian cuisine, roti, crab and callaloo, and Pelau probably rank toward the top. You really can't go wrong with any of these, but Pelau is something special. This rice-based dish is the ultimate comfort food that locals and tourists can enjoy.

Is tamarind chutney good for you? ›

Tamarind contains a high amount of potassium which might help with blood pressure and heart rate. Tamarind might also help in lowering bad cholesterol levels and may decrease the risk of atherosclerosis (heart disease).

Does Indian food use tamarind paste? ›

Many fusion recipes lean on tamarind as a marinade for meats and fishes because the tartaric acid in the ingredient is a powerful tenderizer. Indian cuisine uses tamarind in chutneys, curries and pickles. Tamarind is also turned into different types of sweet syrups that flavors sodas, co*cktails and iced teas.

What is tamarind paste in Indian food? ›

In Indian cuisine, tangy tamarind plays many roles. It acts as a preservative, a cooling agent, and a remedy—its paste relieves the itchy mouthfeel that comes from eating tubers like yam and taro.

What is pholourie made of? ›

Traditional Guyanese pholourie uses dried yellow split peas which are soaked overnight then blended with water until smooth. All-purpose flour and seasonings are then added to make a batter. Many other Guyanese versions use split pea flour in place of dried split peas (which is the version you'll be making here).

What is pholourie? ›

Pholourie is a snack food of Indo-Caribbean origin. It's common in Trinidad & Tobago, Guyana, and other parts of the Caribbean. I've made a yellow split pea version of the pholourie which is so delicious. It's like a fried split pea, and dough ball that you serve with flavorful chutney.

What is Trinidad doubles made of? ›

Doubles is a humble sandwich made from curried chickpeas tucked between two pieces of fried flat bread and dressed in tamarind and coriander sauces, mango chutney, kuchela (spicy, green mango chutney) and cucumber.

What is spinach called in Trinidad? ›

Amaranthus dubius locally known as “spinach bhaggi” or wild bhaggi is the only leafy vegetable where the seed is not imported for the establishment of a crop.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Gov. Deandrea McKenzie

Last Updated:

Views: 6537

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Gov. Deandrea McKenzie

Birthday: 2001-01-17

Address: Suite 769 2454 Marsha Coves, Debbieton, MS 95002

Phone: +813077629322

Job: Real-Estate Executive

Hobby: Archery, Metal detecting, Kitesurfing, Genealogy, Kitesurfing, Calligraphy, Roller skating

Introduction: My name is Gov. Deandrea McKenzie, I am a spotless, clean, glamorous, sparkling, adventurous, nice, brainy person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.