I had always thought of Samosas as
Samosa is a triangular shaped pastry with a spicy vegetable filling, usually peas and potatoes, but meat or fish also can be used. A typical Samosa is deep fried in a lot of oil. Here I have used pie crust like pastry for making the outer covering of the samosa, and I have baked it instead of frying.
To make the samosa covering, mix 1 ½ cups of flour(plus salt to taste) with 4 tbsp butter and mix it together using hands or a food processor until the mixture resembles like corn meal. Then add ice cold water one tbsp at a time and keep on mixing until it forms a stiff dough, about 4-6 tbsp water will be sufficient. Do not add too much water. Cover it with a plastic wrap and keep in the refrigerator while you prepare the stuffing.
For the potato-peas filling, start out by heating up a large woke or shallow frying pan, and add 2 tbsp of oil.
Add 1 medium sized onion (chopped), and cook until light golden brown.
Add 1 tsp minced ginger, 1 finely chopped green chilli, and 1 tsp minced garlic(optional).
Add a cup of frozen green peas and fry until the water from the peas evaporates. Add one finely chopped carrot along with the peas if you wish. It is optional.
Crush 1 tsp of coriander seeds, 1 dried red chilli, and 1 tsp of cumin seeds together in a mortar and pestle and add to the wok. Alternatively, you may add coriander powder, cumin powder, and chilli powder or crushed red pepper flakes.
Add potatoes(boiled, peeled and cubed), about 2-3 cups.
Add a tsp of garam masala powder and salt to taste.
Add lemon juice(juice from a half big lemon).
Stir and cook for about 3-5 minutes.
Turn off the stove and let it cool.
Prepare egg wash by mixing one egg with 1 tbsp water.
Take out the dough from the refrigerator and knead again. Roll it into small chapathis and cut them in half. Stuff each half with about 1 tbsp filling (or more depending on the size of your pastry) and roll it in to a triangle shape. Seal the edges with water or egg wash.
Line a baking sheet with parchment paper and arrange the samosas. Brush egg wash over samosas. Bake it at 400 degree F for about 30-35 minutes or until golden brown.
Serve warm with tamarind dipping sauce.


27 comments:
Awesome recipe. Can this be done with no egg wash. Thanks.
If you use pastry covering, you can easily bake these, regular atta covering doesn't come out that well unless you fry.
Pasties from UK is similar to this, I made them with Linda's recipe with meat filling of course. Great entry, looks good!:)
RP, baked samosas make me want to make them right away. The deep frying what frightens me usually.
I tried your mutton curry and it came out fantastic. thank you.
Hi RP,
samosa is my all time favourite.
thanks for sharing
vineela
wow!baked samosas sounds great and healthy too..awesome recipe
lovely entry! and i didnt know we cud bake samosas :) looks nice!
I have never made samosas at home... I always thought if I must deep fry something at home, it better be chicken ;) the baked version is a great idea... :)
nice recipe..I am not too fond of deep frying,,but this is a good alternative..can we skip the egg part?
i use tortillas sometimes becz i get lazy :) they look great, and with a cup of chai, omg...
baking samosas is a great idea ! Can have these goodies without guilt :)
Hi RP! The baked samosas luk so cute. I have tried baking them before and they dont compare to the deep fried ones at all! :( I made small baby sized ones last time and that came out pretty well when Baked. Your pics luk amazing though for having been baked. Thanks for sending them to me :)
Lovely snack!! Good idea for baking the samosas
they look so cute...
but I guess fried samosas taste better than baked ...
its agreat entry..
hugs and smiles
jaya
Looks like they turned out great for you RP! pastry makes things so much easier:)
baked..that is wonderful. I will give this a try
Nice recipe...Lovely snack...
these samosas are baked ...good..then I can make these as my husband did not like oily stuff
Lovely Samosas!!It is healthy too..I will try this sometime later.
mythreyee, it should be possible. Egg wash gives it a nice glossy look. I guess it might be alright without it. Try brushing some oil if you prefer.
asha, you are right. Pastry covering do well in baking.
indosungod, thanks for the feedback on mutton curry. I hope you will like samosas as well.
vineela, who could resist a spicy samosa with a cup of tea!
dhivya, glad you liked them.
nags, you better call them pies! Deep fried samosas are tastier. But baked ones are okay too.
sig, I hate deep frying inside the house too. You are such a chicken lover! :)
sowmya, egg wash gives a glossy look. Without that, I guess it might look a little different. Hope you will try it.
alpa, tortillas? and you fry them after wrapping in tortilla? Sounds great.
pravs, yup! No guilt! :)
That's a great idea event though I guess the fried ones taste better. Don't they always?:{
samosas look beautiful
RP, that's a great idea to bake in a pie crust! And never thought to add lemon to the filling. They look delicious :)
Hi, Grt recipe.. i love your blog and ur recipes.. Inspired of u and fellow bloggers i started a food blog..
do Visit my blog, http://welcomehunger.blogspot.com and pass ur comments and please link me from ur blog
Thanks,
Ramya
hey Rp, would you like to be a part of Arusuvai friendship chain ? Please let me know. Thanks :)
hey what happened you..long time no see
hey what happened you..long time no see
Post a Comment