PazhamPori (pronounced – Param pori) needs no special introduction to any Malayalee. It is a deep fried fritter made with ripe plantains. As the fritter is made with Ripe plantain or Ethapazham (pronounced - Etha Param) , it is also called as Ethakapoli by few.
My mom used to make this quite often when we were kids, but do you know when I actually started to love and crave for this tea time snack? During my college days and stay in hostels.
After a long and exciting day in college, my main motto
would be to get back to ladies hostel before the evening snacks got over ;-P
In the hostel canteen, they would just cut a whole ripe plantain
in half and dip them in maida batter and fry them until golden brown. I guess
more than the fritters I guess it was size of the fritters that allured me :-) I mean , my mom never served a plantain fritter
that was half the banana itself!! The only downside was, we were allowed to take
only One…so our next mission would be to wait till everyone finishes
their tea and snack and hope for leftovers, thankfully by now my friends would
also join in the waiting :-P
PazhamPori with some sweet elaichi-ginger Tea is my absolute favorite way of having an evening snack and a few weeks back when I saw some super ripe and huge plantains at our downtown farmers market I had to grab a few. And I din’t have to think twice as to what I wanted to make with them.
Mildly chewy on the outside, soft and sweet on the inside and golden brown, there's nothing you won't love about this snack and it's a fried snack I (we) don't mind enjoying anytime! And if your plantain is super ripe, then they literally melt in your mouth like how mine were. Delicious!
Mummy still doesn't prefer serving up
half a plantain as a fritter, so I had to cut them up into small pieces…oh
well, just eat few extra pieces and that’ll make your half plaintain :-P
And as it was made on a lazy weekend evening and my lil’Appu
was happily sleeping, I took few step-wise pics as well. Ahem! those glasses are my dad’s, borrowed for my
quick little photoshoot ;-)
Here's a pictorial on how I made these:
Peel and cut the ripe plantain however you like.
Into a wide bowl add 1 cup of all-purpose flour. Then add a heaped tablespoon of rice flour (the rice flour adds a bit of crunch once fried)
Add some turmeric, sugar and salt. Add enough water to make a smooth batter.
Batter shouldn't be lumpy and neither too thick nor too runny, just good enough to coat the plantain slices.
Fry the ripe plantain on both sides until they are nice and golden brown and mildly caramelized.
Here's a pictorial on how I made these:
Peel and cut the ripe plantain however you like.
Into a wide bowl add 1 cup of all-purpose flour. Then add a heaped tablespoon of rice flour (the rice flour adds a bit of crunch once fried)
Add some turmeric, sugar and salt. Add enough water to make a smooth batter.
Batter shouldn't be lumpy and neither too thick nor too runny, just good enough to coat the plantain slices.
Fry the ripe plantain on both sides until they are nice and golden brown and mildly caramelized.
PazhamPori (Ripe Plaintain fritters)
You’ll
need:
Ripe
plantain – 2 large or 3-4 small ones
All
purpose flour (Maida) – 1 cup
Rice
Flour (Ari podi) – 1 heaped tblsp
Turmeric
powder – ¼ tsp
Sugar
– 1 tsp
Salt
– a pinch
Water
– ¼ cup (more or less as needed)
Oil
for frying (I used Canola oil and shallow fried)
Directions:
1. Peel and cut the ripe plantain. I cut them in half and then into thirds.
2. In a wide bowl mix the All-purpose flour, Rice flour, Turmeric powder, Sugar and Salt
with enough water to make a batter that isn't too thick nor too runny.
3. Heat oil in a pan. Coat the ripe plantain slices on all sides with the batter and fry them until golden brown.
Suggestions:
1. If
your plantain isn’t too ripe or sweet add more sugar to the batter mix (about 3-4 tsp).
2. You
may cut the plantain however you like , only make sure it is coated and fried well.
3. You
can deep fry if you’d like.
4. Using
Coconut oil would bring out a very authentic Keralite taste.
5. I have seen recipes that add baking soda or baking powder while making the batter, but I've never added it while making at home.
5. I have seen recipes that add baking soda or baking powder while making the batter, but I've never added it while making at home.
-Manju