Shankarpali (sweet)
The most favorite Diwali faral sweet in my household! crunchy fried doughnuts/ cookie pieces is the best way I can describe them!
My maternal grandmom makes the best Shankarpali that I have ever eaten and below is her recipe! I failed at it slightly last year, but this year I aced it. Posting this much after Diwali, but hey, the ones I made in Diwali have long gone, and I am considering making them again! So you might want to as well 🙂
You will need:
One cup of milk
¾ cup of ghee
One cup of granulated sugar
Pinch of salt
2 cups of whole wheat flour
3 cups of all purpose flour (maida) (you can use 5 cups of APF instead or any combination, to have 5 cups of flour going in. The more APF you add, better the taste. More whole wheat flour will make it less puffy and dense)
Refined oil for frying
- You can use a smaller cup or bowl and make more or less quantity. The key is to use one measure for everything, doesn’t matter what the cup size is!
Procedure:
- Boil the milk, ghee and sugar together, bring to a rolling boil and make sure that the sugar has dissolved completely.
- Let it boil for a couple minutes – stir continuously.
- Pour in a flat container and let it cool thoroughly
- Blend the flours and salt well
- To the cooled down liquid mixture add the flour mixture and knead dough. You should get a soft dough. You should not need to add more liquid. If the dough starts feeling too hard or dry, omit some flour.
- Knead the dough very well and rest it for 20 minutes
- Heat oil for frying
- Divide the dough in manageable portions and roll out a thin layer (about 2-3 mm thick)
- Check if the oil is hot by putting a small pieces of flattened dough to it – it should sink and float right back to the top and should puff up
- Cut small diamond shapes from the rolled out sough (length about 1 inch) and fry a bunch at a time. They will not stick, so don’t worry
- Stir them while frying and keep pushing them in the oil and flip continuously
- Fry until golden brown and remove in a dish lined with paper towel
- Try one when its cooled, to check if they are crispy like they should be!
- Store in an air tight jar once completely cooled down. Stays crunchy and fresh tasting for 2-3 weeks in cold weather!
You can also make a savory version, check out the recipe for Savory shankarpali here.