Ingredients
Method
- Roast the cashews in ghee and keep aside.
- Pressure cook rice and moong daal together with 4 cups of water upto 6 whistles (with 3 whistles on lower flame)
- In the meantime, in a wide pan, bring a pound of jaggery to a boil with about 1.5 cups of water. Once the entire jaggery has dissolved, strain it using a clean cloth for any impurities.
- Clean the pan and spoon for any impurities, and add back the strained jaggery water.
- Keep boiling the jaggery water. It would first reach a thread consistency (as the spoon is lifted, the last bit of jaggery from the spoon would drop like a thin thread).
- Continue to boil on a lower flame until it reaches the getti paagu (thick syrup) consistency. Take a little bit of paagu (syrup) and drop it into a bowl of water. It will instantly cool down. Pick it up and try to roll it between your fingers. It shouldn’t disintegrate in water and should roll up into a perfect ball. This is the consistency the syrup needs to reach, to be ready for the pongal. Turn off the flame once the paagu consistency is reached.
- Soon after the pressure is reduced, open the cooker and mash the rice mixture. Add some ghee to the mashed mixture so that there are no lumps.
- Add the mashed rice mixture to the paagu and cook on a low flame. Jaggery will become slightly watery now. Add the remaining ghee in small batches till it is fully absorbed.
- Soon after it reaches semi-solid consistency, turn off the flame.
- Add the roasted cashews, cardamom powder, pound nutmeg and pachai karpooram to Sakkarai Pongal and mix well. Sakkarai Pongal is now ready to be served to Perumal!
Notes
Paagu vellam (jaggery) is best, while regular jaggery works too.
Adjust the jaggery and ghee quantities as per taste requirements.
Taste is further enhanced when Sakkarai Pongal is prepared in a venkala paanai (Bronze pot)
1 cup of boiled milk could also be added to mash rice and daal together before it is added to the getti paagu, to enhance the taste.
