Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe – Sweet Potatoes Made Delicious

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe
Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe! Yes, another pithe, blame my Bong genes which keeps craving these nostalgic treats. Ranga Alu is nothing but sweet potatoes. I remember those afternoons in our ancestral village home when my grandma would simply roast sweet potatoes in the dying embers of her clay oven after she was done cooking the lunch for her family of 24 members. She would very patiently peel off the roasted potatoes, make little portions out of them and feed the grandkids one by one.

The “pak ghor” or my grandma’s kitchen was our favorite place to be, in the hope of being fed little things in between the meal preps and heavy duty cooking. That very visual makes me feel like I am a thousand years old. How could time go by so fast? Today my grandparents are gone; the house is in the process of being torn down. All that remain are tender memories.

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe – Delicious Sweet Potatoes

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe
Ranga Alur Puli Pithe

The Ranga Alur puli pithe recipe is made using the very seasonal (back home) sweet potatoes, some flour and of course, these have a delicious coconut filling. Deep fried and then dunked in sugar syrup. The sinfulness of these babies knows no bound and can handhold you to destruction if you are in a January healthy eating mode. But then if you go by a Bengali foodie calendar, such a thing as healthy eating needs cosmic intervention. So right after the bacchanal welcome to the New Year is done with, we are in the Sankranti mode. All the foodie nostalgia engulfs you and causes you to take a detour on your way back home from work in search of the ingredient that leads you to Bong ambrosian bliss – Nolen Gur or the Patali Gur. Once you have sourced the Patali, rest is easy.

So here is the Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe for you to make and enjoy. I do urge you to exercise caution and moderation as these severely addictive.

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Ranga Alur Puli Pithe Recipe

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe


  • Author: Somdatta
  • Prep Time: 10
  • Cook Time: 30
  • Total Time: 40
  • Yield: 10

Description

Ranga Alur Puli Pithe is a traditional and rustic pithe that is made from sweet potatoes with a coconut filling, deep fried and then dunked in sugar syrup.


Ingredients

For the pithe

  • Sweet Potato – 3, large (1 ½ cup mashed pulp)
  • All Purpose Flour – ½ cup
  • Rice Flour – 1 tbsp
  • Salt – ¼ tsp

For the Coconut Filling

  • Ghee – 2 tsp
  • Grated Coconut – 1 cup
  • Sugar – ¼ cup
  • Jaggery – ½ cup, powdered
  • Cardamom Powder – 1 tsp
  • Vegetable oil – 2 cups ( for frying the pithes)

For the Sugar Syrup

  • Water – 2 cups
  • Sugar – ¾ cup
  • Jaggery – ½ cup, powdered
  • Cardamom Powder – 2 tsp

Instructions

For the coconut filling

  1. Heat a pan and add the ghee. As it melts, add the coconut and stir for a couple of minutes.
  2. Add the sugar and let it melt.
  3. Throw in the jaggery and let it melt. Keep mixing everything together.
  4. Add the cardamom powder and mix in. Keep cooking the mixture for 7-8 mins or until it comes together such that once fisted it should hold the shape.

For the sweet potatoes

  1. Cook the sweet potatoes in boiling water for 10 -15 mins until they are fork tender. Strain away the water and let them cook down. You can microwave the potatoes too.
  2. Peel them and mash the potatoes with the salt.
  3. Add the flours and mix together. It should come together in smooth and soft dough and not stick to your fingers. If the dough is moist and sticky, feel free to add a tbsp. or so of flour.

For the Sugar Syrup

  1. Heat all the ingredients except the cardamom powder and let it come to a boil.
  2. Let it boil over medium flame for 8-10 mins. Test a drop of the syrup between the tips of your fingers. It should have a one-string consistency.
  3. Add the cardamom powder, remove from stove and keep warm.

Assembling the pithes

  1. Out of the sweet potato dough, make golf ball sized dough balls. I got about 10.
  2. Take one dough ball and roll it out to a small circle. Use dry flour if required.
  3. Now take 1 tbsp of the coconut mixture and place in the center of the circle. Close the circle by taking the seams and pressing them together kind of like an empanada. It will look like a semi circle after the exercise is over.
  4. Also, feel free to make some pattern on the edges. It just looks good.
  5. Now heat the vegetable oil, and deep fry the pithes, a few at a time to a golden brown over a medium flame.
  6. Once they are fried, take them out and dunk them in the warm sugar syrup for about 4-5 mins.
  7. Take them out and serve them.

Notes

  • When the sweet potatoes are done cooking, immediately remove them from the water. If you let it sit in the boiled water it absorbs even more moisture.
  • If you want to make the recipe even richer and decadent, fry the pithes in ghee instead.
  • Also I used the red skinned sweet potato with a white interior for these pithes and not the usual orange sweet potato that is more prevalent here.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 10
  • Calories: 0
  • Sugar: 0
  • Sodium: 0
  • Fat: 0
  • Saturated Fat: 0
  • Unsaturated Fat: 0
  • Trans Fat: 0
  • Carbohydrates: 0
  • Protein: 0
  • Cholesterol: 0

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