Dal Tadka is a popular Indian lentil dish made with arhar dal (husked & split pigeon pea lentils) or masoor dal (husked & split red lentils). This Dal Tadka recipe gives you a delicious creamy dal with smoked flavors.
In this post I am sharing 2 versions of the recipe.
- Restaurant Style Dal Tadka – Made on Stovetop with an optional smoking method.
- Home Style Dal Tadka – Made in the Instant Pot.
Both the recipes are easy and taste good. You can make either of them as per your preference. For making homestyle dal tadka on stovetop, check the notes section in the recipe card of instant pot dal tadka recipe.
Table of Contents
About this Recipe
Dal Tadka is one of the most popular lentil dish served in Indian restaurants. Basically, dal tadka is cooked lentils which are tempered with oil or ghee fried spices & herbs.
I have to admit that I simply love the dal tadka that is served at the restaurants even though we hardly eat out.
So I try to recreate the restaurant magic in most of the food that I make at home. Here the restaurant style flavors come from smoking the dal using a red-hot charcoal.
Trust me, this simple method of smoking makes the dal so much flavorful and tasty. In Hindi language we also call this smoking technique as dhungar.
This Dal Tadka recipe is more of a North Indian style recipe.
What does Dal Tadka mean?
- Dal is the Hindi term for lentils.
- Tadka or Chaunk is the Hindi term for tempering and is a commonly employed cooking technique in the Indian cuisine.
- Tempering method has the spices & herbs fried in oil. The frying of the spices and herbs release their essential oils, aroma and flavor in the hot oil. This fried spices, herbs, oil mixture is added to prepared lentils or cooked rice or steamed vegetables and it greatly changes the flavor, aroma and taste of the dish. Tempering is very much a part of cooking Indian food and we use this method while making dal, vegetable dishes or chutneys.
Lentils added
- Tuvar dal – Generally dal tadka is made with tuvar dal or arhar dal also known as split pigeon pea lentils. In this post, I have shared the dal recipe made with tuvar dal.
- Moong dal – Even moong lentils can be used to make the recipe. At times I make this recipe both with tuvar dal and moong dal. The recipe can also be made with a mix of masoor dal (red lentils) and pigeon pea lentils. If you want to use moong dal then you can refer this post – Moong Dal Tadka.
How to make Dal Tadka
1. Rinse 1 cup tuvar dal or arhar dal (split & husked pigeon pea lentils) for a couple of times in water. Add them to a 3 litre pressure cooker.
You can also cook the lentils in a pot. Soak the lentils for an hour or two before you cook them in a pot. The method on cooking lentils in a pot is mentioned in the notes section of the recipe card below.
2. Add ½ cup chopped onions, 1 cup finely chopped tomatoes, 1 or 2 green chilies (1 teaspoon of chopped Anaheim pepper or Serrano pepper can be subbed for green chillies) and 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger.
3. Pour 2.5 cups of water. If cooking in a pot, then about 4 to 4.5 cups of water can be added.
4. Add ½ turmeric powder and 1 pinch of asafoetida (hing). If you do not have asafoetida, then skip it.
5. Mix well.
6. Pressure cook the lentils for about 7 to 8 whistles or more till they become soft and creamy. Mash the cooked lentils with a wired whisk or with a spoon and keep aside.
If the consistency looks thick, then add some water. About ½ cup to 1 cup water (depending on the thickness) to get a medium consistency. Simmer dal for 3 to 4 minutes. Consistency of the lentils in the below photo.
7. Once the desired consistency is reached, add 1 to 2 tablespoons low-fat cream (optional), ½ teaspoon garam masala powder, 2 tablespoons chopped coriander leaves (cilantro) and salt as per paste. Switch off the the heat.
8. Mix well so that everything combines uniformly. Check the salt before you add the tempering. If the salt is less than add more salt to the dal.
9. The final consistency of the cooked dal.
Optional – smoking or dhungar method
10. Next is the dhungar method of flavoring dal tadka with the smoky fumes of burnt charcoal. For this with the help of tongs or on a grill pan like shown in the photo below, place a small piece of charcoal.
Burn the charcoal till it becomes red hot. Please use natural charcoal for this method. Note that this is an optional step and you can proceed directly to the tempering method.
11. Place the red hot charcoal in a small steel bowl. You can also use onion layers or a halved hollow onion for the same.
12. Pour about ¼ tsp of oil or ghee on the charcoal. You will see fumes emanating as soon as you pour oil or ghee on the hot charcoal.
13. Place this bowl on the dal.
14. Cover the cooker or the pot with a lid and let the dal get infused with the charcoal smoke. Just keep for 1 to 2 minutes.
Do not keep for a long time as then the dal can taste bitter. Remove the bowl carefully with the help of tongs and cover the cooker with a lid. Set aside.
Making tempering or tadka
15. Next heat 3 tablespoons oil or ghee (clarified butter) in a small pan. First, add 1 teaspoon cumin seeds and crackle them. The cumin should get fried and not be raw, but don’t burn them.
16. Now add 2 to 3 dry red chilies, a generous pinch of asafoetida and 5 to 6 medium sized garlic cloves which have been finely chopped. Let the garlic brown and the red chilies change color. Do not burn the garlic.
17. Lastly add 1 teaspoon crushed kasuri methi and ½ teaspoon red chili powder or cayenne pepper. Mix and switch off the stove. Make sure to fry the tempering ingredients at a low flame, so that you don’t burn them.
18. Pour entire tempering along with the oil or ghee into the dal.
19. You can mix the dal with tempering or serve the dal tadka with the tempering on top it. Garnish with coriander leaves. Serve it hot with steamed basmati rice, cumin rice or with Indian flatbread like roti or paratha or chapati or naan.
Serving Suggestions
The tempering adds a lot of flavor, aroma and thus the dal tadka gets paired beautifully with steamed rice or jeera rice (cumin flavored pilaf).
Dal tadka can be also be served with roti or naan or dinner rolls or paratha.
Expert Tips
- Preparation: First, cook the lentils and then lastly temper it just before serving. You can also cook the lentils first and keep in the fridge. Before serving reheat the lentils and then temper it. Serve immediately. However for best taste always prepare the lentils fresh. It not only tastes good but also a healthier choice.
- Type of Lentils: You can make it with any yellow dal (split lentils). I make it sometimes with Tuvar dal (split pigeon pea lentils) and Masoor dal (split pink lentils) and sometimes only with Tuvar dal.
- Tomatoes: I have added tomatoes and it gives a nice tang. If you do not have tomatoes, then add ½ to 1 teaspoon of lemon juice when the lentils are cooked.
- Tempering: You can temper or fry the spices and herbs in either ghee or oil. In the recipe I have used sunflower oil but ghee (clarified butter) also gives a good flavor. You can even use peanut oil or any neutral flavored oil.
- Dhungar Method: In the step by stepwise photos below, I have illustrated the charcoal smoking method as it gives a really good smoky flavor to the lentils. You can easily skip this method if you don’t have charcoal. Another alternative to get that smoky flavor is to add smoked paprika instead of red chilli powder or cayenne pepper.
- Consistency: The consistency of the cooked dal is neither thick nor thin but medium. But if you prefer you can opt for a slightly thick or thin dal consistency.
- Soaking Lentils: You can also soak the lentils for 30 to 40 minutes before cooking them. This helps in cooking the lentils faster and a recommended step.
Dal is a staple in Indian food. India has so many varieties of dal recipes. Each region, each state having their own delicious recipes.
More Popular Dal Recipes
Dal (Lentils) & Legumes
Dal (Lentils) & Legumes
Dal (Lentils) & Legumes
Dal (Lentils) & Legumes
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Restaurant Style Dal Tadka Recipe
Ingredients
for cooking lentils
- 1 cup tuvar dal (arhar dal or split pigeon pea lentils) or 200 grams or ½ cup tuvar dal + ½ cup masoor dal (split pink lentils)
- 1 to 2 green chilies or serrano peppers – chopped or slit lengthwise
- ½ cup chopped onions or 1 medium sized onion
- 1 cup finely chopped tomatoes or 2 medium sized tomatoes
- 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger or 1 inch ginger, peeled and finely chopped
- ½ teaspoon turmeric powder (ground turmeric)
- ½ teaspoon Garam Masala
- 1 pinch asafoetida (hing) – optional
- 2.5 cups water – for pressure cooking
- 1 or 2 tablespoon low-fat cream – optional
- 2 tablespoon chopped coriander leaves (cilantro)
- salt as required
for tempering or tadka
- 3 tablespoon oil or 3 tablespoon ghee (clarified butter)
- 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
- 5 to 6 medium garlic cloves – finely chopped
- 2 to 3 dry red chilies – broken and seeds removed
- a generous pinch of asafoetida (hing) – optional
- 1 teaspoon crushed kasuri methi (dry fenugreek leaves) – optional
- ½ teaspoon red chili powder or cayenne pepper or paprika
for garnish
- 1 tablespoon chopped coriander leaves (cilantro)
for dhungar method
- a small piece of charcoal
- ¼ teaspoon oil or ghee (clarified butter)
Instructions
1. cook lentils
- 1. Thoroughly rinse 1 cup tuvar dal (arhar dal, or split & husked pigeon pea lentils) in water. Add them to a 3-litre pressure cooker.No pressure cooker? You can also cook the lentils in a pot. Soak the lentils for an hour or two before you cook them in a pot.
- 2. Add ½ cup chopped onions, 1 cup finely chopped tomatoes, 1 or 2 green chilies (1 teaspoon of chopped Anaheim pepper or Serrano pepper can be subbed for green chillies) and 1 teaspoon finely chopped ginger.
- 3. Pour 2.5 cups of water into the pressure cooker. If cooking in a pot, then about 4 to 4.5 cups of water can be added.
- 4. Add ½ turmeric powder and 1 pinch of asafoetida (hing). If you do not have asafoetida, then skip it. 5. Mix well.
- 6. Pressure cook the lentils for about 7-8 whistles, or until they become soft and creamy. Mash the cooked lentils with a wired whisk or with a spoon and keep aside. If the consistency looks thick, then add about ½ – 1 cup water (depending on the thickness) to get a medium consistency. Simmer dal for 3 to 4 minutes.
- 7. Once the desired consistency is reached, add 1-2 tablespoons low-fat cream (optional), ½ teaspoon garam masala powder, 2 tablespoons chopped coriander leaves (cilantro) and salt to taste. Switch off the the heat.
- 8. Mix well so that everything combines uniformly. Taste and adjust salt before adding tadka.
2. Smoke lentils using dhungar method (optional)
- 10. To get the smoky fumes of burnt charcoal like you would in a restaurant, you'll want to follow the dhungar method. Using tongs, place a small piece of charcoal on a grill pan like shown in the photo below. Burn the charcoal till it becomes red hot. Please be sure to use natural charcoal for this method, avoiding anything that has a flame accelerant added. Note that this is an optional step – you can proceed directly to the tempering method.
- 11. Place the red hot charcoal in a small steel bowl. You can also use a halved hollow onion instead of the bowl.
- 12. Pour about ¼ tsp of oil or ghee on the charcoal. You will see fumes emanating as soon as you pour oil or ghee on the hot charcoal.
- 13. Place this bowl on the dal.
- 14. Cover the cooker or pot with a lid and let the dal get infused. Only smoke for 1-2 minutes. Do not keep for a long time, or you'll risk making the dal taste bitter. Remove the bowl carefully with the help of tongs and cover the cooker with a lid. Set aside.
make the tempering (tadka or chaunk)
- 15. Next, heat 3 tablespoons oil or ghee (clarified butter) in a small pan over low-medium heat. First, add 1 teaspoon cumin seeds and crackle them. The cumin should get fried and not be raw, but be careful not burn them.
- 16. Now add 2 to 3 dry red chilies, a generous pinch of asafoetida, and 5-6 medium sized garlic cloves which have been finely chopped. Let the garlic brown lightly and the red chilies change color. Do not burn the garlic.
- 17. Lastly, add 1 teaspoon crushed kasuri methi (fenugreek seeds) and ½ teaspoon red chili powder or cayenne pepper. Mix well and turn off the stove.
- 18. Pour entire tempering along with the oil or ghee into the dal.
- 19. You can either mix the dal with tempering, or serve the dal tadka with the tempering on top it. I personally like the aesthetic of having the tadka floating on top. Garnish with coriander leaves. Enjoy!
- Serving Suggestion: Serve dal tadka hot with steamed basmati rice or jeera rice (cumin rice), or with roti, naan or paratha.
Video
Notes
- Type of Lentils: You can make the recipe with any yellow dal (split lentils). I make it sometimes with Tuvar dal (split pigeon pea lentils) and Masoor dal (split & husked red lentils) and sometimes only with Tuvar dal. You can even add an equal mix of tuvar dal and moong dal.
- Soaking Lentils: You can also soak the lentils for 30 to 40 minutes before cooking them.
- Tomatoes: I have added tomatoes and it gives a nice tang. If you do not have tomatoes, then add ½ to 1 teaspoon of lemon juice when the lentils are cooked.
- Tempering: You can temper or fry the spices and herbs in either ghee or oil. In the recipe I have used sunflower oil but ghee (clarified butter) also gives a good flavor. You can even use peanut oil or any neutral flavored oil.
- Dhungar Method: You can easily skip the charcoal smoking method if you don’t have charcoal. Another alternative to get that smoky flavor is to add smoked paprika instead of red chilli powder or cayenne pepper.
- Consistency: The consistency of the cooked dal is neither thick nor thin but medium. But if you prefer you can opt for a slightly thick or thin dal consistency.
- Soaking Lentils: You can also soak the lentils for 30 to 40 minutes before cooking them. This helps in cooking the lentils faster and a recommended step.
- Soak the lentils for about 1 to 2 hours. Drain and rinse then well in water.
- In a deep pot, add 4 to 5 cups water added to the lentils. Add the rest of the ingredients mentioned in the recipe.
- Cover and cook the lentils. If the water begins to froth and bubble, then remove the lid or cover it partly and continue to cook the lentils till they become soft and creamy.
- If the water becomes less, then add some hot water.
- Once the lentils are cooked (takes from 45 minutes to an hour or sometimes more (depends on the quality and age of the lentils). Then follow the recipe further.
Nutrition Info (Approximate Values)
About Instant Pot Dal Tadka
Dal is a staple at home and I make them in different varieties. What I am sharing in this post, is a version that has been made for decades and is still being made.
A family recipe and one which I make often. A comforting and nourishing dal recipe which I hope you enjoy as much as we do. This is a vegan recipe and can be made gluten-free by skipping asafoetida.
There are many variations of making dal tadka. This instant pot recipe is a home-style version and tastes good like an everyday home cooked food.
After getting the instant pot, I have been making dal in it. I have stopped using the stove-top pressure cooker completely. Thus I have updated this post with the instant pot method also. I have included the stovetop method of this homestyle dal tadka in the recipe card.
At times I even cook the rice along with the dal. I usually serve this dal tadka with roti (Indian flatbread) or steamed rice. So when making rice, I cook the rice and dal together in the IP.
It is best served with some steamed basmati rice. You can also serve with chapati or roti or dinner rolls.
Step by Step Instant Pot Dal
1. Take ½ cup arhar dal (tuvar dal or pigeon pea lentils) in a bowl or colander.
2. Rinse a couple of times and add the rinsed dal in the instant pot steel insert.
3. Add ⅓ heaped cup sliced onions, ⅓ cup chopped tomatoes, 2 green chillies or serrano peppers (sliced, slit or chopped).
4. Add ½ tsp turmeric powder, ½ tsp Kashmiri red chilli powder and a pinch of asafoetida (hing).
5. Pour 1.5 cup water. Mix well.
6. Mix very well. At this step if you plan to cook rice, then place a tall trivet and add rice+water in a steaming pan. Place the pan on the trivet.
7. Switch on the IP. Secure the lid and position the steam release handle to sealing. Press the pressure cook button and set the timer for 15 minutes on high pressure.
Depending on the quality and age of lentils, it can take 10 to 15 minutes. I prefer the dal to be cooked really well and mushy without any separate grains visible, so I cook the lentils for 15 minutes.
At times I have even cooked the lentils for 20 minutes. So depending on the quality of dal, you can decide upon the timing. Anyways, even if the lentils are undercooked, you can always pressure cook for some more minutes later.
8. Give NPR (natural pressure release) after 10 minutes. Release the pressure after 10 minutes and open the IP lid. The lentils have to be cooked very well and become soft and mushy.
If the consistency of dal looks thick, then add some hot water to thin it. If dal looks thin, then use the sauté option and simmer dal for a few minutes.
9. With a spoon lightly mash the dal. If the dal looks thick, you can add some hot water.
10. Season with salt as per taste and stir very well. Cover the cooked dal with the IP lid and begin with the tempering
Preparing tempering (tadka)
11. In a small pan or tadka pan, heat 2 tablespoon oil. Keep the flame to low or medium-low. Add ½ teaspoon small mustard seeds.
12. Let the mustard seeds crackle.
13. Then add 1 teaspoon cumin seeds.
14. The cumin seeds will crackle as soon as you add them in oil. Let them change their color.
15. Then add 4 to 5 medium garlic cloves, crushed lightly with their peels on. You can also slice or chop the garlic. Fry for some seconds stirring often. The garlic can be a light golden but do not brown them or burn them.
16. Add 1 to 2 dry red chilies (broken and deseeded).
17. Add 9 to 10 curry leaves. fry for a few seconds till the red chilies change color and the curry leaves become crisp.
18. Pour the entire tempering mixture in the dal.
19. Mix very well.
20. Lastly, add 2 tablespoons chopped coriander leaves (cilantro)
21. Stir and instant pot dal tadka with steamed rice or roti. You can garnish with some coriander leaves while serving.
Instant Pot Dal Tadka
Ingredients
main ingredients
- ½ cup arhar dal or 100 grams arhar dal (tuvar dal or split pigeon pea lentils)
- ⅓ cup chopped onions or 1 small medium-sized onion or 50 grams onion – chopped or sliced
- ⅓ cup chopped tomatoes or 1 medium-sized tomato or 65 grams tomatoes – chopped
- 1 to 2 green chillis or serrano peppers – sliced, slit or chopped
- ¼ teaspoon turmeric powder (ground turmeric)
- ½ teaspoon kashmiri red chilli powder or ¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper or paprika
- 1 pinch asafoetida (hing) – optional
- 1.5 cups water
- salt as required
- 2 tablespoons chopped coriander leaves (cilantro) – for garnish
for tempering
- 2 tablespoon oil – ghee can be substituted in place of oil. use either sunflower or any neutral tasting oil
- ½ teaspoon small mustard seeds
- 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
- 4 to 5 medium-sized garlic cloves – sliced or chopped or crushed lightly with their peels on
- 1 sprig curry leaf or 9 to 10 curry leaves
- 1 to 2 dry red chilies – broken and deseeded
Instructions
pressure cooking dal
- Take the lentils in a bowl or colander.
- Rinse a couple of times and add the rinsed dal in the ip steel insert.
- Add sliced onions, chopped tomatoes, green chilies (sliced, slit or chopped), turmeric powder, red chilli powder and a pinch of asafoetida.
- Pour water. Mix well. Secure the lid and position the steam release handle to sealing.
- Press the pressure cook button and set the timer for 15 minutes on high pressure.
- Give npr (natural pressure release) of 10 minutes.
- Release the pressure after 10 minutes and open the ip lid. The lentils have to be cooked very well and become soft and mushy. With a spoon lightly mash the dal mixture.
- If the dal looks thick, you can add some hot water.
- Then season with salt as per taste and mix.
- Cover the cooked dal with the ip lid and begin with the tempering.
tempering (tadka)
- In a small pan or tadka pan, heat oil. Add the mustard seeds.
- Let the mustard seeds crackle. Then add the cumin seeds. The cumin seeds will also crackle and brown when you add them.
- Add 4 to 5 medium garlic cloves, crushed lightly with peels. You can also slice or chop the garlic. Fry for some seconds. Do not brown or burn the garlic.
- Add the dry red chilies (broken and deseeded), curry leaves. Fry till the red chillies change color and the curry leaves become crisp.
- Pour the entire tempering mixture in the dal. Mix very well.
- Lastly add chopped coriander leaves.
- Mix again and serve the dal tadka with steamed rice or roti. You can garnish with some coriander leaves while serving.
Notes
- Depending on the quality and age of lentils, the cooking time can vary from 10 to 15 minutes. I prefer the dal to be cooked really well and mushy without any separate grains visible, so I cook the lentils for 15 minutes. Thus depending on the quality of dal, you can decide upon the timing. Even if the lentils are undercooked, you can always pressure cook for some more minutes later.
- Asaofoetida can be skipped.
- To make a spicy dal, add more green chillies.
- If the dal has a thick consistency, add some hot water to thin it.
- If the dal consistency looks thin, press the sauté button and simmer for a few minutes.
- Add the rinsed lentils, chopped onions, tomatoes, green chillies, asafoetida, turmeric powder, red chilli powder in a 2-litre pressure cooker.
- Add 2 cups water.
- Pressure cook the dal for 8 to 9 whistles or 14 to 15 minutes. When the pressure comes down on its own, in the cooker, check the dal. The lentils have to be cooked very well and become soft and mushy.
- With a spoon lightly mash the dal mixture.
- Then add ½ to 1 cup water to the dal. You can add water as required depending on the consistency you want. For a thicker dal, add less water and for a thin dal, add slightly more water.
- Stir very well. Season with salt as per taste.
- Keep the dal on stove top and simmer for some minutes till you get the desired consistency. Do stir the dal at intervals so that the dal does not get browned or burnt from the base. Cover and keep aside.
- Later fry the spices and herbs in the oil and add to the dal.
- Add coriander leaves. Mix and serve.
- Soak the lentils for about 1 to 2 hours. Drain and rinse them well in water.
- In a deep pot, add 4 to 5 cups water added to the lentils. Add the rest of the ingredients mentioned in the recipe. Cover and cook the lentils.
- If the water begins to froth and bubble, then remove the lid or cover it partly and continue to cook the lentils till they become soft and creamy.
- If the water becomes less, then add some hot water. Once the lentils are cooked (takes from 45 mins to an hour or sometimes more. Depends on the quality of the lentils). Then follow the recipe further as mentioned above.
Nutrition Info (Approximate Values)
This recipe post is from the archives (July 2012) and has been republished and updated on 4 June 2020.
This post contains amazon affiliate links.
That is so mouth watering Amit. I am not a regular cook but keep trying various custom made recipes when my wife is not feeling well. I am a big fan of Dal Tadka and often visit to a nearby restaurant where the chef makes a special dish of Dal with double tadka for me. I was always wondering how to make it by myself and you made my dream come true. Way to go buddy. Great explanation with nice and crystal clear pictures. If I collect appreciation (Which I am sure I will) all the credit goes to you. I will try double tadka first and then the smoky version may be later some day.
So thankful to you for sharing such a nice recipe. Keep it up.
Good luck and regards
welcome jaymin. thanks for writing a detailed comment. most restaurants gives double tadka and thats what makes the dal so flavorful in restaurants.
Hi, I am new to using pressure cooker, and mine is the “wobble” top, not the whistle type. Can you tell me how to know that the daal is done?
i don’t know what is wobble top and hearing it for the first time. so not sure how things work here. i would suggest you to go through your cooker’s manual and it will have guidelines on cooking various food products like rice or lentils etc.
She probably means traditional Hawkins type and not the slitted prestige type steam release.
thanks namit. i am not sure it is what you are referring to. because later i check on amazon and the whistle was a different type.
Wow turned absolutely yummm…..,i also luv 2 cook,keep on experimenting..i put gin gar paste instead of chopped ginger but still gud…thnx alot…
welcome rumana. ginger garlic also works. and its always good to try and experiment 🙂
Hi, apart from too some ingredients missing (buying Asian herbs in Germany is not as easy) it still turned out good.
Prefer English recipes.
Thank you
welcome tanja. thanks for the positive feedback.
A great recipe, I’ve made this a few time myself – it gave me an appreciation of the impact dried methi can have!
This would be an ideal dish to try out on people who ‘think’ they don’t like lentils. One day I’ll try the smoking technique..
thanks craig for your feedback. yes, do try the smoking technique.
Who much water we have to add
only if the dal appears thick, then you can add about 1/2 cup of water or even upto 1 cup of water. usually dal tadka has a medium consistency.
Love the photos and clear instructions. Tried the recipe…came out so yummy!
thannks mythili for sharing positive feedback on dal.
outstanding
Awesome receipe turned out perfect restaurant style everyone just loved it
thanks abhilasha
Always a hit!
Thanks VG
Seems good.
Will try it soon and get back to you
thanks and do give the feedback if possible.
Hi dear,
Wonderful recipe….i made it and my husband loved it so much….even my kids were licking their fingers
thanks priya. nice to know
Made this one. Turned out awesome!
Have couple of questions: Why does my dal always turn out pale yellow and not bright yellow as your recipe despite adding turmeric?
Second, I don’t have charcoal at home so I want to use onion as you mentioned but how do you burn onion layer. I tried lighting the layer but nothing happened.
turmeric always give a bright yellow color. so not sure why the dal you prepare has a pale yellow color. onion layers are not burned. burnt charcoal is kept on the onion layers 🙂
Hi dassana,
Thanks alot for posting such tasty receipies…I lived it…will try now ..
welcome shanaz
Just made this and our four kids absolutely loved it – that hardly ever happens! I love the brown garlic taste. Really delicious.
thanks JC. glad to know this.