Masala dosa
| Type | Dosa |
|---|---|
| Course | Chutney, sambar, potato curry |
| Region or state | South India |
| Serving temperature | Hot |
| Main ingredients | Fermented batter of rice and various legumes (black gram, pigeon pea, chickpea), various spices (fenugreek, red chili) |
| Variations | rava masala dosa, onion masala dosa, paper masala dosa |
| This article is part of the series on |
| Indian cuisine |
|---|
Masala dosa (Tamil: மசாலா தோசை, Kannada: ಮಸಾಲೆ ದೋಸೆ, masāle dōsey/dōsai) is a dish of South India, consisting of a savoury dosa crepe stuffed with a spiced (masala) potato curry. It is a popular breakfast item in South India, though it can be served at all times of the day and found in many other parts of the country[1][2] and overseas.[3][4]
History
It is generally agreed that the dish was popularized in Madras (now Chennai) during the 1930s by K. Krishna Rao, a restaurateur who operated the popular Udupi style hotel called Sri Krishna Vilas Hotel on Mount Road[5] and later the New Woodlands Hotel, both pioneers of Udupi cuisine. Rao is also regarded as the dish's creator.[6][7][8]
One tale attributes it to the cooks of Someshvara III, King of Mysore (1126–1138), who combined leftover curry with dosas.[9] However, while the Manasollasa compiled during his reign does mention a dosa-like dish called dosaka, potatoes are a New World plant not introduced to India under the arrival of the Portuguese in the 16th century.[10]
Preparation
While there is variation in the recipe from town to town,[1] the basic recipe typically starts with a batter of parboiled rice, poha, and various legumes (black gram, pigeon peas, chickpeas), and incorporates various spices for flavour, such as fenugreek and dry red chilli. The rice and legumes are fermented by soaking them overnight in water, then ground into a batter. To make the dosa the batter is spread on a hot tava griddle using a ladle or a bowl. It is pan-roasted until crispy, filled with potato curry, and served with chutneys, and sambar.[11] One common variant is the paper masala dosa, which is made with a thinner batter, resulting in a crisper, almost paper-thin final product.
Variations
-
Masala dosa before folding, showing the potato curry filling
-
Paper masala dosa
-
Madras special masala dosa
-
Masala dosa
-
MTR masala dosa
References
- ^ a b Ramnath, N.S. "American Dosa". Forbes.
- ^ "What A Masala dosa Costs Around The World". Huffingtonpost.in. Huffingtonpost India. 16 March 2015.
- ^ Romig, Rollo (7 May 2014). "Masala dosa to Die For". The New York Times.
- ^ "Dosa's complex spices hit the spot". Sfchronicle.com/. San Francisco chronicle. 25 March 2015.
- ^ "Krishna Rao of Woodlands — Man who took iconic Udupi cuisine to global palate". www.dtnext.in. 3 January 2021.
- ^ Socians, The (15 November 2019). "Origin of Masala Dosa: Know How From a Sin Accompanied by a Bad Habit to Delicious South Indian Food". Socians. Archived from the original on 17 November 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
K. Krishna Rao who is also regarded as the originator of the masala dosa in its modern form, ran Old Woodlands in Chennai during the early 1940s.
- ^ "India's new offering to curry Western flavor". Asia Times Online. 2 February 2004. Archived from the original on 2 February 2004. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
- ^ Nair, P. Thankappan (2004). South Indians in Kolkata: History of Kannadigas, Konkanis, Malayalees, Tamilians, Telugus, South Indian Dishes, and Tippoo Sultan's Heirs in Calcutta. Punthi Pustak. ISBN 978-81-86791-50-9.
- ^ Crispy masala dosa: An Indian breakfast dish with mysterious origins
- ^ "The Journey of Masala Dosa: From Batter to Bliss". 15 April 2025.
- ^ Praveen, M. P.; Krishnakumar, G. (13 June 2014). "Masala dosa slips out of reach". The Hindu. Chennai, India.