Diwali Sweets - Badam Halwa, Bobbatlu & Annam Payasam - Indian food recipes - Food and cooking blog (2024)

Wishing all my readers, visitors and friends a happy and safe Deepavali!

Phew! Its been a marathon of sweets dishes at our home. Three sweet recipes for my dear readers this Diwali – Badam Halwa, Annam Payasam and Bobbatlu. With a home full of near and dear loved ones and the background sound of crackers bursting, I’m trying to get this Diwali post up. 🙂

Badam Halwa ~ Almond Sweet

Badam Halwa is a melt-in-the-mouth creamy delight prepared with almonds, sugar, milk and ghee. Preparation is simple – prepare sugar syrup, combine ghee and almond paste to the syrup, stirring it constantly till it forms a smooth creamy texture.

Badam Halwa Recipe

Cooking Time: 40 mts

Makes 10-12 laddus

.

1 Place 3/4 cup of almonds in hot water and leave aside for an hour. The almonds easily peel off after an hour. Grind the peeled almonds to a smooth paste by adding milk.
2 Take a heavy bottomed vessel, add the sugar and water and let it melt and once it begins to boil, add the almond paste and combine. Now get ready for some good arm work-out. Go on stirring till the mixture begins to thicken (it should look like a thick dosa batter) on low flame). During the stirring process, add the ghee which gets absorbed into halwa. Turn off heat.
3 Leave aside to cool and it thickens further.

Bobbatlu

I blogged Bobbatlu recipe earlier. I thought I’d post it again. Time consuming affair but worth the effort. A tempting traditional lentil based sweet that also goes by the name Obattu, Bhakshalu and Puran Poli.

Bobbatlu Recipe

Cooking Time: 1 hr

Makes approx 15 bobbatlu

.

Ingredients:

1 cup chana dal/bengal gram soaked in water for an hour and drained

1 cup sugar (adjust to your choice)

1 1/4 cups maida/all purpose flour

3-4 tbsps oil

1/2 tsp cardamom pwd

1 tbsp ghee

pinch of salt

1 Pressure cook channa dal adding a cup of water till the dal turns very soft. Grind to a fine paste.
2 Heat a cooking vessel, add the ground dal paste and sugar and cook till they blend and form a thick lump like paste with no moisture left. Keep stirring on slow flame. Add cardamom pwd and salt and combine. Cool and prepare small lemon sized balls for stuffing. Keep aside.
3 Combine maida, pinch of salt, oil and enough water to make a very soft and sticky dough(softer than puri dough). Knead well and keep aside for one or two hours.
4 Grease your hand with oil and pinch a small portion of dough and flatten it into a 2″ disc. Place a ball of channa dal stuffing in the centre and draw the edges of the dough from all sides to cover the stuffing completely.
5 Take a plastic sheet or a plantain leaf and gently flatten each ball carefully with your fingers to form a 6″ diamater flat circular roti/bobattu/poli.
6 Heat a tawa and fry it on low flame such that its roasted on both sides till brown spots appear. Smear oil over the bobbatu while frying.
7 Serve warm with ghee. Store them in an air tight container or in the refrigerator. Stays fresh for a few days.

Kitchen Notes – For variation, you can add a few tbsps of grated coconut to the channa dal stuffing.

Annam Payasam ~ Rice Kheer

Annam Payasam aka Paramannam (Food of the Gods) is prepared with raw rice, milk and jaggery or sugar. Rice is slowly simmered in milk and combined with jaggery, flavored with aromatic cardamom and garnished with toasted cashewnuts and raisins. I had earlier blogged Paramannam recipe which was prepared using sugar. The version I’m blogging today calls for jaggery. Simple to prepare, comforting and delicious!

Annam Payasam Recipe

Cooking Time: 40 mts

Cuisine: Andhra

Serves 6-7 persons

.

Ingredients:

1/2 cup raw rice washed and drained

1/2 cup grated jaggery

1 cup water

1/2 lt low fat milk

pinch of salt

1/4 tsp cardamom pwd

1 tbsp ghee

10-12 cashewnuts

1 tbsp raisins

1 Heat a pan, add a tbsp of ghee and toast the cashewnuts and raisins till golden brown. Remove from pan, keep aside.
2 Heat a vessel, add grated jaggery. Let the jaggery melt over slow flame till its sticky on touch. Don’t over cook it, it should basically completely melt. Strain the jaggery and cool.
3 In a separate vessel, bring milk and water to a boil. Lower heat and add the rice to the milk. Cook until the rice is soft and the mixture turns thick. Remove from heat and cool.
5 Once cool, add the jaggery syrup to the cooled cooked milk and combine well. Add the cardamom pwd, salt and toasted cashews and raisins. Serve warm or refrigerate until chilled. It tastes good both warm and chilled.

Kitchen Notes – Do not add the jaggery syrup while the rice is being cooked. Ensure the flame is off and the cooked rice is slightly cool when adding the jaggery syrup. For a rich taste, use whole milk.

Diwali Sweets - Badam Halwa, Bobbatlu & Annam Payasam - Indian food recipes - Food and cooking blog (2024)

FAQs

What is the best food for Diwali? ›

Celebrate the festival of light with these hearty snacks
  1. Besan ke Ladoos. Ladoos made of besan or gramflour. ...
  2. Gulgule made using jaggery! Gulgule are a popular sweet snack in Northern and Eastern India, made using jaggery (a type of cane sugar) and fennel. ...
  3. Coconut Ladoos. ...
  4. Murukku. ...
  5. Mathri. ...
  6. A Thali from Tamil Nadu!

What is the name of the sweet made and eaten during Diwali? ›

Diwali sweets recipes include popular bengali sweets like kalakand, rasgulla, rasmalai, chum chum, sandesh, chocolate sandesh. All time favorites like gulab jamun, peda, burfi varieties, kaju katli, halwa varieties, kesari varieties, kheer or payasam recipes.

What is the origin of Badam Halwa? ›

Origin of badam halwa,

Around 200 years ago, Arab. They later had an impact on this delicacy in other Continents. Arabs first made the Badam Halwa in coastal Indian places like Karachi and Kozhikode, from where it spread throughout the world and gained popularity.

What is the menu for Diwali? ›

Diwali Main Course Dishes
  • Dal Makhani.
  • Chana Masala.
  • Paneer Butter Masala.
  • Vegetable Korma.
  • Saag Paneer.
  • Palak Paneer.
  • Dhaba Style Dal Fry.
  • Vegetable Jalfrezi.
Nov 7, 2023

What is forbidden during Diwali? ›

Avoid cooking or eating non-vegetarian cuisine at home, and don't drink alcohol on Diwali. It is important that you never leave the Diwali pooja site unattended during the night so that there is always ghee or oil available for the lamp you ignite to burn. Don't do anything that involves money.

Which fruit is crushed in Diwali? ›

' There's a ritual to squish a fruit called 'Karit' which means killing the narkasur. Usually the men in the house crush the fruit with their feet and then lick the juice. This custom symbolizes the victory of good over the evil.

What is India's national dessert? ›

Do you know that Jalebi is the national sweet of India and you will find this sweet in every corner of India and the taste of the Jalebis of this shop is wonderful and you will like to visit it for other reasons like the liveliness of the place and the activities taking place nearby it.

Can we eat egg on Diwali? ›

Yes, we eat non-veg on Diwali day. There is no rule found anywhere about it.

Is halwa Indian or Arabic? ›

The sweet's spellings are as numerous as its origins: Egyptians call it “halawa,” while Indians drop the final "h" and name it “halva.” Regardless of what you call it, what is certain is that the word derives from the Arabic word, “halwa,” which means “sweet confection.” This versatile, rich ingredient has spread ...

Which country is famous for badam? ›

The vast majority of the world's almonds are grown and harvested in the United States. In the 2022/23 crop year the United States produced over 1.1 million metric tons of almonds. The second leading producer of almonds was Australia in that year, with about 109 thousand metric tons of almonds.

Can we eat chicken on Diwali? ›

I checked around with some friends and learned that there are certain Hindu communities that actually do eat meat on Diwali.

What do people drink for Diwali? ›

Mix roasted cumin powder, mint paste, coriander paste, lemon juice and black salt. Now add water and mix well. Adorn with mint leaves. Put the first three ingredients in a blender.

What do you enjoy the most during Diwali? ›

People exchange gifts and sweets, enjoy delicious feasts, watch firework displays and wear new clothes. It's a time to clean and decorate your home, too. 8) Rangoli is a popular Diwali tradition –– beautiful patterns made using colourful powders and flowers.

Which vegetables do we get around the time of Diwali? ›

Vegetables that we get around the time of Diwali: Spiny gourd, (Kantoli), Ridge gourd (Shiralt), Ghosali, Kohala 2. Fruits that we get around the time of Diwali: Sweet lime, Oranges, Apples, Musk melons 3. Grains that we get around the time of Diwali: Ragi, Rice.

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