Amma was also talking about the same. It seems her mom also used to make this payasam. I really wonder why those age old recipes got lost track. I wanted to learn and see how its supposed to be prepared. Its very similar to the paruppu payasam. But it was completely so different to taste and should I say the bowl was empty in flat 5 mins. We made it for the neivedyam and so didn't know the taste until we actually tasted it. But believe me, it was simply superb. The process may seem little complicated with soaking and cooking it for long time, but then hey what's pleasure without pain. If I am assured of such divine taste, I would take up the task without hesitation.
Ingredients Needed:
Whole Wheat Berries - 1 cup
Jaggary - 1 cup
Cashew Nuts - 10
Raisins - 10
Cardamom powder - 1/4 tsp
Water - 2 cups
Ghee / Butter - 2 tbsp (optional)
Method to prepare:
Wash and Soak wheat berries for 2 days. You can soak them during the day and drain and store in fridge. We did this because we weren't sure if they will stay without getting spoilt in room temperature for so long. Next time, I am going to experiment with that too.
Before pressure cooking this, wash well. Add about 2 cups of water and pressure cook for nearly 5-6 whistles. Check if the berries are soft. If not, put them back again.
Meanwhile, melt the jaggary with little water. Remove if any scum. Then add the jaggary water, cardamom to the wheat berries and pressure cooker again. Once done, remove the lid and cook on high flame to get the desired consistency. For more richness add cashew paste.
Update:
You can leave out the nuts roasting part in the ghee as the payasam as such was quite creamy and tasty.
Roast the cashew nuts and raisins in ghee and add to the boiling payasam.
The combination was ultimate, the berries being cooked in jaggary made them little hard on the outer but soft in the inside. It was a complete new experience. When you bite on the berries, its goes little dunking inside. You can get to chew on them and with jaggary all the way, it was divine!
Cardamom adds such taste and aroma, that its not really the same without it!
Sunita celebrates the spices with her event Thick Spice. Her themes have always given me opportunity to understand more about spices. This month marks the 1st year anniversary of starting this wonderful event. And its my pleasure to send in my favorite spice, Cardamom!
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