Punjab cuisine
Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters
Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. Crunchy daal pakoras made from soaked and coarsely ground chana dal (split chickpeas) mixed with onion, green chilli and spices, then deep-fried until shatteringly crispy. Punjab's rain-day snack of choice — denser and crunchier than besan pakoras with a satisfying lentil depth.
Daal pakora is the pakora that requires a little planning ahead (soaking the dal) but rewards you with a uniquely satisfying crunch and texture that besan (gram flour) pakoras simply cannot replicate.
The technique of coating food in besan (chickpea flour) and frying it is documented in Sanskrit texts, and besan-coated fried foods appear in accounts of Delhi bazaar food going back to the Sultanate period. In Punjab, when clouds gather over Lahore and the first rain of the season hits, every household starts soaking chana dal. It's a Pavlovian response. The coarsely ground lentil batter creates a porous, irregular surface that becomes incredibly crispy in hot oil — each pakora is a different shape, a different crunch. Fun fact: chana dal pakoras are the pakoras that vendors at old Punjab railway stations traditionally made — robust enough to survive the journey, crunchy enough to be irresistible. The ground dal batter needs no eggs, no baking powder — the texture comes entirely from the way the lentils fry.
Ingredients
Instructions
- GRIND THE DAL: Drain soaked chana dal thoroughly. Add to a food processor or blender. Blend to a coarse paste — not smooth, not whole lentils, but somewhere in between with visible texture. Add only 1-2 tbsp water if absolutely necessary. HINT: Coarse grinding = crunchy pakoras. Smooth paste = dense, oily pakoras.
- MIX THE BATTER: Transfer ground dal to a bowl. Add onion, green chilli, ginger, coriander, red chilli powder, cumin seeds, ajwain and salt. Mix together thoroughly with your hands until everything is evenly distributed. The batter should be thick and scoopable, not pourable.
- TEST THE BATTER: Drop a small amount into hot oil. It should hold its shape and sizzle actively. If it falls apart, the batter needs more grinding. If it sinks slowly and doesn't sizzle, the oil isn't hot enough. Fix both before proceeding.
- FRY IN BATCHES: Heat oil in a karahi to 180°C (a small drop of batter should sizzle immediately and float up). Using a spoon or wet hands, drop irregular spoonfuls of batter into the oil. Don't crowd the pot. Fry for 4-5 minutes until deep golden and very crispy, turning occasionally.
- DOUBLE FRY FOR MAXIMUM CRUNCH: For extra crispiness, fry the pakoras, remove, let them cool for 2 minutes, then fry again for 1-2 minutes. Double frying creates the shatteringly crispy exterior that daal pakoras are known for. Drain on paper towels.
- SERVE IMMEDIATELY: Daal pakoras lose their crunch within 15-20 minutes. Serve them straight from the oil, piping hot, with chutney alongside.
Chef's Secrets
- The longer the dal soaks, the softer it grinds and the more cohesive the batter — 6-8 hours is ideal.
- Do not add baking powder — daal pakoras derive their texture from the ground lentil, not from leavening.
- Squeeze a small onion-heavy handful into a ball before dropping — this creates a more cohesive pakora.
- On rainy days in Punjab, serve with a very spicy green chutney and chai — the combination is practically mandatory.
Common Questions
How long does Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters take to make?
Total time is 50m — 30m prep and 20m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 5 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters from?
Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters?
Serve immediately on a newspaper-lined plate (very traditional and practical) with hari dhania chutney and imli chutney. Accompanied by a cup of strong ginger tea in monsoon season. Sprinkle chaat masala on top just before serving.
Goes Well With
Pyaz Pakora (Onion Fritters)
Pyaz Pakora — crispy, lacy, golden onion fritters dipped in a spiced chickpea batter and deep-fried — is the first thing every Pakistani makes when it rains. The scent alone is enough to start a conversation.
Palak Pakora — Spinach Fritters
Lacy, crispy palak pakoras made with whole fresh spinach leaves dipped in a spiced besan (gram flour) batter and fried until golden and crunchy. The lightest and most elegant of all Pakistani pakoras — ready in 20 minutes and absolutely impossible to eat just one.
Gol Gappay
Crispy hollow puris filled with spiced chickpeas and tangy tamarind water — Pakistan's most addictive street snack. Once you start, you physically cannot stop at one.
What Cooks Are Saying
Authentic taste, clear steps. Exactly what I was looking for.
Nice recipe. I substituted one ingredient and it still came out great.
I've tried many recipes for this dish but this one is the best by far.
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