Ragi Poori (Finger Millet Bread)

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Ragi Poori

Like many babies born in India, my first solid food too was ragi/finger millet porridge thinned with milk. I think most of you would know this already; it is sprouted ragi, sun-dried and powdered along with pottukadalai (split chana dal) and with or without almonds and other nuts. My connection with ragi stopped there and I did not eat anything made with ragi or ragi flour for the next 23-24 years. After moving to US, I saw ragi flour in the Indian grocery stores and bought one packet out of curiosity without knowing what to do with it.

One day I had some leftover dosa batter which was not enough for both of us. Usually, in the circumstance, either rice flour, whole wheat flour or all purpose flour is added to the dosa batter to increase the quantity. So I decided to use some ragi flour instead and prepared dosas as usual. The shape was perfect, it came off the pan without any mess and the taste was good too but after tasting I felt that my whole body was itching. Weird right! My husband didn't feel anything like that but I had this itching for some time. I don't know if I was really allergic to ragi flour or it was psychological but that was the end of my "ragi-trying-saga". Has anyone else experienced the same?

Couple of years later I decided to give it a try once again and saw a recipe for sweet ragi dumplings in a Tamil magazine. I tried it immediately. It came out very well, tasted good and most importantly I didn't have any itching. So that's the only ragi dish I prepare always. We never used to get whole ragi n US, so I was excited to find it in the grocery stores here in Canada. These days I use sprouted ragi regularly. This New Year I have decided to try a lot of ingredients I have been avoiding all these years and I thought why not start with ragi flour. I saw this recipe for ragi pooris in the same Tamil magazine in which I saw the dumplings recipe.

The method of preparation is very simple; just mixing equal quantities of ragi flour and whole wheat flour and proceeding as usual to prepare pooris. I made it very small size pooris for my son. At first, he did not accept that it was poori, looking at the color. I had to persuade him a lot to try it. After tasting it he didn't stop asking for more. I too found that these ragi pooris tasted exactly like the regular ones. So why don't you try it too?

Ragi Poori Recipe

Prep TimeCook TimeMakes
20 Mins10 Mins15-20 small pooris
AuthorCategoryMethod
Tiffins/Main-CourseFrying
Ragi Poori (Finger Millet Bread) Try these ragi pooris for a change from the usual whole wheat flour pooris. These pooris have an interesting color, making it curious for both children and adults alike.
Ingredients:
  • Ragi Flour 1/4 Cup
  • Whole Wheat Flour 1/4 Cup
  • Salt A Pinch
  • Water 1/4 Cup Approximately
  • Oil (I Used Sunflower Oil) For Frying
Procedure:
  1. We are going to deep fry the pooris and not shallow fry, so heat required an amount of oil in a frying pan. Do not set the stove at high because the pooris will redden quickly but will not be cooked properly.
  2. Meanwhile prepare the poori dough. In a medium size, bowl mix together the ragi flour, whole wheat flour, and salt. Add water as required, little by little to form a stiff dough. Note that the dough for poori should not be soft like that of chapathis because it will absorb a lot of oil while frying. Also, pooris should be prepared immediately after preparing the dough. Unlike chapathis the dough doesn't need standing time.
  3. You can either divide the dough into 15-20 small pieces and roll each piece of dough into thin circles or divide the entire poori dough into half. Roll each half into a big thin circle and using a small round biscuit cutter or a lid cut out small circles. Remove the scraps and re-roll it again and cut circles and keep it aside, covered.
  4. Add a small piece of dough to the hot oil and it should fry and float on top at once; then the oil is ready. Now add one piece of rolled out dough at a time. Gently press the poori with the back of the slotted ladle and it would puff up. Flip it over and leave it for few seconds; drain out the poori and place it on a kitchen towel to absorb excess oil. Repeat the same process for the remaining pooris. Serve it hot with your favorite side dish or dip.
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Another interesting poori recipe of mine:

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10 COMMENTS

  1. Ragi Flour Balls Recipe | Madhuram's VegCorner.com

    […] Ragi Poori (Finger Millet Bread) […]

  2. shilpi

    hey my son is allergic to (gluten), a protein found in wheat. i was looking for some ragi recipes. And i read urs, so i m definately gonna try this recipe. thanks.

    • Madhuram

      You’re welcome Shilpi.

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  4. sirisha

    Hey thanks for posting… im gonna give it a try.

  5. Rupa

    I had ragi flour in other forms too but never in puris, gotta try this. I lived in Montreal for a long time and found only flour, not whole ragi. But I think Toronto has wider choice. Now in the US, as you said, only ragi flour is available and it’s not always fresh I find. But frying it may not give off the slightly stale taste, healthier too compared to just wheat flour. Thanks!

    Somebody mentioned that Whole Foods has ragi, but not sure.

  6. Sharmilee

    Nice idea of combining ragi with wheat flour sure gona give a try!

  7. ruchikacooks

    How do you even think of such a poori? We are poori lovers and would make this for sure..I make ragi kanji though..to have with thayir and mavadu 🙂

  8. Priya

    Fantastic poori,am gonna try definitely..

  9. simplyfood

    I have never tried ragi flour before I am going to google it and try your recipe with it.