Motichur Laddu Recipe (Motichoor Ladoo)
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4.9
Motichur Laddu Recipe (Motichoor Ladoo)
Description
The preparation involves making a one-thread consistency sugar syrup infused with saffron, providing both sweetness and color. The batter for the boondi is made with gram flour, saffron, water, and aromatic seeds like black cardamom and melon seeds. The batter is gently pressed through a perforated ladle into hot oil, frying the tiny droplets until cooked but not crisp, ensuring they remain tender and absorb syrup well.
After frying, the boondi is soaked evenly in the hot sugar syrup to infuse sweetness and fragrant notes. The syrup-soaked boondi mixture is then blended lightly by hand to mix thoroughly without crushing the droplets excessively. Finally, the mixture is portioned and molded into smooth, round laddus by applying a small amount of oil or ghee on the palms to prevent sticking.
Motichur Laddus can be served as festive treats or offerings. Attention to frying temperature and syrup consistency is important to achieve the characteristic soft yet cohesive texture. The recipe can be scaled and adapted, including for vegan versions by using neutral oil for shaping instead of ghee.
Ingredients
For sugar syrup
- 1 cup sugar
- ½ cup water
- saffron or crushed saffron (kesar, powder, generous pinch
For making boondi
- 1 cup besan (gram flour)
- saffron or crushed saffron (kesar, powder, generous pinch
- ¾ cup water
- 2 to 3 black cardamom seeds removed and the skins discarded
- ½ tablespoon magaz (melon seeds)
- cooking oil for deep frying
- oil for applying on the palms while shaping the ladoo, or ghee, small amount
Instructions
Preparing sugar syrup
- Dissolve sugar, saffron threads and water in a pan and keep it on the stove top.
- Cook the sugar solution till it reaches one thread consistency (check step 3 pic to see photo showing one thread consistency) and then switch off the flame. Keep the sugar solution aside.)
Making boondi
- Make a smooth flowing batter of the gram flour/besan, crushed saffron and water. The batter should neither be thick nor thin. It should be a flowing batter without any lumps. The amount of water to be added depends on the quality of the the gram flour. So you can add more or less than what is mentioned in the recipe.
- Heat oil for deep frying in a kadai or pan. The oil has to be moderately hot. Take a perforated ladle/spoon. With your hands position the ladle above the oil. You will need one more large ladle/jhara to remove the fried boondis.
- Take a large spoon of the besan batter and pour it on perforated ladle/spoon. Press with the other spoon so that the batter falls down from the perforations into the hot oil.
- Fry the boondi (gram flour balls) till they become golden. Don't over fry or make them crisp. When the oil stops sizzling, remove the boondis. About 45 seconds to 1 minute is enough to get the correct texture in the boondi.
- This step is important because if boondi becomes crisp then motichur laddu won't be soft and they won't be able to absorb the sugar syrup.
Making motichoor ladoo
- For collecting the fried boondi use a large slotted spoon/jhara. Drain the oil very well after removing the boondi and then add them directly to the sugar syrup. Also note that the sugar syrup should be hot.
- If the sugar syrup is not hot, then just heat it. In case, the sugar syrup crystallizes, then reheat again mixing 1 to 2 tablespoons water. No need to bother about the tailed or flat boondis as we will be pulsing them in the blender later.
- Make all the boondis like this and keep on adding them immediately to the sugar syrup. Stir and mix well. The boondis should get softened in the sugar syrup.
- In a blender or mixer add the boondi and the sugar syrup. Add 1 tablespoon of hot water and pulse the boondi mixture for a few times to get a smaller shape.
- Don't pulse too much otherwise you won't be able to shape the motichur laddu. The amount of water to be added depends on the texture of the boondis.
- If the boondis are a bit crisp, then add 1 or 2 tablespoons more of the hot water. The boondis absorb the hot water and remain soft and moist.
- Add the magaz/melon seeds and black cardamom seeds. Mix well.
- Apply some oil or ghee on your palms and shape the motichoor ladoo. The mixture would be warm when preparing the laddu. On cooling they become firm.
- You can garnish the motichoor ladoo with melon seeds/magaz or raisins. These motichur ladoo can also be refrigerated since they are not made from ghee. If you fry them in ghee then the ghee will solidify on refrigeration.
Notes
- Use fresh gram flour within its shelf life to ensure proper batter consistency and flavor.
- Keep the sugar syrup hot by placing its pan over warm water during shaping to maintain softness.
- Avoid over-frying boondi; aim for tender droplets, not crisp ones, to absorb syrup properly.
- Do not over-blend the boondi mixture to preserve texture and prevent becoming pasty.
- Fry in medium-hot oil to balance cooking speed and oil absorption, preventing sogginess or excessive browning.
- For a vegan option, use neutral oil instead of ghee when shaping the laddus.
- The recipe can be adjusted easily to make small or large batches according to need.
Nutrition Information
Show DetailsNutrition Facts
Serving: 10Ladoo
Amount Per Serving
Calories 173 kcal
% Daily Value*
| Calories | 173kcal | 9% |
| Carbohydrates | 27g | 9% |
| Protein | 3g | 6% |
| Fat | 6g | 9% |
| Saturated Fat | 1g | 5% |
| Polyunsaturated Fat | 1g | 6% |
| Monounsaturated Fat | 4g | 20% |
| Cholesterol | 3mg | 1% |
| Sodium | 10mg | 0% |
| Potassium | 112mg | 2% |
| Fiber | 1g | 4% |
| Sugar | 21g | 42% |
| Vitamin A | 5IU | 0% |
| Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) | 1mg | |
| Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin) | 1mg | |
| Vitamin B3 (Niacin) | 1mg | |
| Vitamin B6 | 1mg | |
| Vitamin C | 1mg | 1% |
| Vitamin E | 2mg | |
| Vitamin K | 1µg | |
| Calcium | 10mg | 1% |
| Vitamin B9 (Folate) | 52µg | |
| Iron | 1mg | 6% |
| Magnesium | 22mg | 6% |
| Phosphorus | 39mg | |
| Zinc | 1mg |
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet.