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  1. Home
  2. Dry Vegetarian Side Dishes
  3. Poriyal Podi & Sweet Potato Poriyal Recipe

Poriyal Podi & Sweet Potato Poriyal Recipe

Updated: Dec 1, 2015 · Published: Nov 23, 2009 by nags · This post may contain affiliate links · 34 Comments

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I have been keeping a secret for a while. Yep, I have. And that is, my love for sweet potatoes. There you go, now you all know me inside out. That's all there is to me - I love sweet potatoes, chocolate, brinjal and step by step recipe pictures. I am a very simple person.
Back to sweet potatoes. What does that have to do with this poriyal podi recipe you ask? Well, I usually have sweet potatoes just boiled and very lightly salted. It makes my troubles go away like nothing else can.
But the other day, I was going through Chandra Padmanabhan's Southern Spice, for the umpteenth time, and saw this recipe called chakkaravalli kizhangu poriyal recipe. I had no clue chakkaravalli kizhangu is sweet potato. All this time I thought sweet ptoato is cheeni kizhangu in tamil although I have no clue how I came to that conclusion.
I tried it and let me just tell you this much - it beats slightly salted sweet potatoes to the door and back, any day!
To make this poriyal, you need poriyal podi. It can be made in a jiffy so don't let that intimidate you. You can make a bit of this and store it for future use too.

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Poriyal Masala Podi Recipe

Source: Southern Spice by Chandra Padmanabhan
What I Used:
1 cup coriander seeds/kothamalli
½ cup urad dal/uluntham paruppu/husked black gram
½ cup grated coconut
2 generous pinches of hing/asafoetida/perungaayam
10 dried red chillies
2 teaspoon oil
How I Made It:
1. Dry roast the coriander seeds in a skillet/kadai until the seeds turn a darker shade of brown (about 4-5 mins). Set aside.
2. In the same pan, dry roast the dal until golden brown, taking care not to burn it. Set aside.
3. In the same pan, dry roast the coconut until just short of burnt. I made mine turn a dark brown taking care not to burn. Set aside.
4. Add the oil to the pan, let it heat through and throw in the red chillies. Fry them until they are short of burning, throw in the hing, stir through for 10 seconds and remove from fire.
5. Cool, combine and grind the ingredients to a powder.
The smell of this freshly made poriyal podi is a-m-a-z-i-n-g and I am not even exaggerating this time. So let's quickly go make this sweet potato poriyal, shall we? Store the leftover poriyal podi in an air tight container.
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Chakkaravalli Kizhangu / Sweet Potato Poriyal Recipe
Source: Southern Spice by Chandra Padmanabhan
Serves: 2
What I Used:
2 cups sweet potatoes, cut into small cubes
2 green chillies
¼ teaspoon turmeric powder
1.5 tablespoon poriyal masala podi
For tempering:
2 teaspoon oil
¼ teaspoon mustard seeds
¼ teaspoon jeera/cumin seeds
1 red chilli, halved
A pinch of hing (optional)
A few curry leaves
How I Made It:
1. Heat oil for tempering in a pan and add all the ingredients. When the mustard seeds beging to pop, add the turmeric, green chillies and sweet potatoes with some salt and ⅓ cup water. Mix well.
2. Cook closed for 10-12 mins until the sweet potatoes are soft and cooked. If there is extra water, leave the pan open and let it evaporate. Once the mixture is dry, add the poriyal podi and stir well.
3. Serve hot with steamed rice.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sharmila

    November 23, 2009 at 9:23 am

    That snap of what you have done with the sweet potatoes already proves me a criminal for wasting them in mushy curries. 🙁
    I'd love to give this a try Nags. 🙂

    Reply
  2. Manasi

    November 23, 2009 at 7:39 am

    I am sold on this recipe ! Will surely try!
    Awesome pics.

    Reply
  3. sangeeta

    November 23, 2009 at 7:25 am

    i tried a stirfry made with just the temperings you have mentioned ...after seeing a recipe in femina..i liked it but this podi will make it more interesting n hot for sure.....the pictures look great.
    i'd love it as it is........

    Reply
  4. Swapna

    November 23, 2009 at 5:59 am

    I love sweet potato too..this looks so delicious...will surely try this out...

    As usual great pics:)...

    Reply
  5. DEESHA

    November 23, 2009 at 5:39 am

    sweet potato is a lil too sweet for my taste but I guess the poriyal podi should balace it out

    Reply
  6. Hb

    November 23, 2009 at 4:02 am

    Even I love sweet potatoes but keep wondering what to make apart from boiling. I made similar podi yesterday but without coconut. Did you use dessicated coconut?

    Reply
  7. RAKS KITCHEN

    November 23, 2009 at 5:59 am

    I know only making podimas using this kezhangu,this sounds amazing and thanks for that poriyal podi recipe,i have heard abt it,but never made or tasted!

    Today I made ur paneer peas pulav for my kid 🙂

    Reply
  8. Tina

    November 23, 2009 at 5:20 am

    Sweet potato is ma fav tooo...This looks spicy and delicious.

    Reply
  9. Sonia

    November 23, 2009 at 4:48 am

    Nags, keeping a secret from us is serious issue. 😉 😀
    I love sweet potato too...very forgiving..no? I love the podi in that bowl. Look so nice. 🙂

    Reply
  10. Nags

    November 23, 2009 at 4:05 am

    hey hb, knew you'd be first 🙂 i used freshly grated coconut (well, it was freshly greated when I bought it 4 days back!) but unsweetened dessicated should work too!

    Reply
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