It is a Maharashtrian custom to exchange 'tilguls' (sesame seeds and jaggery syrup balls) on Pongal and these come in all shapes, sizes and textures too (hard as walnut shells, slimy as slime balls, perfectly shaped perfectly sized and perfectly made). We received tilguls from four or five people - about 20 or 25 tilguls in all.
I am not really fond of anything made with 'til' (sesame seeds) but have some tilguls simply out of habit. Yes, habit!! At certain hours of the day - esp. when I return from work - my stomach does not growl, but the eye balls pop and sometimes the tongue drools or vice-versa at the sight of the 'first edible thing'. The mind/brain interprets these messages as - "Hunger - mouth calling, mouth calling! Over and out!" My hands respond immediately to the SOS by reaching out and grabbing frantically at anything edible in the vicinity and popping it inside my mouth. This is generally followed by a few blissful moments of chewing, swallowing and sometimes guilt too (with enough practice one can push it to the end of the bottomless pit - the guilt I mean!). I started as a novice but now I am almost there and getting the 'pro' tag!!
Note: One way to overcome this urge is to keep fresh fruits waiting on your dining table - it works like magic, is healthy and perfect for 6:30p.m. That is what I usually do but that day unfortunately fruits had got over and I gave in to the tilguls.
I was in for a cruel surprise. Just as I had mechanically started moving around the sticky jaggery filled sesame ball around and bit into it, I struck ceramic (not gold) and screamed "AAAAH". I had just bit on my 'cap'!! I won't name the person whose tilgul caused the tragedy as decapitated caps can be fixed but fractured relationships do not heal even with time. I don't think I will ever yield to those 'stomach messages' any more (at least not in the near future - read as a week or so:)). The tilgul was not made well as the jaggery syrup had not been allowed to reach the correct consistency - now you know why sweet making may 'read' simple but may not be all that easy! You also know a way of getting back at people - just gift them a generous batch of 'not well made' sticky tilguls!
Apart from the little drama caused by sticky tilguls, Pongal passed off peacefully with the usual delicacies - Venn Pongal, Chakra Pongal and Vadais.
Significance of the Sankrant/Boghi/Lohri/Pongal:
Astrological event:
Sankranti is the time when the Sun passes from one zodiac sign to another and Makar (Capricorn) Sankranti is the transition of the Sun from Sagittarious to Capricorn. This time is celebrated in Maharashtra with exchange of tilguls.
Agricultural importance in Punjab and Tamil Nadu:
Pongal or Lodi mark the harvesting of crops (gathering of ripened crop) by farmers ,and prayers for a good future harvest is done on this day. The festivity is kept simple in terms of preparations because the idea is to thank the Earth for its generosity.
Tamil Nadu: It is sugar cane harvesting time in Tamil Nadu hence offering sugar cane to Mother Earth is a must. One also prays that Spring ensures a good harvest in the future.
Punjab: Punjab is the major producer of wheat in India. Wheat is a winter crop sown in October and harvested in March and April. Sankranti is a time when the cold season comes to an end and spring promises a rich harvest in April. It is to celebrate the return of Spring and the promise of a rich harvest that Punjab celebrates Lohri/Lodi. In true Punjabi style the celebrations are marked with colorful dances around a bonfire offering revadi, peanuts and sweets. The culmination of winter harvest is celebrated as 'Baisakhi' in April.
The eats
Venn-Pongal - Health factor - Very nutritious!
(Savory gruel made with lentils and rice - Khichdi from the State ofTamil Nadu)Ingredients:
Rice - 1 cup
Moong dal / Split and dehusked Mung beans - 1/2 cup
Whole black peppers - 6-7
Cumin Seeds - 1 tsp.
Ghee/Margarine/Oil - 1 tbsp.
Cashewnuts - 5-10
Curry Leaves - 2 sprigs
Salt to taste
Method:
Clean and pressure cook rice and mung beans together till very soft. (I add 4 times water for the amount of rice + 2 times water the amount of dal). We do not want a hard mass. It is desirable to achieve a creamy pudding consistency like khichdi.
Roast peppers and cumin seeds and powder the two coarsely. Set aside. Heat a tbsp. of oil and fry the broken cashews and set aside. Also roast the curry leaves till they crackle.
When the rice+dal is done, remove and add the powder, the cashews and the curry leaves giving it a light mix. If the result is not creamy you could add boiling water to adjust the consistency.
Generally a good amount of ghee is added. I do not add much but my children top this with a tsp. of salted table butter while having. Have it steaming hot and just out of the fire. It gathers into a solid mass because of the starch if it goes cold and doesn't taste nice so try and have it comfortably hot.
Chakra Pongal
(Sweet pudding madel of rice and lentils with jaggery)
Ingredients:
Rice - 1 cup
Moong dal / Split and dehusked Mung beans - 1/4 cup
Powdered jaggery (I use organic, and a sweet one) - Approx 3 cups
Ghee/Shortening/Margarine - Maximum 1/2 cup - start with a tbsp. at a time
Green Cardamom - 5 pods powdered
Cashewnuts - broken - about a tbsp.
Raisins - About 10
Edible camphor (Pachchai karpooram) - A pinch
Method:
Cook rice and dal together till soft (not soggy or gooey but not separate either) in a cooker or pot.
In a heavy bottomed pan heat a tbsp. of fat (I used margarine and you can't see the difference). Add raisins and fry till it changes color and plumps up. Remove with a slotted spoon and set aside on a kitchen napkin.
Add cashew, fry till light brown, strain and set aside on a tissue.
Now add another tbsp. of fat to the pan. Add jaggery and the rice-dal mix and cook till the jaggery blends into the rice. It should come together but remain creamy. I add one more tsp. of fat at this stage and then remove. This should not take more than 3 tbsps. for a rich version.
Add cardamom, cashewnuts and raisins. Mix and serve hot.
The more the fat, the tastier the pongal. The reddish or brownish appearance depends on the quality of jaggery used. Some jaggery varieties carry a lot of saltiness. This variety is not suited for chakra pongal, appam, or vella payasam. Organic jaggery is sweet, softer to powder and has a reddish color which is perfect for any jaggery preparation.
The two pongals are my entry to Sudeshna of "From a Bengali's Kitchen" for her event Harvest:The Festival Of Rice.
Masala vadai
(Savory deep fried snacks made with split chickpea, and flavored with spices)
Ingredients:
Split chick peas / Bengal gram/Chana dal - 2 cups (soaked for at least two hours and drained)
Coriander - 3 tbsp. chopped fine
Dry red chillies - 2 small ones (to taste)
Cloves - 2
Black pepper corns - 5
Cinnamon - 1/2 inch piece
Salt to taste
Oil to fry
Method:
First grind the spices together to an almost fine powder.
Now add the soaked and drained lentils and grind till you get a coarse batter with some unground or almost lentils too. (I keep a tbsp. of soaked dal aside and add it in the batter later)
Add chopped coriander. I did not use onions as we avoid it during festivals but otherwise I pep it up with 1/2cup finely chopped onions and a tsp. of chopped dill to give a yummy flavor.
Mix the batter well.
Make small ping-pong balls out of the dough and flatten it to a disc in the centre of your palm so that it is a little thick in the centre and flat at the edges.
Deep fry in hot oil and serve immediately. This is a course batter that does not require addition of water and hence it will not absorb much oil either. If you add water or grind fine the fritters or vadas will taken in more oil. I like a little bit of crunch and hence some lentils whole. That is entirely your choice:)
These vadais are my entry to the seventh helping of My Legume Love Affair - a legume event started by Susan and this time hosted by dear Srivalli of 'Cooking 4 All Seasons'.

Note: Though I might have made myself sound like a glutton, tilguls or til vadis are nutritious, healthy laddoos (Zero oil, vegan,sweetened with jaggery) and you can afford to snack on two or three a day if they are made well without the thought of gaining weight and at the same time feeding your senses and your body! I found some good ones at Sinful Indulgences by Jayashree Mudaliar. I will definitely listen to my tummy hollering if I am sent some like the ones she made - it would be a sin to avoid them!
hi, what a great read this post made. Loved the way you wrote it, though I am sorry to hear about the tilgul related unpleasantness! The pongal delicacies are awesome, and perfect entries to the events.
ReplyDeleteaweesommeeeee.....all the things in one go!!
ReplyDeleteU have too good fotography skills too!
chakra pongal,i loveee the color, how come u got such rich color, i get it slightly faded :P
he he he can't stop loling...
ReplyDeleteWat a lovely feast to eyes, am just drooling over those crispy masala vadais..
ReplyDeleteWe celebrate Pongal just the same way, but are not celebrating for a little while longer.
ReplyDeleteI just love the way you have described your evening time cravings. Guess what, it describes mine to a T! Except that I usually crave crunch.
Hope your tooth doesn't hurt anymore.
Thank you Shreya! Your comments make it delightful:)
ReplyDeleteSahaja, Thank you! I am trying to improve and when you say that, I know I am inching there!! I guess the variety I get is like that - just luck!
Navita, ....over my tooth?:)) I got it fixed a week later and received some ticking off for reporting in late to the Dentist!
Priya, he he sometimes I can make you drool too!!
tilguls :( I am with you here, I don't have sesame in my pantry.
ReplyDeleteOh the array of delicacies you have here, I might celebrate Pongal again real soon.
The moment I heard tilgul & tooth I knew it!Sorry to hear about that:-(
ReplyDeleteAll those food look very tempting harini, esp. becoz i am not used to cooking these at home at all.
Ouch!! Hope you are okay now. I have a cap too, they cost so much to replace! Stop eating those hard chewy stuff, woman! Go back to fruits!! :)
ReplyDeleteI love the vadai, yummy! Love the array of food.
Funny post...how sad that your "til gul gya god god bola" as they say, backfired...hope you are feeling better...the pongals and the vadai look awesome..I have never added cinnamon and cloves to my vadai, normally I do chillies,coriander and curryleaves...will try it your way the next time :-)
ReplyDeletelove the pongal pics a lottt
ReplyDeletelovely vadas Harini. and great pics..
ReplyDeleteOh wow! You made all that! I just made a last minute sakkarai pongal and called it a day! I love the sakkarai pongal pics especially... nice and glossy!
ReplyDeleteawesome pics... I love the chakkara pongal and the vadai especially... my hunger cravings have started right now :)
ReplyDeletelol, I guess the tilgul was way too hard. That reminds me, I have to set right my cavity before it gets really worse, I dont want an RCT & i definitely dont want a cap after reading this. I love Tilguls .. I love the masala vadas .. my hubby's fave too
ReplyDeleteHai,hai,Sunshineji,aap abhi kuch kha sakte ho?howz your tooth?
ReplyDeleteOther note,love the pongals-inviting pics.I have just started liking pongal after bengali khichdi which turned out good.
Take care of your pearlies.Laddoo aayenge jaayenge,but pearls chale gaye toh ????? ;(
Take Care,I can't stop imagining your scream scene and am dying of laughter (hahahahha....)also the scene of mind interpreting SOS ,(thud)oh no,.. I have fallen off the chair doubling in laughter and stomach ache.see u later
Serious note,take care.Love the pongals.
ReplyDeleteLove Dal Vada! My favorite nibbles! The pongal looks soo good
ReplyDeletelovely pics..In karnataka we call them as sweet and khara pongal... looks yummy and mouthwatering..don't ask about vada..any fried thing is yummyyyyy
ReplyDeleteHa ha I thought u got a diamond hidden in balls... Sorry i couldn't stop laughing .... Love the whole menu, I made them but prepared medu vadai. Lovely and droolworthy pictures
ReplyDeleteBad experience ... great goodies. The same time around Makar Sankranti or the harvesting time is celebrated in Bengal and Orissa too ... two major contributors of rice to the country. And sweets and Pitha are made of all harvested stuff like rice, lentils, jaggery(Bengal produces great Palm jaggery),etc. at that time.
ReplyDeleteYuor Pongal and vadais look great. :-)
Too bad about your tooth. :-(
What a great post! I love reading about traditions and customs such as these. Thank you so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks everyone for your consideration about the tooth;). It was only a ceramic cap that came off so the tooth doesn't hurt at all!! It wasn't such a bad experience except because my first reaction after taking the thing in my hand was a big guffaw!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the wonderful description of Sankranti!
ReplyDeleteAnd you got to tempt me with all those
Venn-Pongal and Chakra pongal! i loved to eat those at my friends - now i have the recipe and can make it at home!
Yaay!
Hope you had a wonderful sankranti - other than the ruined cap! :-P
I am confused wht shud i exclaim..wowwwww or owwwwwwww.
ReplyDeleteThe incident was bad to bear but fun to read(oops sorry)I can imagine how it feels,but i also hope none of those who shared tilguds with u read ur post...lagta hai meri nazar lag gayi(in case u believe these odd things)tsk tsk tsk,now i am not repenting for not having such wondeful neighbours or freinds to share food with me ;-)
Jokes apart,i was dfrooling from start to end of post,everything sounds and looks so delcious,thanks for the enrty madam,i am honoured
Send u mine too,hope u will like it
the tilgul story was good, but sorry to hear that u got hurt! hope u r fine now!
ReplyDeletethe pongals look delicious..nice click
Ha, ha...me no til lover either. Have you had "revri" ? They always made my teeth clatter
ReplyDeleteAnd so many goodies you made !!! All of them had my tummy growling though truth be told have never had "pongal"
Arun, thanks!!
ReplyDeleteAlka, that was a good one - wow or oww:). The person who gave me had good intentions! Thanks for your FIC entry too:)
KV, Welcome:) I am glad you liked the writing of the incident!
Sandeepa, yay! So that makes two of us - I too hate revdi!! Pongal is basically khichdi, and we used to make it often when the kids were really young - about 1 or 2, as it is healthy bland and easy to swallow. Maybe you could try it for your kids too:)
Gosh! Tilguls can be dangerous for sure :)
ReplyDeleteHope your toothcap is on it's way to recovery.
And three great treats in one post - now that's a treat!
"decapitated caps can be fixed but fractured relationships do not heal even with time" <<------ hahhahaha... u are too funny!!! i can't stop laughing. great post. lovely recipes... and good shots- everything looks so yummy harini.
ReplyDeleteLovely post and this is certainly a lovely feast for the eyes.
ReplyDeletehe he he... I know what it is to have a broken cap.. My hubby has got one cap placed three times in a row.. whenever he bit into some solid food it used to come out and hen we changed the doc! now it is fine.. It has not come out despite me making solid laddus ;) vadai looks yummy.. been long since I made vadai at home. There is an Indian restaurant here.. they make similar vadai with chopped onion bits too..
ReplyDeletePongals and vadai look very delicious. I'm the same way as you when i return from work...end up feeling guilty a lot of time :-) Sorry about your tilgul experience, but i couldn't control my laughter reading that. I had a similar experience with a friend's low fat mysorepa, but thankfully nothing happened to me :D
ReplyDeleteawesome post,..Sunshinemom,..
ReplyDeletehappy republic day,..:-)
Wow sakkarai pongal is mouthwatering and bet would have been a treat! Vadai and ven pongal too looks great!
ReplyDeleteI don't want those tilgul :D ,though something like that only will stop my carvings for chewy things:)
Sorry for replying bit late, yep u can give trial with makki ki atta n will be very curious to know how they would have turned out for u..
ReplyDeletelovely clicks of beautiful pics... awesome treat... may i join u again dear. (esply for vadas tempting to pickup)
ReplyDeleteI was in splits reading your post SM....hope your tooth is fixed! And the vadais look so delicious.
ReplyDeleteHAPPY REPUBLIC DAY.
ReplyDeleteThere's no need for any disclaimer.whatever you say is always welcome.
I enjoyed the quote I must say,after all who else but you could say that ;)?now I am just kidding,but seriously NO DISCLAIMER PLEASE.I know your funny bone is in the right place,mera nahin hai,isliye kabhi kabhi overboard ho jati hoon,then I add disclaimer.Expecting yummy quotes from you.
Lovely recipes Harini.I'm still feeling about the neighbors you've got ;-) Hey, do you have the recipe of tilguls. I never made them and my friend made it during sankranthi and they turned out to be hard. The link you've provided has asked to make the sesame into powder. I've seen tilguls with whole sesame seeds. I hope you understand what I mean.
ReplyDeleteAnyways, take care. Also, I want to let you know that I've started an event at my blog. If you are interested please participate.
Awesome treat, all three recipes are gorgeous. Awesome click. hope you are feeling better from your ache.
ReplyDeleteoh dear... i hope ur ceramic is fixed now. gosh, it must have hurt so much! i too am not very fond of til unde as we call...
ReplyDeleteand that pongal looks so delicious. belated sankranthi wishes (i know i am too early for next yr;).
Nice recipes. I am also posting pongal recipe now.... YUM! Nice pictures...
ReplyDeleteLovely writeup:) all the dishes look great,especially the chakara pongal...mine was almost white in color...i blame it to the jaggery that i got here:-(.Good one!
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear abt the tragedy that happened Harini..
ReplyDeleteAll the dishes look so yummy..esply Venpongal n the Vada..luved 'em..:)
I'm a pro as well in pushing the guilt deep deep...deep down. I love the combination of ellu and vellam. In my house for Garuda panchami, we soak raw sesame in water and then grind it together with jaggery. I like that sweet so much.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right about preparing Indian sweets. Getting it right is an art, with so many types of pagu consistencies. I think we should also start using candy thermometers for Indian sweets and give exact temperatures, so that many of us can actually prepare it.
Lovely feast. The vadai is calling my name!
So many delicious dishes..thanks for the entries H..
ReplyDeleteawesome pongal and vadai. Did u unmould the pongals to come beautiful shape? I felt hungry when I see it. Lovely entries.
ReplyDeleteHi..I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I love pongal. Picture so nice and glossy. Yummy!
ReplyDelete