Banana Cake In Pan
You want to make a cake but you don’t have an oven. What do you do? Don’t panic. You can cook a cake in a pan too. Surprised? Just follow this recipe and see the result – it will not disappoint you.
You want to make a cake but you don’t have an oven. What do you do? Don’t panic. You can cook a cake in a pan too. Surprised? Just follow this recipe and see the result – it will not disappoint you.
For many baking bread at home is a great stress buster. And when you see your labour of love come out of the oven, baked perfectly, the pleasure is indescribable. So go ahead, just follow this recipe and enjoy the results with your family and friends
Come Diwali and most Maharashtrian housewives get busy making various sweet and savoury snacks. One of them is chirote which are layered dough roundels deep-fried and then dipped in flavoured sugar syrup.
The origins of mathri can be traced to Rajasthan. It is a crisp deep-fried snack made with flour, spice and ghee. It can be flavoured variously with kasuri methi, carom seeds, black peppercorns, cumin seeds, coriander seeds to name a few. Here we have added sabudana which give it a different texture. It is quite easy to make and can be stored for a few days.
Nankhatai is the Indian version of shortbread cookies. It has a crumbly melt in the mouth texture that can be enjoyed with cups of hot tea or coffee. The name is derived from Persian where nan means bread and khatai means biscuit. Here we have further enhanced its look and taste with the addition of apricot jam.
Namkeen champakali is a crunchy and flavourful teatime snack. These intricately shaped spirals are made with refined flour dough, deep-fried and then seasoned with a spice blend that give them a delightful taste. Champakalis can be made sweet too and is usually made during festivals.
This malpua, a speciality of Bihar, is luscious and mouthwatering. Made with refined flour, semolina, milk, dried coconut, fennel seeds and sugar is easy to make. It is a great tea time snack or can be served as an after meal dessert.
East-west fusion cake flavoured with saffron, screwpine water, rose water and cardamom powder – it is so very delicious that you will not be able to stop at eating one slice. Rasmalai helps to keep the cake moist.
This cake is a proof of the fact that eggless cakes can be just as tasty as the ones which are made with eggs. Paan with gulkand is, as we all know, a great mouth freshner to be had after a heavy meal. And when this combination is added to the cake batter the result is divine.