
Jangri a famous Indian sweet is a look-alike of its equally popular counterpart – Jalebis. While jalebis are made from all-purpose flour(maida), jangris are made from Whole Urad Dal.It is called as Imartis in UP , where two versions of it – a soft & a crispy one are made. (thanks sangeeta for sharing this info !)
Having a hugeeeeeeeee sweet-tooth my love for jangris is understandable. Though i knew how to make the sweet, till date i was never inclined to make it because Sri Krishna Sweets is nearby and my craving is just a hop, skip and run to the sweet joint !
The Bloggers Marathon by Jayasri featuring recipes from Raks Kitchen was the perfect motivator to get the lovely sweet to my kitchen. The step-by-step tutorial and the alluring pictures from Raks triggered my lazy bones; my hubby who just came home after work also tried his hands in piping (i took a short video of the same).
Generally a separate cloth is used for piping which has a small hole made from a heated metal skewer or nail. It is then stitched around to make it perfect for use.
I used a small polythene bag with a tiny hole at the closed end and also a butter paper shaped as a cone with decent results. While the butter-paper cone did produce some dainty looking jangris, i needed to re-make a new cone every time the filling was over. Thus the polythene bag or zip-lock transparent pouch (as used by raks) made more sense in terms of continuity .
After making it, i realised it is not too hard to make and with a little interest and loads of love the sweet can be made often !
Having a hugeeeeeeeee sweet-tooth my love for jangris is understandable. Though i knew how to make the sweet, till date i was never inclined to make it because Sri Krishna Sweets is nearby and my craving is just a hop, skip and run to the sweet joint !
The Bloggers Marathon by Jayasri featuring recipes from Raks Kitchen was the perfect motivator to get the lovely sweet to my kitchen. The step-by-step tutorial and the alluring pictures from Raks triggered my lazy bones; my hubby who just came home after work also tried his hands in piping (i took a short video of the same).
Generally a separate cloth is used for piping which has a small hole made from a heated metal skewer or nail. It is then stitched around to make it perfect for use.
I used a small polythene bag with a tiny hole at the closed end and also a butter paper shaped as a cone with decent results. While the butter-paper cone did produce some dainty looking jangris, i needed to re-make a new cone every time the filling was over. Thus the polythene bag or zip-lock transparent pouch (as used by raks) made more sense in terms of continuity .
After making it, i realised it is not too hard to make and with a little interest and loads of love the sweet can be made often !
What Goes:- (approx 15 mini jangris excluding some funky designs by yours truly)
For the Batter:-
- Whole white urad dal – 1 cup (approx 100-125 gms)
- Rice flour -1 tbsp
- Orange food colour1/2 pinch
- Salt – a pinch
- Water -less than 1/4 cup
For the Sugar Syrup:-
- Sugar – 1 cup
- Water – just enough to immerse the sugar
- Orange Food Colour- a pinch
- Lemon Juice- a squeeze
- Rose essence – few drops (optional)
For the piping:-
- Zip lock cover /small polythene bag/cloth/butterpaper(limited use)
How:-
Soak Urad Dal for 2-3 hours and grind it to a smooth paste. The batter was really fluffy and smooth(i used grinder, u can also use a food processor or mixer).
Making the sugar syrup is very easy and breezy. Heat the sugar with just enough water and allow it to boil for 3-4 minutes. Add essence, food colour and the lemon juice. Set aside.
Take the small polythene bag (or zip lock cover) and make a small hole as shown. Alternatively a cone from the butter paper also served the purpose.
Heat a flat botomed vessel with oil and let it remain on low flame ! I used a metal skewer for turning over the jangris (u can also use chopsticks)
Now fill the pouch with the batter, hold and press the cone/pouch and draw jangris by making a circle and swirling small coil type rings around it.
The short video clip (my hubby’s piping it pretty) will help to make better looking jangris–
Once the jangris get cooked turn them over gently and let it cook crisp.
Now dunk them to the sugar syrup. Let the jangris absorb the flavoured syrup for 2-3 minutes.
Take it out carefully and let it stay for sometime before you devour ! Enjoy !!




Awesome looking jangris Priya..the color, shape, texture everything is perfect..you nailed it!!
US Masala
What a lovely jangris,It looks absolutely delicious..
Wow, drooling,they looks awesome.
I love jangris and these are tempting me
jangris are looking so good..lovely colour and beautiful step wise pictures.
Ahhh Priya, Am also a hugeeeee fan of jangri, probably thatz the only one I would relish during deewali.. U nailed it priya, esp, the video sure helps..
Jangiris are my favouritee tooo…. Same pinch… I'm also fond of them… Yours look perfect and delicious…. am drooling…
Priya you are making me hungry for some tea and snacks! I love your "funky" designs :)
wow they look v nice:)
lovely and perfectly delicious jangris with a step by step demo.
awesome Jangri looks delicious. I love your designs.
Very well explained and mouth watering jangiris!
perfect Priya! lovely- remember diwali? when we used to fight over jangri? well, look at you- now you made your own Jangris…You rock!
So pretty and cute jangiris Priya, feel like having some rite now..
beautifully done delicious
Wow.. jalebi lookalikes…looks so so so yumm
ammaandbaby.blogspot.com/
I couldn't the perfect ,,, have to try it out again….urs look too good!
Smitha
http://smithasspicyflavors.blogspot.com/
I had no idea jangri's were made with urad dal! Kudos to you for trying them at home, they look delicious.
Gosh! these look so delicious. I always thought that it's very hard to make these, now I get it it's not. Thanks for sharing, I've bookmarked this.
Beautiful jangri.. my fav… i never got right jangri here.. will surely try ur recipe :)