Water Chestnut Flour Halva
Singhara Halwa
Reeta Kumar
Singhara is Indian water-chestnut, triangular in shape, with thick red...ish green skin, with 2 small spikes at the top. It has milky white, lightly sweet flesh. It is eaten like a fruit when fresh, made into bhajies and curries when halfway mature and made into flour when completely mature and dry.
During fasting, Hindus are not allowed to break their fast with anything that contains cereals, lentils and ordinary salt. Therefore, traditional ?fasting food? or 'Vrat ka khana', as it is called in India, has to find alternative ways of making staple food like poories and parathas. Singhara is a fruit, so it is permitted for fasting food.
See Buckwheat or Kotu Poori, Buckwheat or Kotu Dahi Pakori and Sago Khitchri.
Serves 5-6
Ingredients
1 cup singhara flour
4 cups boiling hot water
4-6 tbsp. ghee
1 cup sugar or to taste
1/2 tsp. freshly ground green cardamom seeds
1 tbsp. blanched almonds and pistachios, shredded.
Instructions
Heat the ghee in a karahi or heavy bottomed pan.
Add singhara flour and stir-fry on low to medium heat, until it changes colour and aroma of roasting rises.
Meanwhile, dissolve sugar in hot water. Add cardamom powder to it.
Turn heat to minimum or turn it off and add water slowly, stirring all the time, to avoid lump forming. A wire whisk is good for stirring it properly.
Turn heat up to medium again and keep stirring, until it begins to set and eventually the whole mass begins to comes off the edges of the pan. You will see a film of ghee separating the halva from the from the pan.
Stir in half the nuts and take the halva out in a serving bowl.
Garnish with remaining nuts and serve hot.
Notes
Alternative way of serving: You can press the halwa on a flatplate, sprinkle with half the nuts on top, press gently and cut it into diamond shapes.