An essential part of a Tamil brahmin wedding feast, Puli Inji is one of my favourite parts of the fest. Sweet, Sour and also slightly spicy, I love this dish, and always want more, though the servers would only put a small tsp in each banana leaf.
The other day, with a whole bunch of ginger at home, I was wondering what to make which will use the ginger up and then decided to make some puli inji. I make a slight change to the traditional recipe. In the traditional recipe, the chilli and ginger are chopped into tiny pieces, while I blended it up so the end result was more chutney-like than a gravy-like which is how it is usually made. This recipe can be stored for a couple of weeks when refrigerated.
Puli Inji aka Sweet Sour Ginger Sauce
Ingredients:
- 1 cup ginger, peeled, chopped and ground into a rough paste
- 1 cup green chillies, peeled, chopped into a paste
- 1 lemon sized ball of tamarind
- 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
- 2-3 tbsps of grated jaggery (more or less depending on the spice intensity of the chilli plus your spice tolerance)
- Salt to taste
To be ground into a powder
- 1 tbsp Urad dal (split black gram)
- 1/2 tsp fenugreek seeds
- 5-6 curry leaves
For the seasoning
- 1-2 tbsps Gingelly oil
- 1 tsp mustard seeds
- 1/4 tsp asafoetida
Method:
- Soak the tamarind in hot water and keep aside for 30-45 mins. When it cools, smash it well and extract all the juice. Throw the pulp and reserve the tamarind water. You can also use store-bought tamarind paste and use a couple of tsps for this recipe.
- In a dry pan, dry-roast the urad dal, fenugreek seeds and curry leaves till they become brown and crisp. Keep aside to cool completely and then grind this into a fine powder.
- In another pan, add the oil and when it warms up, add the mustard seeds and let them pop. Now add the asafoetida and stir for a couple of seconds. Next, add the ginger and let it brown. Now add the chilli and let that cook for a couple of minutes.
- When the ginger and the chilli are brown, add the tamarind juice, turmeric powder, salt and let it come to a rolling boil.
- Once the mixture is boiling, add the jaggery and the ground powder and let it come to the consistency that you want and switch off the flame.
- The mixture will thicken as it cools, so do switch off the flame before it reaches the final consistency you want.
Yummy Puli Inji is ready. This is great as a side to any south Indian dish as well as a chutney for bread. You can also use this as a dip.
If you want a more textured dish, chop the ginger and chillies and then make it as per the recipe.





A very traditional south Indian dish, this is our version of Kadhi, a yoghurt based gravy, which is found almost all over India, in various avatars – the kadhis which you have in Gujarat and Punjab and the pitla from Maharashtra.
Mor Kuzambu or Buttermilk Gravy
This sweet is the favourite of everyone at home, especially the children and is my go-to recipe when I need to whip up a sweet for any festival. GG & BB love it so much that I have to hide some for S, otherwise, he won’t get any when he comes home from work! This is a very easy recipe but takes a little bit of time stirring if you want to get the rich taste.
Semiya/Vermicelli Payasam
An easy one-pot meal, this pulao can be put together when you are in a hurry. This is the perfect meal for a bachelor to make as it does not need many utensils as well as a lot of skills to make it.
Ingredients: