Kitchenpostcards
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Podcast
  • Youtube
Desserts, Entree, vegetarian  /  April 13, 2018

Meetha Pulao

by Sakshi Kapoor

Sating the sweet tooth with something Meetha

Almost everyone in my family has a sweet tooth. But I will be pompous and say it out aloud that I am usually the only one who makes an effort to prepare a homemade sweet dish to sate cravings! I love homemade sweets and have grown up eating, not store bought ice creams and chocolates but homemade Ladoos, Kheer, Panjeeri, Halwa, Meetha Pulao amongst other things. There were jalebis too, but they were bought from the best available Halwai shop in the area.

 

Guess what is the sunday special šŸ˜‹ #jalebi #dubai #indianblogger #foodporn #pennsylvania #indianfood #sweet #expatblogger #instagood #food #foodlover #streetfood #vegetarian #tasty

A post shared by Kitchenpostcards (@kitchenpostcards) on Jan 29, 2017 at 5:56am PST

 

Kanika’s recent posts have added more sweet dishes like Gulgule, Poode and Malpue to my repertoire now. These were things that were made at home but occasionally. So I hope to make these more often in the future. But I don’t remember exactly when and where I first had Meethe Chawal or Meetha Pulao (Sweet Pilaf). Like Poode, Gulgule etc these were dishes that was only made at home either Basant Panchami or Baisakhi.

 

Punjabi Meetha Pulao recipe
Meethe Chawal

Yellow, the colour so reminiscent of the Punjab’s Sarson (Mustard) fields in the season of Basant (Spring), of harvests of the fertile land, is often seen on our plates on such special festivals.

This is what my mother told me when I asked her if any special sweets are made on Baisakhi or Basant Panchami. I don’t think I cared so much about this fact as a kid. Most of the time, I was just craving something sweet and this was made on just a whim.
I soon learnt how to make these but I often struggled to cook the rice properly as they were cooked with the sugar. Making them like a regular pulao never gave satisfactory results. It was tasty but I wanted the rice to be softer and yet separate. Like they are in a Biryani.

What is the perfect recipe for Persian inspired Meetha Pulao?

Until, I found a good recipe for these in Veronica Rani Sidhu’s book “Menus and Memories from Punjab” that Kanika recently gifted me. She describes them to have been inspired from Persian Sweet rice and uses citrus zest which we never did at home! The technique for cooking rice was more like a biryani. I just had to try the recipe out!
 

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

To my relief, it came out better than what I had been making. But I would still add more water while cooking the rice in this recipe.

Here is my adaptation of her recipe for Meethe Chawal.

Ingredients
Basmati rice, 1 cup
Raisins, 2 tablespoons
Orange zest, 1 teaspoon 
Salt, 1/4 teaspoon 
Saffron strands,1/2 teaspoon 
A small piece of cinnamon stick
Clove, 1
Cardamom, 2
sugar, 3/4 cup (or jaggery*)
Ghee, 1 tablespoons
A handful of Almonds

Method

Start by washing and draining the basmati rice. Now boil a litre of water and add salt in a deep pan. Once the water boils, add the raisins and rice. Boil for 7-8 minutes and then drain.
To the drained rice, add crushed saffron and orange zest. Mix carefully to avoid breaking the rice. You will notice that the rice will turn a brilliant yellow soon.

Next, crush the cardamom. Sliver or crush the almonds as well.
In another pan, heat ghee on low heat. Once it melts add the crushed cardamom, clove, cinnamon sticks and almonds. Cook for 1-2 minutes and then add the sugar. I used 3/4th cup of sugar for 1 cup of rice. You can use less sugar if you don’t want the rice to be too sweet.

Substitutes for Sugar

*I haven’t tried using jaggery yet because I wasn’t sure of the quantity and how it would change the colour of the rice. If you’re confident about the amount of jaggery then please use it and tell us your experience in the comments. I will update the recipe with notes below once I make another version with jaggery.

Cooking the rice till it’s soft

Stir in the sugar and be careful to keep the heat on low.
Now without waiting for too long, add the rice and mix it in carefully. Add half a cup of water and shut the lid and let it cook covered for 20 minutes.

Check the rice after 20 minutes if the rice is well cooked. You can add a tablespoon of water again and shut the pan for another 5-6 minutes till the rice is completely cooked. 
Tasty Sweet Pilaf recipe persian style

Serve this fragrant Meetha Pulao warm as a side to a meal or as a dessert.

Meetha Pulao
2018-06-28 03:53:36
A fragrant sweet pulao of Persian origin that is loaded with nuts and raisins and flavours of citrus, spice and saffron.
Ingredients
  1. Basmati rice 1 cup
  2. Raisins 2 tablespoons
  3. Orange zest Ā 1 teaspoon
  4. Salt Ā 1/4 teaspoon
  5. Saffron strands 1/2 teaspoon
  6. A small piece of cinnamon stick
  7. Clove 1
  8. Cardamom 2
  9. Sugar Ā 3/4 cup (or jaggery*)
  10. Ghee Ā 1 tablespoons
  11. A handful of Almonds
Add ingredients to shopping list
If you don’t have Buy Me a Pie! app installed you’ll see the list with ingredients right after downloading it
Preparing the par boiled rice
  1. Wash and drain the basmati rice.
  2. In a deep pan, boil a litre of water and add salt. Once the water boils, add the raisins and rice. Boil for 7-8 minutes and then drain.
  3. To the drained rice, add crushed saffron and orange zest. Mix carefully to avoid breaking the rice. The rice will turn a brilliant yellow soon.
Making/ Assembling the Meetha Pulao
  1. Crush the cardamom. Sliver or crush the almonds as well.
  2. Now in another pan, heat the ghee on low heat. Once it melts add crushed cardamom, clove, cinnamon sticks and almonds.
  3. Cook for 1-2 minutes and then add the sugar.
  4. Stir in the sugar and be careful to keep the heat on low.
  5. Now without waiting for too long, add the rice and mix it in carefully. Add half a cup of water and shut the lid and let it cook covered for 20 minutes.
  6. If the rice is not cooked, add a tablespoon of water again and shut for another 5-6 minutes.
  7. Serve Meetha Pulao warm as a side dish or as a dessert.
Notes
  1. I used 3/4th cup of sugar in this Pulao for 1 cup of rice. You can use less sugar if you don't want the rice to be too sweet.
Sugar Substitutes
  1. *I haven't tried using jaggery yet because I wasn't sure of the quantity and how it would change the colour of the rice. If you're confident about the amount of jaggery then please use it and tell us your experience in the comments. I will update the recipe with notes below once I make another version with jaggery.
Print
By Sakshi Kapoor
Adapted from Memories and Menus from Punjab by Veronica Rani Sidhu
Adapted from Memories and Menus from Punjab by Veronica Rani Sidhu
Kitchenpostcards https://www.kitchenpostcards.com/

 

Please follow and like us:
error
fb-share-icon
Tweet
fb-share-icon

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

Tags

  • Baisakhi
  • Easy recipe
  • Gurh wale chawal
  • Homecooks
  • homemade
  • meetha
  • meetha pulao
  • Meethe chawal
  • Peele chawal
  • pilaf
  • Pulav
  • Punjabi food
  • rice
  • saffron rice
  • Sweet rice pilaf persian style

Post navigation

Pineapple Pachadi
Palakwali Lobiya | Black Eyed Peas with Spinach

6 comments

  • Kheer and Malpua; a saawan special from Punjab | Kitchenpostcards
    April 22, 2018

    […] Meethe Chawal ~ Sweet PilafĀ  […]

    Reply
  • Besan ka halwa~ a Navaratri special | Kitchenpostcards
    April 28, 2018

    […] Meetha Pulao […]

    Reply
  • Sewiyan or Payasam~ Sweet Treat for FestivalsĀ  | Kitchenpostcards
    April 30, 2018

    […] Meetha Pulao […]

    Reply
  • Besan Ladoos | Kitchenpostcards
    May 4, 2018

    […] Meethe Chawal ~ Sweetened RiceĀ  […]

    Reply
  • Puri and Aloo Bhaji ~ A Ganesh Chaturthi Special | Kitchenpostcards
    May 11, 2018

    […] Meetha Pulao […]

    Reply
  • Pineapple upside-down Cake | Kitchenpostcards
    May 11, 2018

    […] Meetha Pulao […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Gajar ki Sabzi Two Ways – Cooking Together with Kanika & Sakshi

https://youtu.be/uPW-JIf09Oc

Recent Posts

  • Tamarind Rice – use that leftover rice!
  • Kitchenpostcards Podcast S1, Ep4: Staples in a Punjabi Kitchen
  • Chane ki Dal ki Khichdi
  • Kitchenpostcards Podcast S1, Ep3: Seasonal Eating – Winter & Spring
  • Kitchenpostcards Podcast S1, Ep2: Seasonal Eating- Summer & Monsoon
  • Kitchenpostcards Podcast S1, Ep1: Our Own Unique Punjabis!

Archives

Categories

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Elara by LyraThemes
  • Ā© 2021 | Kitchenpostcards – All rights reserved.
Subscribe to Kitchenpostcards!Recipes, inspiration and tips you can use.
Name
Enter your email address
How did you hear about us?

Thanks, I’m not interested

Social media & sharing icons powered by UltimatelySocial
%d bloggers like this:
    This site uses cookies: Find out more.