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Home » South Indian » Dosa Recipe

Dosa Recipe (with Step by Step Photos)

(24 Votes and 35 Comments)

Breakfast, Idli and Dosa, South Indian

हिन्दीગુજરાતી
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Dosa – a thin and crispy crepe made from rice and urad dal (black lentils), served with Coconut Chutney and Vegetable Sambar is a match made in heaven! This popular breakfast item is not only healthy but also easy to prepare. There are many varieties of Dosa, e.g. Mysore Masala Dosa, Set Dosa, Ragi Dosa, Wheat Flour Dosa, Paper Dosa, etc. This simple Dosa Recipe explains how to make Plain or Paper Dosa from scratch with step by step photos and also provides tips on preventing them from sticking to pan while cooking.
For thin and crispy Dosa, well prepared Dosa Batter is key to its taste and texture and its preparation is very easy – first soaked rice and urad dal (black lentils) are ground individually into smooth batter and then its mixture is allowed to ferment overnight. Dosa batter prepared in this recipe can be used for the making most of the Dosas mentioned above as well other South Indian staple food items like Paniyaram, Uttapam etc.
How to Make Dosa and Dosa Batter from Scratch

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Preparation Time:  14 hours
Cooking Time:  25 minutes
Serves: 4
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Cooking Measurements
Dosa Recipe In Hindi (हिन्दी में पढ़े)
Dosa Recipe In Gujarati (ગુજરાતી માં વાંચો)
Ingredients:
3/4 cup Parboiled Rice (idli-dosa rice)
3/4 cup Regular Rice
1/2 cup Whole Urad Dal (without skin) or Split Urad Dal (black lentils)
1/4 teaspoon Fenugreek Seeds (methi dana)
1/2 tablespoon Chana Dal (gram lentils), optional
Water, as needed
Salt to taste
Oil, for shallow frying
Directions:
  1. step-1
    Take all the ingredients to prepare the dosa batter. Rice, urad dal and fenugreek seeds are the main ingredients. Chana dal is used for getting a golden color for Dosa.
  2. step-2
    Rinse both types of rice (regular rice and parboiled rice) together in water for 3-4 times and soak them in 2 cups of water for 4-5 hours – (Place both types of rice in a medium-size bowl and fill it with water till 3/4th height. Rinse the rice by rubbing them between your fingertips; the water will turn cloudy. Drain the water and repeat the process 3-4 times).
  3. step-3
    Rinse urad dal and chana dal together in water, add fenugreek seeds and soak in 1 cup water for 4-5 hours.
  4. step-4
    Drain water from urad dal in a small bowl and reserve it (it will be used in the next step while grinding the dal). Add drained urad dal, chana dal and fenugreek seeds mixture in the medium jar of a mixer grinder or blender.
  5. step-5
    Add water as needed and grind until smooth and fluffy batter (use water reserved in previous step, approx. 1½ cups water will required to grind 1/2 cup dry urad dal).
  6. step-6
    The batter should be fluffy and not very thick. Transfer it to a large container.
  7. step-7
    Drain water from rice and add them to the same mixer grinder jar. Depending on the size of the jar, you can ground the rice in multiple batches.
  8. step-8
    Add water as needed and grind until smooth texture. Don’t add too much water in a single go; add 1-2 tablespoons water at a time (approx. 1/2 cup water will required). Rice requires less water compared to urad dal while grinding. Rice batter will be little grainy and will not be as smooth as urad dal batter. Transfer it to the same container having urad dal batter in it.
  9. step-9
    Add salt and mix both batters well using spoon. The final batter should not be too thick or too watery. Cover it with plate and leave it at room temperature for 8-10 hours or overnight for fermentation. During cold weather, keep the batter in warm place (or inside the oven with oven light on) for fermentation.
  10. step-10
    During fermentation, the batter volume would increase and the tiny bubbles would appear on the surface when you stir it with a spoon. Stir the batter with a spoon. If it looks too thick, add few tablespoons water and mix well until it has attained pouring consistency (little watery than idli batter).
  11. step-11
    Heat non-stick tava or iron tava (skillet or griddle) over medium flame. Sprinkle few drops of water on the surface. If water drops sizzle and evaporate within few seconds, tava is hot enough to cook. Apply 1/2-teaspoon oil on the griddle and spread it evenly with a spatula or a clean wet cloth. Take a ladle full of batter, pour it over the surface of tawa, swirl it as thin as possible in a spiral motion by rotating ladle and make it into round shape of approx. 7-8 inch diameter circle.
  12. step-12
    Apply 1-teaspoon oil (or ghee / butter for crispy dosa) around the edges of dosa (or spread oil/ghee/butter evenly with brush for crispy dosa).
  13. step-13
    Cook until the bottom surface turns light brown and the edges start to come upward, it will take around 2-minutes.
  14. step-14
    Flip it and cook for a minute. If you are making thin dosa (as shown in the photo), you do not need to cook the other side. Transfer it to a plate. Wipe tava with clean wet cloth before making next dosa (this is to prevent dosa from sticking to Pan) and repeat the process from step-11 to step-13 for remaining batter. Hot and crispy plain dosa is ready.
Tips and Variations:
  • Please note that rice requires less water compared to urad dal while grinding them into a batter.
  • Number of hours required to ferment the batter depends on the weather condition. In summer, batter is fermented within 6-8 hours but in winter it takes up to 12-14 hours.
  • Make sure that batter is not heated up while grinding; this is required to make sure that it ferments properly. Grind the rice and dal in batches to prevent batter from heating up if you are making batter in large quantity.
  • Chana dal is added to give dosa a golden color.
  • To prevent dosas from sticking to the pan,
    1. Grease the tava/ griddle properly with oil before making the first dosa.
    2. Make sure that tava is hot enough before spreading the batter. To check whether tava is hot enough or not, sprinkle few drops of water on the surface and if the water drops sizzle and evaporate within few seconds, tava is ready.
    3. Don’t forget to wipe the tawa with a clean wet cloth before spreading the batter for each dosa.
  • Fermented dosa batter can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 3-4 days.
  • If you are using the refrigerated dosa batter, take it out from the refrigerator and wait for at least 30-minutes before starting to make dosa.
Taste: Crispy and Savory
Serving Ideas:Serve paper dosa with white coconut chutney and vegetable sambar in the breakfast or in the dinner. It can be also served with red coconut chutney and green coconut chutney.

Author: Foram

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35 Comments


Jul 26, 2022 by Jayne
The perfect dosa! I had masala potato dosa last week for the first time and wanted to try making them. Your recipe is wonderfully easy to follow and made gorgeous dosa for me! I also made your masala potato filling which I loved also. Thank you!
The fermentation took quite a while as the temp here was about 75F. I put it in the oven with the light on and it worked a charm, though the oven got a little too warm and I worried that it might kill the fermentation so I turned off the light after 8 hours.
My next dosa will be with quinoa for a more high protein dosa!
Mar 13, 2022 by Iha
I am a 11 year old girl 6th grade i actually wanted this for my school project and it helped me a lot thank you thank you !
Feb 01, 2022 by Michelle
Hi
These look amazing how do you get it to be the round tube shape like you have pictured? Is there a special way of doing it whilst cooking?
Also do you have a recipe for the potatoes in that picture too please?
Many thanks looking forward to trying these.

Response: Hello Michelle, make it round shaped like a tube when the dosa is cooked and hot. For potato masala, follow this recipe for masala dosa.


Dec 27, 2021 by Shanthi
Can you use the same batter for making idli?

Response: Yes, you can use the same batter for idli. Make sure to keep the batter little bit thick (less watery).


Feb 15, 2021 by HerbertDeLyser
I love Indian food and want to try this. It looks like it is also sugar free.
I love Papa Dum too which is thin and crispy.
Thanks for the clear directions!!
Jul 13, 2020 by Swati
I've followed most of your recipes and they have turned as expected. Thanks for all of them, great job !!

This time the dosa is sticking to the pan and it is a mess. Please help to make me understand where I am going wrong.

I have used only normal (parboiled) rice, did not use a mixture as advised.

Response: Hi Swati, follow the below given tips to prevent dosa from sticking to the pan.
1. Make sure that the batter is at room temperature (not cold).
2. Make sure that the pan is heated properly before spreading the dosa (sprinkle water on the pan and then wipe with a towel, grease the pan with oil and then spread the batter).


Jun 03, 2020 by Meera
Very nice. You took care of even minute things Keep it up!
Jun 02, 2020 by Vaani sharma
Great Dosa recipe.
Apr 22, 2020 by Kesavulu
Good step by step description
Apr 15, 2020 by Deepti Loomba
Hello
My question is thai if I am using only normal rice then what should be the ratio for the ingredients for dosa batter.

Response: Hi Deepti, just use the same amount of rice (normal rice+ idli/dosa rice) (total 1½ cups normal rice) if you are using only normal rice.


Sep 15, 2019 by Prasenjit ghosh
I want to see latest popular south Indian food of recipes.

Sep 12, 2019 by Jayesh taylor
It is nice recipe for dosa. But you have add here it is masala mysore masala dosa on dosa spreading. As well sambhar and coconut chutney recipe link together.
Aug 28, 2019 by Sadhna Kapoor
Can I take more quantity of regular rice and less quantity of parboiled rice eg.Three cups of regular rice and One cup of parboiled rice please suggest me fast, please reply me.
Thanks.

Response: Yes, you can use more regular rice and less paraboiled rice.

Mar 18, 2019 by Najma
Great recipe....What's regular rice?

Response: Hello Najma, regular rice means any type of white rice like basmati rice, sona masoori rice, khichdi rice or any short grain rice.


Oct 27, 2018 by Subhash Chandra Mondal
Good description. Easy to comprehend. It will be helpful for beginners also.
Oct 04, 2018 by jungjeet
Bohut acha hai, mene banaya and ye crispy bana tha, measurement ko sahi dhang se karne se ye crispy ho sakta hai.
Aug 18, 2018 by Pallavi
I tried this dosa recipe. But my batter didn’t ferment at all. I used half boiled 3/4th cup rice and used 3/4th cup raw rice.
Any suggestion so that I can use this unfermented batter. Tomorrow a lot of guests are coming.
My batter always fermented with other recipes but only this time it didn’t.

Response: Hi Pallavi, sorry to hear that the batter didn't ferment at all. I am not sure why it didn't ferment at all. Sometimes it doesn't ferment really well and doesn't increase in size in cooler climate. If you can see tiny bubbles in the batter then it means it is fermented.
To use unfermented batter, add the tempering mixture of finely chopped onion, curry leaves, green chilli, mustard seeds and cumin seeds to the batter and make small sized dosa from that.

Jul 19, 2018 by Nilesh
Can we use idli rava instead of rice or boiled rice?

Response: Yes, you can use the same amount of idli rava instead of rice or boiled rice.


Apr 07, 2018 by Shailaja Tyagi
Hello. Thanks for the recipe. I have a couple of questions-
1. Can I use only parboiled rice? As in replacing the regular rice also with parboiled.
2. And udad dal means the white dal split in half here, right?

Response: Yes Shailaja, you can use only parboiled rice and udad dal means white spilt lentils (white dal in half) or whole black lentils without skin.


Mar 07, 2018 by Sumit Majumdar
In winter, fermentation can be hastened/controlled if the container with the batter is placed in a bigger bowl of warm/hot water.

Response: Thank you Sumit for providing the tip to our readers.

Oct 16, 2017 by Shweta
Can we use normal rice instead of idli dosa rice?

Response: Yes, you can use any short grained rice instead of idli or dosa rice.


Jul 15, 2017 by jayshree
I have tried a lot of ur recipes n all of them have turned out to be amazing. Looking forward to making dosa tomorrow.
Can I use kasoori methi instead of fenugreek seeds?

Thank u.

Response: No Jayshree, you cannot use kasuri methi instead of fenugreek seeds.

Jun 22, 2017 by Heena thakur
Hi ..can I soak dal n rice together? If not why?

Response: No Heena, you cannot soak dal and rice together. For the perfect grinding (batter consistency), it is necessary to grind them separately.

May 28, 2017 by Shubham Thite
It is very good to learn cooking.
Apr 09, 2017 by Farhana
In Bangladesh, parboiled rice is the major staple food consumed and considered as regular rice. Could you please suggest what other type of regular rice (atop rice, polau rice: kllijira..) I can use to make the batter? Or only using parboiled rice is ok?

Response: Hello Farhana, you can us parboiled rice or any short grained rice to make the idli batter.


Dec 29, 2016 by Aarti patel
Hi. My first few dosa were very nice crispy. And after maybe 8 dosa. Others became soft and was continually breaking and not spreading well. Why is that?

Response: Hello Aarti, follow the given tips to make each dosa crispy.
1. Clean the tava before making each dosa.
2. Make sure that tava is properly heated before making each dosa. If the tava is overheated, it will be hard to spread the dosa. If it is not heated enough, dosa will not turn crispy.

Nov 27, 2016 by Susan
Hello I really enjoyed step by step recipe for utpam. This was my first time to make this dish. It came out exactly the picture showed. Thanks for sharing the one step recipes. I am going to try other North Indian recipes too.
Oct 18, 2016 by Radhika
Can we preserve the dosa batter in freezer ? I mean can we freeze it? For how long will it stay good?

Response: Yes, you can freeze it for 1 month in a container. Thaw the batter in refrigerator and then keep at room temperature for 1-2 hours before making dosa.


Aug 30, 2016 by David
I'm looking for a gluten free roti. Is it rumalli roti I'm thinking of? Would you have a recipe please?
Great recipes.

Response: Hello David, rumali roti is not gluten free as it is made with a combination of white flour and whole wheat flour. For gluten free roti, you can try this dosa, makki ki roti (corn flour roti), pathiri (rice flour roti) or even you can make the roti using amaranth flour.

Aug 16, 2016 by Huma
Hi, I am from Pakistan. Nice and easy recipe, I'll must try. Something I want to know that is the parboiled rice same as sela rice, and if I won't use them, should I use only the regular rice?

Response: Yes Huma, parboiled rice and sela rice are same. If you only use the regular rice, the dosa may not turn as good.

May 11, 2016 by Anamika
Thanks for recipe. It came out really crispy. Can we make idli with same batter.or else plz share idli recipe with rice. Thanks once again for sharing.

Response: Hello Anamika, you can make the idli with same batter (just keep the batter little thick comapred to dosa batter).

May 06, 2016 by Janu
I m great fan of your recipes. Good step by step recipe.. Please can you tell me to make soft dosa. If I use more urad dal then rice, will it make soft or hard chingam type dosa!!!!!....Please guide me...

Response: Hello, follow the same measurements (ratio) for dal and rice as given in the recipe to make the dosa batter. When you spread the dosa, spread it little thick to make soft dosa.

May 04, 2016 by Anamika
Super yummy crispy dosa. Thanks for sharing. I love all your recipes. Kindly share sattu filled parantha recipe.

Response: Hi Anamika, we will definitely try to upload the recipe of sattu filled paratha.

Apr 25, 2016 by Anamika
It came out perfect & crispy. Thanks for sharing. Really like all your recipes. One of my fav is paneer do pyaza. Sometime instead of paneer I add boil egg to it, to make masala egg. It's my husband fav.
Apr 17, 2016 by Maninderkaur
Awesome recipes. Thanks.

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