My husband loves Mysore pak and we always get a kilo from Krishna Sweets during our trip to Chennai. However, I always keep thinking that there's nothing healthy in it but just loads of ghee and sugar and Besan (kadala maavu/ gram flour) which doesn't help much. Last week, when talking to my mami about Diwali preparations, she mentioned that ammamma used to make badam pak often and that everyone loves it. Immediately, I asked her if she has learnt the recipe and jotted it down and planned to try it this Diwali.
Badam Pak / Almond fudge |
The ratio is the same as the traditional mysore pak, just that we omit besan (gram flour) completely and use badam (almonds) instead.
What You Need -
1 cup badam (almonds)
1 cup water
2 cups sugar
3 cups ghee
Method -
=> I used 1/2 cup badam, 1 cup sugar and 1.5 cups ghee and got around 15 pieces, as you see in the picture. For your reference, the standard is 1 cup = 240 ml.
- Powder almonds (badam) in your mixie. You might have to do it in batches as we need them to be finely powdered. There's no need to soak badam or peel the skin.
- Prepare a greased tray and keep it ready. I used my oven's tray and placed a baking sheet on it.
- Mix all the ingredients in a wide pan and make sure there are no lumps. I used a whisk to do the job.
- Put the pan on the gas stove (medium flame) and keep stirring in one direction. This is the painful part as you need to keep stirring continuously for about 12-15 minutes.
- After about 8 minutes, you would realize that the mixture is getting thickened. Continue stirring.
- Around 13th minute, ghee would start leaving the sides of the pan and the mixture would have thickened even further.
- Now, you can pour the mixture on the tray. Don't level the surface, the best (ideal) result would be porous badam pak. If you had poured it on the plate earlier (before it's done) then the badam pak would be flat (not porous) yet soft.
- Wait for another 15 minutes for it to cool down and then cut into squares.
- Store in an airtight container. This stays good at room temperature for 7-10 days.
- Enjoy the rich badam sweet!!
Badam Mysore Pak |
Notes:
- There was a lot of ghee (about 8-10 spoons) that separated and I managed to collect them in a bottle, one spoon at a time, from the tray. The rest of the ghee that was on the tray, was used to roll out doodh pedas that I had made.
- Also, I used the kitchen tissues (paper) to wipe/drain excess ghee from the pieces.
- Timings would vary if you double or triple the quantities I used. You would have to wait and watch for the signs like, mixture thickening up and ghee separating.
I am not so fond of sweets but however this badam pak has grabbed all my attentions. I just loved it. It looks so yummy. As I am not experienced of making sweet but still i have noted down the recipe and will surely make it out at the earliest.
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ReplyDeletevery informative and interesting. really, i was searching something new today and now your recipe came on my computer. Wow! I am very impressed with your work. One of the best sweet dishes you can make in your home. Yummy!
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ReplyDeleteMysore Pak
Mysore Pak recipe
How to make Mysore Pak