Bori (food)

Bori (Bengali: বড়ি) is dried lentil dumpling popular in Bengali cuisine. It is made from a paste of urad dal and winter melon which is sun-dried for several days. Once fully dried, it can easily last for about a year.

The paste is laid out by hand on a mat in the sunlight. It sticks to the mat while wet but when the bori dries completely it can easily come off. In its simplest form bori takes the conical shape naturally occurring due to the way the paste is laid out. The word bari in Bengali means tablet (derived from batika, which is possibly derived from Sanskrit pattika पट्टिका) . However, intricate artistic designs can also made with the paste when squeezed out through a funnel. This is called naksha bori. It is also called gahona bori or gayna bori because the designs often look like those of jewellery (gahana or gayna is Bengali for jewellery). To avoid breaking naksha bori when removing from the mat, a layer of poppy seeds is spread before laying the paste. The district of Purba Medinipur is famous for its naksha bori.[1] Preparing bori is almost exclusively done by women of the household, sometimes assisted by children. Contrary to the common notion, it is not grown on trees.

Bori can be fried and eaten as a snack or can be added to fish or vegetable dishes to enhance taste and to add variety.

References

  1. Ray, Utsa (2015-01-05). Culinary culture in colonial India. Cambridge University Press. p. 227. ISBN 110704281X.

External links

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