Sweet Tooth: 5 Unique Desserts Of Andhra Pradesh

Sample the honied side of Andhra gastronomy, with its popular emblematic desserts

Shutterstock/P.V.R.M
Shutterstock/P.V.R.M : Putharekulu. Its delicate, crispy wafer-like layers are filled with a mixture of sugar and ghee

The desserts of Andhra Pradesh definitely trump its main course cuisine comprising mouth-watering tangy and spicy dishes. You will find everything from paper-thin crisp rolls and deep-fried sugary bits to cream-filled patties and sticky fruit-based puddings in Andhra Pradesh. Here are some popular sweets you must dig into on your next visit to Andhra Pradesh.

Putharekulu 

The wafer is made from a batter of rice flour, ghee, and water and cooked over an upturned pot
The wafer is made from a batter of rice flour, ghee, and water and cooked over an upturned pot Photo: Liskanth
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Delicate, crispy wafer-like layers are filled with a mixture of sugar and ghee. The wafer is made from a batter of rice flour, ghee, and water and cooked over an upturned pot. The mixture is drizzled over the heated surface, removed once cooked, and further roasted over an open flame until crispy. The filling of ghee and sugar is then smeared on the wafer, which is rolled up and served.

Nellore Malai Kaja 

Nellore Malai Kaja
Nellore Malai Kaja Photo: Muralikrishna Sweets/Facebook
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A clotted cream forms the centre of this exquisite dish. The outer layer is made from a mixture of maida (flour), sugar, ghee, and cardamom. This is shaped into discs, deep fried until golden brown, and then filled with the cream.

Kakinada Kaja 

This delectable snack originated in the city of Kakinada and is similar to another confection, Andhra kaja
This delectable snack originated in the city of Kakinada and is similar to another confection, Andhra kaja Photo: Wikimedia Commons
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This delectable snack originated in the city of Kakinada and is similar to another confection, Andhra kaja. Created from a mixture of maida (refined wheat flour), sugar, ghee (clarified butter), and cardamom, patted down into discs and deep fried until golden brown, these are finally soaked in sugar syrup. The sweet and sticky textured preparation, with its crisp exterior and soft and chewy middle, is much sought-after during festivities.

Mamidi Thandra

Mamidi Thandra is mango jelly dried in layers
Mamidi Thandra is mango jelly dried in layers Photo: Athreyapuram Pootharekulu
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This sweet and tangy layered concoction is made from mangoes indigenous to Andhra Pradesh. The mango is peeled, deseeded, and then cooked with sugar and jaggery to make a thick, sweet, sticky syrup. The syrup is allowed to firm up on a flat surface, cut into shiny yellow diamond-shaped snacks or turned into roundels. Mamidi Thandra is a popular treat during the summer months.

Sunnundalu 

The sunnundalu is made from urad dal (lentils), flour, sugar, and ghee
The sunnundalu is made from urad dal (lentils), flour, sugar, and ghee Photo: Wikimedia Commons
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Laddu, or small roundels of sweetened grain or lentil flour, are an eternal favourite in the Indian dessert pantheon. The sunnundalu is made from urad dal (lentils), flour, sugar, and ghee. All are slow-roasted over a low flame till fragrant and then rolled into delicious, long-lasting roundels bursting with flavour.

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