Fastival Food

Puri Ghuguni – Odia-Style Street Breakfast Favorite

Intro: The Soul of Sunday Mornings & Street Corners

In Odisha, Puri Ghuguni isn’t just a meal—it’s a mood. Whether served during festive mornings or at roadside stalls wrapped in sal leaves, this combo brings the warmth of home and the zing of spice in every bite.

Ghuguni, a spiced yellow peas curry, is often ladled over soft, puffed puri or eaten alongside. It’s tangy, bold, and deeply comforting—served with chopped onions, green chilies, and sometimes a squeeze of lemon.

Ghuguni Recipe (Odia Style)

Ingredients:

1 cup dried yellow peas (soaked overnight)

1 medium onion, chopped

1 small tomato, chopped or grated

1 tsp ginger-garlic paste

½ tsp turmeric

½ tsp red chili powder

½ tsp cumin seeds

1 tsp garam masala or curry masala

1 tbsp mustard oil

Salt to taste

Fresh coriander and chopped onion for garnish


Steps:

1. Cook the Peas

Pressure cook soaked peas with salt and turmeric until soft but not mushy (2–3 whistles).



2. Prepare the Masala

Heat mustard oil. Add cumin seeds, then onions.

Sauté till golden. Add ginger-garlic paste, turmeric, chili, and salt.

Add tomato and cook till oil separates.



3. Mix It Up

Add boiled peas along with some water. Simmer for 10–15 mins.

Finish with garam masala. Adjust thickness as per preference.





Puri Recipe (Crispy & Fluffy)

Ingredients:

1½ cup wheat flour

½ tsp salt

Warm water to knead

Oil for deep frying


Steps:

1. Knead a stiff dough with flour, salt, and water. Rest 15 mins.


2. Roll into small circles.


3. Deep fry in hot oil until puffed and golden.




Serving Suggestions:

Serve hot puris with a bowl of ghuguni, topped with chopped onion, coriander, and green chilies.

Add a slice of lemon or sprinkle some black salt for street-style finish!




Why I Love It

This dish reminds me of temple festivals, roadside breakfasts, and slow Sunday mornings. It’s simple, nostalgic, and totally satisfying.

Street Foods

Dahi Bara Aloo Dum – Odisha’s Most Beloved Street-Style Combo


🛍️ When Curd-Soaked Vadas Meet Spicy Potatoes on a Leaf Plate

Whether it’s Cuttack’s roadside stalls or Sunday morning cravings, Dahi Bara Aloo Dum is always a win.
The soft, tangy dahi bara cools you down, while the fiery aloo dum wakes up your taste buds — it’s the balance of spice, sourness, and comfort.

Optional but amazing: add ghugni, a sprinkle of sev, and chopped onions on top for that full street-style experience!


🛒 What You’ll Need (Serves 3–4):

For Dahi Bara:

1 cup urad dal, soaked overnight

Salt to taste

½ tsp ginger paste

Oil for frying

1½ cups thick curd

Salt, sugar, roasted cumin powder, black salt for seasoning


For Aloo Dum:

3–4 medium boiled potatoes, cubed

1 onion + 1 tomato, finely chopped

1 tsp ginger-garlic paste

1 tsp red chili powder

½ tsp turmeric

½ tsp cumin + mustard seeds

Salt, oil, and coriander for garnish


Optional: Ghugni (yellow peas curry), chopped onion, green chilies, sev



🧂 How to Make It – Tangy, Spicy & Street-Style Authentic

1. Make the Dahi Bara

Grind soaked urad dal into a fluffy batter with ginger + salt.
Deep fry small vadas until golden. Soak in warm water for 10 mins.
Then transfer to seasoned curd (whisked with salt, sugar, cumin powder, black salt). Let it soak 30 mins or more.

2. Prepare Aloo Dum

Heat oil, temper with cumin + mustard.
Add onion, ginger-garlic, sauté till golden. Add tomato + spices.
Add boiled potatoes, mash some for thickness. Simmer until masala coats well.

3. Assemble the Magic

On a plate or dona leaf, place 2–3 dahi baras.
Top with a generous scoop of aloo dum.
Optional: a spoon of ghugni, chopped onion, sev, coriander, and a dash of black salt.



❤️ Why Dahi Bara Aloo Dum Feels Like Home in a Bite

Combines cool and heat, soft and spicy

Ultimate Odia breakfast/street snack

Can be prepped in advance and served in style

Because some recipes don’t need reinvention — just respect