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4 tadkas to take your dal from ordinary to amazing

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 4, 2025, 12:23 IST
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1/5

4 tadkas to take your dal from ordinary to amazing

Dal is comfort first, conversation later. It sits on the stove without hurry, simmering gently until the tadka makes its entrance. Beyond taste, each bowl is loaded with plant protein, fibre, iron, and minerals that fuel the body as much as they soothe the mind. That sizzling mix of spices, ghee, or oil changes everything, lifting the lentils from plain to memorable. Switch the tempering, and the same dal suddenly feels like a new dish. Scroll down for four delicious tadkas to try at home.

2/5

Hing–jeera tadka

This one is minimal, clean, and deeply satisfying. The scent of asafoetida lifts sleepy lentils, while cumin seeds bring a toasty backbone. A slit green chilli gives a fresh, grassy heat that does not shout. It works beautifully with arhar or moong, the kind of dal you eat on a weekday and still feel cared for. Finish with a squeeze of lemon and a scatter of chopped coriander; the bowl wakes up without turning heavy.

To make it, take ghee in a small pan, warm it, add cumin and let it crackle, lower the heat, add a pinch of asafoetida and a slit green chilli, swirl for a few seconds, then pour over hot dal and cover for a minute so the aroma settles.

3/5

Lehsun–lal mirch tadka

Garlic and red chilli are theatre. Sliced cloves turn gold and sweet, while dried whole chillies stain the fat a gentle crimson. The flavour is smoky, warm, and a little nostalgic; perfect for masoor or thin moong that need an assertive hand. If you like a deeper note, add a touch of Kashmiri chilli powder off the heat and let it bloom in the fat. The result is a glow rather than a burn, the kind that makes you reach for a second ladle.

To make it, take ghee, warm it, add thinly sliced garlic and cook until pale gold, slide in two dried red chillies and a pinch of chilli powder off the heat, then pour over the dal and finish with a few drops of raw ghee.

4/5

Mustard seed-curry leaf crackle

From southern kitchens comes the sound everyone waits for: mustard seeds popping, curry leaves flying in, the air suddenly bright. A whisper of asafoetida ties it together, and a few shallots or sliced garlic can add sweetness if you want a gentler edge. This tadka cuts through creamy tuvar or a coconut-milk dal, keeping each spoonful lively. A final ribbon of coconut oil or ghee rounds the edges without dulling the spark.

To make it, take oil hot, add black mustard seeds and wait for the steady pop, add a pinch of asafoetida, a handful of curry leaves, and a red and green chilli, sizzle for 20–30 seconds, then tip over the dal; finish with a teaspoon of coconut oil.

5/5

Panch phoron harmony

Equal parts cumin, fennel, mustard, fenugreek, and nigella. Five seeds, five voices. In hot mustard oil they bloom one by one, releasing their fragrance and flavour, giving sweet, bitter, sharp, and aromatic notes at once. As they sizzle, the aroma fills the kitchen, promising warmth and depth in every bite, while tiny pops and hisses mark the start of a richly layered dish. The fennel’s perfume softens the fenugreek’s bite, nigella adds a quiet smokiness, cumin steadies the mix. This is perfect for moong or masoor, and lovely with a hint of jaggery and a splash of lime to balance. It tastes like evening kitchens in Bengal and Odisha, busy yet composed.

To make it, take mustard oil until it shimmers, add panch phoron, let the seeds crackle and swell, add a dried red chilli if you like, pull the pan off the heat, then pour over the dal; finish with a pinch of jaggery and lime at the table.

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Copyright © May 29, 2026, 02.01AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service