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5 Indian steamed dishes that go beyond idlis and momos

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 30, 2025, 10:36 IST
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5 Indian steamed dishes that go beyond idlis and momos

Steaming has always been one of the quiet strengths of Indian cooking. It’s the technique that makes food lighter on the stomach, preserves flavour without drowning it in oil, and works perfectly in hot, humid climates. Yet in popular imagination, steamed food is reduced to idlis from the south and momos from the north-east. The truth is, kitchens across the country have been steaming long before either became shorthand. Here are five dishes that prove just how wide and inventive the tradition really is.

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Patra from Gujarat

Colocasia leaves rolled with a spiced gram flour paste, then steamed, sliced and tempered; patra is a lesson in patience and pay-off. The steaming cooks the leaves until tender, while the besan layer holds it all together with tangy-sweet-spicy notes. Once cooled and cut into spirals, a crackle of mustard seeds and sesame turns them into a snack that is light yet filling. Patra shows how steaming isn’t just about health; it can also create something striking on the plate.

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Panki from Surat

Delicate and almost lace-like, panki is a rice flour and spiced batter spread between banana leaves and steamed. The leaf keeps the pancake thin, moist and fragrant, and peeling it back at the table is half the joy. Unlike fried snacks, panki is light enough to enjoy piece after piece, served hot with chutney. Its appeal lies in restraint – little oil, minimal spice, just the flavour of the leaf and batter in harmony.

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Pathrode of coastal Karnataka

Closer in spirit to patra but with its own character, pathrode is made with colocasia leaves layered with a rice-and-spice paste. Once stacked, they are tightly rolled, steamed, and cut. Coconut, tamarind, and jaggery give the paste its sweet-sour-spicy complexity, making pathrode a staple in monsoon months when colocasia is abundant. Served plain or tossed in coconut oil, it carries the taste of the coastal kitchen in every bite.

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Muthia from Gujarat

A versatile snack that earns its name from the way the dough is gripped in the fist, muthia can be made with bottle gourd, fenugreek, or even leftover greens. The dough is shaped into logs, steamed until firm, then sliced and tempered. Unlike fried pakoras, these are light and gently spiced, eaten as breakfast, tea-time bite, or even dinner side. The steaming keeps them moist, while the quick tempering adds crunch.

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Sandwich dhokla

Everyone knows dhokla, but the sandwich version is truly a delicious and delightful reminder of just how playful, endlessly creative, and surprisingly versatile everyday steaming can really be. Layers of tangy, spiced chutney are carefully tucked between soft, fluffy, golden gram flour batter before being gently steamed into a vibrant, colorful, layered, and flavorful stack of wholesome goodness. When sliced, the cross-section beautifully reveals striking, bright, and beautiful stripes of vivid green and yellow. It is festive, versatile, light, filling, and deeply satisfying, solid proof that steaming doesn’t ever mean compromising on indulgent flavor, rich texture, or stunning overall visual appeal at all.

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Copyright © May 28, 2026, 07.21PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service