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​6 regional South Indian dosa varieties one must try​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 23, 2025, 13:36 IST
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6 regional South Indian dosa varieties one must try

The dosa isn’t just breakfast in South India, it’s everyday food that has quietly become a marker of culture and region. Made from the same rice-and-lentil batter, it changes character wherever you go: crisp and spicy in Mysore, soft and fluffy in Karnataka’s tiffin joints, light as air along the Mangalore coast, or hearty with lentils in Tamil Nadu. Each version reflects its home state’s taste and temperament. Here are six regional dosas worth knowing and making in your own kitchen.

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1. Mysore Masala Dosa (Karnataka)

This is Bengaluru’s pride; a crisp, golden dosa with a secret weapon and spicy red chutney smeared inside. The filling is the familiar potato masala, but it’s that chutney that makes it unforgettable.

To make - Soak 2 cups rice and ½ cup urad dal overnight, grind smooth, and ferment for 8–10 hours. For the chutney, blend dried red chillies, garlic, and tamarind with a little oil. Spread the batter thin on a hot tawa, drizzle ghee, smear the chutney, add potato filling, and fold. Serve with coconut chutney.

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2. Rava Dosa (Tamil Nadu)

A dosa for the impatient, rava dosa skips fermentation and comes together in minutes. Thin, lacy, and speckled with pepper and cumin, it’s a classic at Tamil tiffin houses.

To make - Mix 1 cup semolina, ½ cup rice flour, ¼ cup maida, crushed pepper, cumin, chopped green chillies, and ginger. Add 3 cups water to make a thin, watery batter. Pour from a height onto a hot tawa so it forms a net-like sheet. Drizzle ghee, cook till crisp, and serve with coconut chutney and sambar.

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3. Pesarattu (Andhra Pradesh)

Pesarattu is Andhra’s green-hued speciality, made from moong dal. Nutritious yet indulgent, it’s often paired with a scoop of upma inside.

To make - Soak 2 cups whole green gram (moong dal) and 2 tbsp rice overnight, then grind with ginger, green chillies, and cumin into a smooth batter. Spread it thick on a hot tawa, drizzle a little oil, and drop a spoonful of upma in the centre before folding. The upma is made by roasting semolina and cooking it with tempered curry leaves, green chillies, and onions until soft and fluffy. Serve the dosa hot with ginger chutney on the side, and you’ve got a plate that’s hearty and comforting.

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4. Set Dosa (Karnataka)

Set dosa isn’t about crispness but fluff. Served in stacks of three, they’re soft, spongy, and perfect for soaking up sagu or chutney.

To make - Soak 2 cups rice, ½ cup urad dal, ¼ cup poha, and a spoon of methi seeds, then grind and leave the batter to ferment overnight. On a greased tawa, spread small rounds that are slightly thick but soft enough to stay white and pillowy rather than crisp. These dosas are best paired with a bowl of fragrant vegetable sagu or a fresh coconut chutney, making for a plate that’s simple yet deeply satisfying.

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5. Neer Dosa (Coastal Karnataka, Mangalore)

Neer dosa is sheer minimalism; no fermentation, no fuss, just rice and water. Soft, white, and almost lace like, it pairs beautifully with coconut chutneys and fish curries.

To make - Soak 2 cups of raw rice for 4–5 hours. Grind into a fine paste with water, then thin the batter to a runny, watery consistency. On a hot, lightly greased tawa, pour and swirl the pan quickly so the batter spreads like a crepe. Cook only on one side. Serve hot with sambar or vegetable curry.

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6. Adai (Tamil Nadu)

Adai is hearty and rustic, made with multiple lentils and spices - a farmer’s meal that still feels modern. Unlike dosa, it doesn’t need fermentation.

To make - Soak 1 cup rice and ¼ cup each of toor dal, chana dal, urad dal, and moong dal for 3–4 hours. Grind coarsely with dried red chillies, ginger, and curry leaves. Spread the batter thick on a hot tawa, drizzle oil, and cook till golden on both sides. Serve hot with avial or a piece of jaggery for a rustic, satisfying finish.

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