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​7 traditional recipes from across India using flaxseeds​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 24, 2025, 00:55 IST
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7 traditional recipes from across India using flaxseeds

Flaxseeds may be trending today, but in India, they’ve always been part of everyday food traditions. Long before they were called a “superfood,” they were tucked into spice tins in Maharashtra, rolled into laddoos in Uttar Pradesh, and pounded into chutneys in Andhra kitchens. Known as alsi, jawas, or agase beeja, these tiny seeds carried farmer wisdom, women’s kitchen knowledge, and nourishing strength through generations. The world is finally catching up to what Indian homes have known all along — flaxseeds are versatile, wholesome, and rooted deeply in our food culture. Scroll down to see just how many ways they’ve been used across India.

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Tisi Kaddu, Bihar

A simple, comforting dish, Tisi Kaddu is made by sautéing diced pumpkin with mustard seeds, green chillies, and a pinch of turmeric. Once the pumpkin softens, roasted mustard seeds are ground into a coarse paste and stirred in, giving the curry its signature nutty aroma. A splash of mustard oil at the end brightens the flavors, making it perfect with steamed rice.

3/9

Jawas Chutney - Maharashtra

Start by dry-roasting two cups of flaxseeds until they release a nutty aroma. In a grinder, add the seeds along with ten cloves of garlic, eight dried red chillies, and a teaspoon of salt. Pulse until coarse. The chutney is ready as it is - dry, fiery, and sharp, but to eat it the Vidarbha way, stir in a spoonful of hot oil so it clings properly to a jowar bhakri. This is the kind of chutney made to last through long hours in the fields.

4/9

Pinni- Punjab

Roast two cups of wheat flour slowly in half a cup of ghee until golden and nutty. Add half a cup of flaxseed powder, stir in one cup of grated jaggery, and finish with chopped almonds. Shape the mixture into round pinnis while still warm. These aren’t festival sweets but winter food; solid, sustaining, and designed to last through freezing nights. Recipes vary from home to home, but flaxseed gives every batch a deeper, earthier strength.

5/9

Laddoos with muscle - North India

Roast two cups of flaxseeds and grind them lightly, leaving a bit of crunch. In a pan, melt one cup of jaggery with half a cup of ghee until it turns syrupy. Stir in the flax powder and mix quickly before rolling into tight balls. The laddoos will be dense, chewy, and not too sweet - exactly the sort that warm you on foggy mornings in Uttar Pradesh or Rajasthan. One or two is all it takes to stay full for hours.

6/9

Podi power - Andhra & Telangana

Heat a pan and roast one cup of flaxseeds until they crackle. In the same pan, toast six dried red chillies, five garlic cloves, and a handful of curry leaves. Grind everything together with salt into a coarse powder. Stored in a steel dabba, alsi podi waits for its simplest partner: hot rice with ghee. A spoonful transforms an ordinary dinner into something satisfying, the way it’s done in countless Andhra homes.

7/9

Chikna Jhol / Flaxseed Rasam

A regional specialty from Odisha and Bengal, Chikna Jhol is made by cooking flaxseed paste with garlic, turmeric, and a hint of tamarind, creating a thin, tangy rasam. Poured over steaming rice and often paired with a simple potato fry, this dish balances warmth, spice, and subtle nuttiness, offering a comforting, wholesome meal that highlights the earthy flavor of flaxseeds.

8/9

Alsi Barfi (Flaxseed Fudge)

Roasted flaxseeds are ground into a coarse powder and gently cooked with jaggery and ghee until the mixture thickens to a fudgy consistency. Once ready, it’s poured into a tray, allowed to set, and cut into small squares. This nutty, warming sweet is a beloved winter treat across Rajasthan and North India, cherished for its rich flavor and wholesome goodness.

9/9

Sabzi of the desert - Rajasthan

Grind half a cup of roasted flaxseeds thoroughly. In a clay pot or heavy-bottomed pan, bring two cups of fresh buttermilk to a gentle simmer along with a pinch of turmeric and salt. Slowly whisk in the ground flax powder and let it gradually thicken into a warm, earthy curry. Eaten with hot bajra rotis, it’s rustic, wholesome food from older times, built for cold winter desert nights. Few households prepare it now, but it survives beautifully as a reminder of how every humble seed once had a purpose. You can also easily stir the flax powder into regular everyday sabzis to quietly boost both flavor and nutrition.

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