Classroom lesson 路 Food馃嚠馃嚦 India

Dosa - the giant savoury pancake

Crispy, golden and folded into a long, thin pancake

A cone-shaped golden dosa on a metal plate with small bowls of chutney and sambar

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

A dosa is a thin, crispy pancake from the south of India. It is made from a batter of rice and lentils, cooked on a big hot pan, and served folded up - sometimes as long as your arm. Dosas are eaten with side dishes called chutneys and a spicy soup called sambar.

Tell me more

To make a dosa, cooks soak rice and a kind of lentil called urad dal overnight. They grind them up into a smooth batter, then leave it for a day to ferment - which means tiny bubbles form inside it, the way bread dough rises. The next morning, the batter is ready.

The cook pours a ladleful of batter onto a flat hot pan and quickly spreads it round and round with the back of the ladle - thinner and thinner, until the pancake is the size of a dinner plate or bigger. A drizzle of oil, and in just a minute the dosa is golden brown and crispy at the edges.

Dosas are often served plain - folded in half or rolled into a long tube - and dipped into the side dishes. A 'masala dosa' has a filling of spiced potato wrapped inside, which is a kid favourite. There is also a special long, thin paper dosa that can be as long as a small child and tall as a hat.

Eating a dosa is hands-on. You tear off a piece with your fingers, dip it into a chutney - maybe coconut, maybe tomato - and pop it in. Sambar is a tangy, lightly spicy soup of lentils and vegetables that you can dunk into. It's a meal that is very filling without ever feeling heavy.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think the batter has to wait a whole day before cooking?
  2. 02Pancakes, dosas, tortillas, naan - lots of countries make a flat round bread. Can you list more?
  3. 03What's a food in your house that takes a long time to make? Why is the waiting worth it?
Try this

Classroom activity

Make a class chart of 'flat round foods' around the world: dosa (India), pancake (everywhere), tortilla (Mexico), naan (India), injera (Ethiopia), crepe (France), roti (India), tortita, blini (Russia), pita (Greece). Mark each one on a world map. Are any made the same way?