What Is Idli Podi? A Guide to South Indian Gunpowder
Podi is a popular South Indian condiment (served alongside or on top of food). It is a magical dry powder that South Indians sprinkle, mix, or aggressively shove into their mouths when they decide that life needs more flavor. It is the region's answer to ketchup, except it has personality. Made by roasting lentils, chilies, and spices into a coarse, earthy, slightly dangerous-looking dust, podi is proof that South Indian grandmothers figured out umami long before it became a trend on cooking shows. It does not merely accompany food. It rescues it. Idli Podi , specifically, is the Beyoncé of the podi family. Image: Open Food Facts Also known as gunpowder, Idli Podi is a dry, coarse spice powder traditionally made from roasted lentils (urad dal, chana dal), dried red chilies, sesame seeds, curry leaves, and spices. Picture this: you are staring at a plate of pale, fluffy, innocent idlis. They look like they have never experienced conflict. They are basically edible clouds. ...