The Pantry / Semolina
Semolina
sooji · suji
Wheat with a bite — savoury and sweet at once.
What it is
Semolina is coarsely milled wheat — granular, pale gold when toasted — used across a surprising range: the savoury breakfast upma, the glossy sweet sooji halwa, the batter of certain snacks, and a crisp coating for frying. Fine and coarse grades suit different dishes.
Where it comes from
Used across the subcontinent, semolina (sooji/rava) is a everyday grain for quick savoury and sweet dishes alike. Toasting it first — until golden and nutty — is the step that makes both.
What it's called
Semolina · sooji / suji (Hindi) · rava. Fine and coarse grades exist.
In the kitchen
Toasted in ghee then cooked with water for savoury upma or with sugar and milk for halwa; used in the batter of rava dosa and as a crisp fry-coating. The toasting is essential — raw semolina tastes flat, toasted it is nutty and golden.
What we know about the claims
A wholesome wheat grain (so not gluten-free); a source of carbohydrate and some protein. No caution beyond the gluten note.
Choosing and buying
Everywhere; fine (for halwa, batters) and coarse (for upma) grades. Toast before use for the best flavour.