Gulab Jamun

Gulab jamun — khoya dumplings fried dark and soaked in rose-cardamom syrup, Mughal Corridor

Gulab jamun is the Mughlai sweet the whole subcontinent claims — soft khoya dumplings fried dark and bathed in rose-and-cardamom syrup, the festival sweet of Diwali, Eid and every wedding from Old Delhi outwards. The name is Persian-rooted, gol and ab for flower and water, after the rose-scented syrup, and legend has it the dessert came together in a Mughal royal kitchen — Shah Jahan’s cooks are the usual claim. The body is khoya, milk reduced to solids, kneaded soft with a little flour and paneer, rolled crack-free, fried slow until deep brown, then rested in a warm one-string syrup until it swells and turns juicy. This version follows Hebbar’s Kitchen, whose khoya gulab jamun keeps the mawa base and the slow fry that make them melt rather than bounce.

Zone: Mughal Corridor
SOURCE: Adapted from Hebbar’s Kitchen — soft khoya-and-paneer dumplings fried slow and soaked in warm rose-and-cardamom syrup (English-language)
LOCAL NAME: गुलाब जामुन
Servings 4 people
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS 

METHOD 

  • Make the syrup first: simmer the sugar and water with the saffron and cardamom until it reaches a one-string consistency, then stir in the rose water and lemon juice and keep warm.
  • Mash the grated khoya and paneer smooth, then gently mix in the flour, baking powder and cardamom.
  • Add a little milk and bring together into a soft dough without kneading hard.
  • Roll into smooth, crack-free balls, smaller than you want them, as they swell.
  • Heat the ghee to medium-low and fry the balls slowly, stirring the oil so they colour evenly, until deep golden-brown.
  • Lift out and drop the hot balls straight into the warm syrup.
  • Rest them in the syrup at least 1–2 hours until they swell and turn juicy.
  • Serve warm, garnished with slivered pistachios.
Start Cooking

NOTES

UK adaptation: Khoya (mawa) from a South Asian grocer, or milk powder for an instant version; a little paneer and plain flour to bind; sugar, cardamom, saffron and rose water for the syrup. Ghee for frying. Everything else widely available.
US adaptation: Khoya (mawa) from Patel Brothers or H-Mart, frozen if needed (or milk powder); a little paneer and all-purpose flour; sugar, cardamom, saffron and rose water. Ghee for frying. Everything else widely available.
Cook’s note: Soft gulab jamun depend on two things — a smooth, crack-free dough (grate the khoya, don’t over-knead) and a slow fry over low heat so they cook through to the centre without browning too fast. Drop the hot fried balls into warm, not boiling, one-string syrup and let them soak; syrup too thick or too hot keeps them hard.
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