Mobsea Logo
Home

Dal

What to Eat in Kerala

<
^
>

Dal

Dal or pappu or paripu is a dried pulse (lentil, pea or various types of bean) which has been split. The outer hull is usually stripped off; dal that has not been hulled is described as chilka (skin), e.g. chilka urad dal, mung dal chilka. The word dal is also used to name the thick stew prepared from these pulses, an important part of Indian, Nepali, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, West Indian and Bangladeshi cuisine. It is regularly eaten with rice in southern India, and with both rice and roti (wheatbased flat bread) throughout northern India and Pakistan as well as Bangladesh, East India, and Nepal where Dal Baht (literally: dal and rice) is the staple food for much of the population. Dal is a ready source of proteins for a balanced diet containing little or no meat. Sri Lankan cooking of dal resembles that of southern Indian dishes.


<
^
>

Papadum
Coconut milk
Ada
Poduthol
Thalassery biryani
The Tangy Rasam
Kaalan
Dal
Coconut
Banana chips
Jack fruit chips
Banana
More ...


Test your English Language
Cool Inventions
What to Eat in Gujarat
Forever Young Naturally Beauty
Benefits of Almonds
Photography Essentials
Celebrities Who Had Unbelievable Jobs
Myth about Adoption
Healthy Arms
Benefits of Saffron
Precautions while using Touch Screen Mobile
Best Street Artists In The World
Most Influential People in the World
The Best New Cars
Creating Comic Pop Art
Amazing Dances From Around The World
The Most Powerful People In Enterprise Tech
The Most Reliable cars in the world
The Most Romantic Train Journeys