Sabudana Vada is a popular savory deep fried snack made during Hindu fasting days, featuring tapioca pearls (sago), potatoes, peanuts and herbs. They are naturally gluten-free and vegan. This fail-proof Maharashtrian style Sabudana Vada recipe gives you a super delicious crispy vada with a soft and light interior.
You need to plan ahead and soak the sago pearls. It is very important to soak the sago really well.Important: Please refrain from using un-soaked or under-soaked sabudana to avoid scalding or burns as they will burst and shatter in oil when frying.
First optionally, using a colander or mesh strainer rinse 1 cup sabudana lightly twice draining all the water.
Soak the sabudana or sago in water for 5 hours at least or overnight. I soaked the sago pearls overnight and by morning they had become soft.
When properly soaked, the sabudana pearls will be tender without any hard center. When you press the pearls between your forefinger and thumb, they should get mashed easily with a floury moist texture on your fingers.
If you feel some hardness in the center, then soak for some more time. Drain all the water really well from the soaked sabudana.
There should not be any water logged in the soaked pearls. Water will make the patties moist and sticky. The patties will soak up a good amount of oil while frying making them loaded with oil. So drain the water really well.
You can opt to gently and lightly press the soaked pearls in the strainer with a spoon or spatula. Or set aside the pearls in a strainer (keeping a bowl beneath) for some 20 to 30 minutes dripping of any extra water.
After draining the water thoroughly transfer the sabudana in a mixing bowl and set aside.
Cooking Potatoes
Scrub and rinse 4 medium-sized potatoes thoroughly in water first.
1. Stove-top pressure cooker: Place the potatoes in a 3 litre cooker. Add water which just about covers the potatoes. Pressure cook potatoes for 10 to 12 minutes or 4 to 5 whistles on medium heat.When the pressure settles down on its own in the cooker, open the lid and check the potatoes. Pass a knife or fork through the center of the potatoes and it should slide easily without any resistance.
2. Cooking in a pan: Take water and add peeled and chopped potatoes. The water should cover the potatoes. Add a 2 to 3 pinches of salt if preferred.Cover and simmer potatoes until fork tender. Drain the water really well. When the potatoes are tender, using a strainer, drain all the water.
3. For Instant Pot cooking: Place a trivet in the inner steel of your Instant Pot. Add 1.5 cups water. Place the rinsed potatoes on the trivet. Seal with the lid and position the valve to sealing. Press the manual/pressure cook button and set the time to 10 or 12 minutes with high pressure option.After you hear the beep when the pressure cooking is complete, wait for 5 minutes and then do a quick pressure release. Remove the potatoes with tongs and place them in a plate or tray. Check the potatoes to see if they are cooked tender with a fork or knife.
Let the potatoes become warm. Later peel and then chop them or mash them.
Roasting Peanuts
On a skillet or in a shallow pan, roast the groundnuts/peanuts till they become crisp and crunchy.
Cool and then coarsely powder in a mortar-pestle or in a dry grinder. You can even make a fine powder.
Making Sago Mixture
Add the mashed potatoes and coarsely ground roasted groundnuts to the sabudana in the mixing bowl.
Add edible rock salt, cumin seeds, sugar, ginger, green chillies, coriander leaves and lemon juice to the sabudana . Mix the entire mixture very well.
Now take some portion of the mixture in your hands and shape them into flat round vada or patty. Set aside.
Repeat until you use up the entire dough mixture.
Making Sabudana Vada
Heat oil for deep frying in a kadai. Add a tiny ball made from the mixture.
Fry it on medium flame. If this ball does not break while frying, then you are good to go.
If it breaks, then add 1 to 2 tablespoons of rajgira atta (or amaranth flour) to the mixture and mix well.
Now gently place the vada in the oil. Keep the heat to medium or medium-high while frying. If the oil is warm, the vada will absorb a lot of oil and become soggy.
Add the vada for frying depending on the size of the kadai. Do not crowd the kadai or pan.
When one side gets golden, then only flip the vada. Otherwise, don't even touch as they might break if not cooked.
Turn over a couple of times so as to fry the sabudana vada evenly. Fry until they are crisp and golden
Remove them with a slotted spoon. Place on kitchen paper towels to absorb excess oil. Fry the remaining batches of the patties this way.
Serve Sabudana Vada hot or warm.
Serving Suggestions
Sabudana Vada can be made for fasting days or as an evening snack.
It pairs well with coconut chutney, sweetened curd (just mix in some sugar), coriander chutney, tamarind chutney, or even tomato ketchup.
Make Ahead Options
For prep ahead, boil and mash potatoes a day earlier, and roast and powder peanuts.
Soaked sabudana can also be refrigerated after draining water.
The patties can be shaped in advance and kept in the fridge. Any leftover mixture keeps well in the fridge for 1 to 2 days.
Video
Notes
Soaking: Sabudana must be fully soaked until soft. Any hardness can cause them to burst while frying.
Moisture: Drain water well using a strainer. Extra moisture makes these vadas soggy and oily.
Crispiness: Fry a few minutes longer for extra crunch.
Peanuts: Use unsalted roasted peanuts. Roast ahead and peel if needed.
Binding: If patties break, mix in a little fasting flour (buckwheat, amaranth, water chestnut) or rice flour if not fasting.
Frying Temperature: Keep oil at medium to medium-high heat. Too hot burns the outside, too cool makes vadas greasy.
Herbs: Replace coriander with mint or curry leaves for a different flavor.
Spices: Use green chilies or substitute with black pepper. Add red chili powder if not making for fasting.
Scaling: Recipe can be halved, doubled, or tripled.