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​6 bajra recipes for winter warmth and daily comfort​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 27, 2025, 10:26 IST
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6 bajra recipes for winter warmth and daily comfort

Winter diets prioritise foods that support body warmth, digestion, and sustained energy. Bajra (pearl millet) meets these needs due to its high fibre content, complex carbohydrates, and mineral profile, including iron and magnesium. In many Indian regions, bajra is traditionally consumed during colder months because it digests slowly and keeps the body satiated for longer periods. The following six recipes are practical, everyday preparations designed for regular meals, not seasonal celebrations.

2/7

Bajra Roti with Ghee

Bajra roti is winter’s most dependable bread. Dense, earthy, and grounding, it’s the kind of food that makes the body feel held. A spoon of ghee melting into the hot roti adds softness, warmth, and quiet energy, turning a simple meal into something deeply satisfying.
To make it, take
Bajra flour, warm water, a pinch of salt. Knead gently, pat into rotis, cook on a hot tawa, and finish with ghee.

3/7

Bajra Moong Dal Khichdi

Bajra moong dal khichdi has a mild, nutty flavour with gentle earthiness from the grain. Moong dal smoothens the taste, keeping it light and clean on the palate. Cumin and ginger add soft warmth and aroma without sharpness, creating a savoury, comforting dish that feels warming without tasting heavy.
To make it, take
Soaked bajra, split yellow moong dal, cumin, ginger, turmeric, and ghee. Pressure cook until soft and porridge-like.

4/7

Bajra Porridge (sweet or savoury)

Bajra porridge is a winter breakfast that actually lasts. Slow-cooked, mildly textured, and naturally filling, it keeps energy steady through cold mornings. The flavour stays neutral, making it easy to take sweet or savoury depending on appetite.

To make it, take
Bajra flour cooked slowly in water or milk. For sweet, add jaggery and cardamom. For savoury, add salt, pepper, and a little ghee.

5/7

Bajra Thepla

Bajra thepla brings warmth into a format built for movement. Softer than rotis and sturdier than parathas, it holds well without reheating and travels easily. The mild sourness from curd balances bajra’s density, keeping the bread comfortable to eat.
To make it, take
Bajra flour, wheat flour, curd, turmeric, cumin, and oil. Knead, roll thin, and cook on a tawa.

6/7

Bajra Dosa

Lighter than it looks, bajra dosa fits neatly into winter mornings. Fermentation softens the grain, giving the dosa a gentle crispness and clean flavour. Paired with coconut chutney or plain podi, it feels warm without weighing the body down.
To make it, take soaked bajra, urad dal, and fenugreek seeds. Grind, ferment overnight, and cook like a regular dosa. It digests slowly, keeps energy steady, and works well for people who want a comforting breakfast that doesn’t cause heaviness or mid-morning crashes.

7/7

Bajra Laddu

Bajra laddu offers a warm, nutty flavour profile suited to winter. Roasted bajra flour develops a deep, earthy taste, jaggery provides rounded, caramel-like sweetness, and ghee adds richness and aroma. Together, these ingredients create a dense, mildly sweet laddu with a lingering warmth, delivering indulgence without overpowering sweetness.

To make it, take
Roasted bajra flour, jaggery, ghee, and crushed nuts. Mix warm and shape into laddus.

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Copyright © Jun 6, 2026, 03.27AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service