Khaja

Khaja
Alternative names Pheni
Place of origin India
Region or state Bihar
Main ingredients Wheat flour, sugar, oil
Cookbook: Khaja  Media: Khaja

Khaja is a dessert of India. Refined wheat flour with sugar is made into layered dough, with or without dry fruit or other stuffing, and lightly fried in oil to make khaja.[1]

Khajas is a baklava-like dessert, and is prepared and sold in Bihar.[2][3] Khajas of the Silao and Rajgir are known for their puffiness. Where as khaja of Puri is too famous. The batter is prepared from wheat flour, mawa and oil. It is then deep fried until crisp. Then a sugar syrup is made which is known as "Paga". The crisp croissants are then soaked in the sugar syrup until they absorb the sugar syrup. Khaja of Kakinada, a coastal town of Andhra Pradesh, is dry from outside and full of sugar syrup from inside and is juicy.

See also

References

  1. Elizabeth Fernandez, Sugar and spice and all things nice, ISBN 978-1409287223
  2. Elizabeth Fernandez, Sugar and spice and all things nice, ISBN 978-1409287223
  3. Chitrita Banerji, Eating India: An Odyssey into the Food and Culture of the Land of Spices, ISBN 978-1596910188
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