Learn How to Make Easy Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste at home. Step-by-step guide to soft idlis and flavorful sambhar for a delicious South Indian breakfast.
1) Idli — ingredients & step-by-step

Ingredients (traditional batter)
- 3 cups idli/parboiled rice (≈600 g)
- 1 cup whole urad dal (skinned black gram) (≈200 g)
- 1 tsp fenugreek seeds (methi)
- ½ – 1 tsp salt (added after fermentation)
- Water for soaking & grinding (as needed)
- Optional for softer idlis: ¼ cup beaten rice/poha (soaked & drained) or ½ cup cooked rice
Equipment
- Wet grinder or high-power blender (blender will work, but wet grinder gives fluffier results)
- Idli steamer or large pot with idli moulds / small steel bowls
- Large mixing container for fermentation (batter will rise)

Steps
- Rinse & soak
- Rinse rice 2–3 times till water runs clearer. Soak rice + fenugreek seeds in enough water for 4–6 hours.
- Rinse urad dal and soak separately for 4–6 hours.
- Grind urad dal
- Drain urad dal. Grind urad with some water (add slowly) to a smooth, fluffy, slightly airy paste. Use a wet grinder (~20–30 min) or blender (short bursts, avoid overheating). The urad paste should be light and creamy.
- Grind rice
- Drain rice and grind to a slightly gritty/smooth batter (not completely paste-smooth; a little texture helps). If using poha/cooked rice, add it with rice while grinding. Add water gradually—batter should be thick but pourable.
- Mix
- Combine rice batter + urad paste thoroughly in a large, clean bowl. Mix by hand or spatula (hand warmth helps fermentation). Aim for a batter consistency that’s slightly thicker than pancake batter.
- Ferment
- Cover loosely and keep in a warm place (ideal 30–35°C) for 8–12 hours or overnight. Batter should rise and look airy/bubbly and increase in volume. If it becomes too sour, shorten fermentation next time.
- Add salt & check consistency
- After fermentation, add ½–1 tsp salt and whisk gently. Adjust water if too thick — you want batter that will fill idli moulds without flattening.
- Steam idlis
- Boil ~2 cups water in steamer. Grease idli moulds lightly. Pour batter into moulds. Steam covered for 10–12 minutes (medium idlis) — toothpick should come out clean. For mini idlis 7–9 minutes. Don’t over-steam or idlis can turn rubbery.
- Unmould & serve
- Let rest 2 minutes, run spatula around edges and remove. Serve hot with sambar + chutney.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
Quick tips (idli)
- If idlis are dense: urad dal may not have been ground enough or batter ratio wrong; increase urad slightly next time or grind longer for air.
- If batter is too sour: shorten fermentation or refrigerate as soon as it reaches desired rise.
- For instant: use idli rava method or store-bought idli mix.
- masala
2) Sambar — ingredients & step-by-step
Ingredients (for ~4 servings)
- 1 cup toor dal (arhar) — rinsed (≈200 g)
- 2–3 cups mixed vegetables (example: 1 medium carrot, 1 small potato, 1 small onion, 1 medium tomato, 6–8 cm drumstick cut or 1/2 cup pumpkin/eggplant)
- 1 small lemon-sized ball tamarind OR 1–2 tbsp tamarind paste
- 2 tbsp sambar powder (store-bought or homemade)
- ½ tsp turmeric powder
- 1–2 tsp jaggery or 1 tsp sugar (optional, balances tamarind)
- Salt to taste
- 3–4 cups water (adjust)
- Fresh coriander leaves, chopped (for garnish)
Tempering
- 2 tbsp oil (or ghee/gingelly oil for South-Indian flavor)
- 1 tsp mustard seeds
- ½ tsp cumin seeds (optional)
- 1 tbsp chana dal or urad dal (optional, for nutty flavor)
- 2 dry red chilies, broken (optional)
- A generous sprig of curry leaves
- Pinch of asafoetida (hing)
Steps
- Cook dal
- Rinse toor dal. Pressure-cook with 2½–3 cups water and ½ tsp turmeric until very soft (usually 3–4 whistles) OR cook in a pot until mushy. Mash/whisk to a smooth, slightly creamy consistency and keep aside.
- Prepare tamarind
- If using fresh tamarind, soak a lemon-sized ball in ~1 cup warm water for 10–15 min, squeeze and extract pulp; discard solids. If using paste, dilute to taste.
- Cook vegetables
- In a pan, add 2–3 cups water, chopped vegetables, a pinch of turmeric and salt. Cook until vegetables are tender (10–15 min). Add tomato later to avoid overcooking.
- Add tamarind & sambar powder
- Add tamarind extract (or paste) and 2 tbsp sambar powder to the cooked vegetables. Simmer 5–8 minutes so the flavors meld. Taste and adjust tamarind/salt. Add jaggery if using.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
- Combine with dal
- Add the mashed dal to the vegetable-tamarind mixture. Add water to reach desired sambar consistency. Simmer 5–10 minutes. Adjust seasoning.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
- Final tempering
- Heat oil in small pan, add mustard seeds. When they splutter, add chana dal/urad dal (if using) and roast until golden, add curry leaves, dry red chilies and a pinch of hing. Pour the tempering over sambar and mix. Garnish with coriander.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
Quick tips (sambar)
- Sambar powder quality majorly affects taste—use a good brand or homemade roasted ground mix.
- Add veggies that hold shape (carrot, drumstick, brinjal) for texture.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
- Let sambar rest a few minutes before serving — flavors deepen.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste

3) Coconut Chutney — ingredients & steps
Ingredients (classic coconut chutney)
- 1 cup fresh grated coconut (or frozen/thawed)
- 2 tbsp roasted chana dal (daria) or 1 tbsp urad dal (roasted)
- 1–2 green chilies (adjust heat)
- ½” piece ginger (optional)
- Salt to taste
- ¼ – ½ cup water (adjust to desired consistency)
- Optional: small onion or coriander leaves for flavor
Tempering
- 1 tsp oil
- ½ tsp mustard seeds
- ½ tsp urad dal (or a pinch of chana dal)
- A few curry leaves
- 1 dry red chili (optional)
Steps
- Blend
- In a blender, add grated coconut, roasted chana dal, green chilies, ginger, and a little water. Grind to a smooth or slightly coarse paste. Add salt and adjust water to reach spreadable chutney consistency.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
- Temper
- Heat oil in a small pan. Add mustard seeds; when they pop, add urad/chana dal, curry leaves and red chili; sauté briefly. Pour this tempering over the chutney.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
- Serve
- Serve immediately or chill slightly. Goes with idli, dosa, vada.
Variations
- Coriander chutney: add a small handful coriander leaves while grinding.
- Mint chutney: add few mint leaves.
- Peanut chutney: replace chana dal with roasted peanuts (roasted, peeled) for a nuttier chutney.
4) Quick troubleshooting & storage
Idli problems & fixes
- Idlis are hard/chewy: Batter probably under-fermented or rice-to-urad ratio off. Grind urad longer and ensure batter is airy. Add a little poha or cooked rice for softness next time.
- Idlis sticky / soggy: Batter too wet or under-steamed; steam a couple minutes longer.
- Batter didn’t ferment: Keep in warmer place (oven with light on or warm water bath). Use slightly more urad or a pinch of sugar to jump-start fermentation.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
Sambar & chutney storage
- Sambar: refrigerate up to 3–4 days; reheat and add water if thick. Freezes OK (1–2 months) but texture of veggies changes.
- Coconut chutney: best fresh; keeps 1–2 days refrigerated. For longer life, use dried coconut + rehydrate or freeze portions.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
5) Handy extras & variations
- Instant shortcut: use store-bought idli/dosa mix or idli rava for quick idlis (no fermentation or reduced fermentation).
- Healthier idlis: add ragi or oats (substitute up to 20% of rice).
- Homemade sambhar powder (quick): roast coriander seeds (3 tbsp), chana dal (1 tbsp), urad dal (1 tbsp), dry red chilies (6–8), fenugreek (½ tsp), curry leaves handful — roast lightly and grind to powder.How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
How to Make Idli Sambhar with South Indian Taste
