
The Right Way to Make Upma: Dry, Fluffy, and Properly Tempered
Upma is the workhorse breakfast of South India — Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala — eaten for centuries in temples, homes, and roadside dhabas alike. The name derives from Sanskrit 'upari' (salty) and 'maa' (flour). Done right, it is dry enough that grains separate when pressed, aromatic with mustard and curry leaves, nutty with fried dals and cashews, and bright with a final squeeze of lemon. Done wrong, it is gray, gluey porridge. The technique has two load-bearing steps: dry-toast the semolina first so the grains resist clumping when hydrated, then build a proper tempering in the right sequence. Every spice goes into the pan in a specific order — mustard seeds first until they pop, then curry leaves until they sizzle, then dals until golden, then chilies and ginger, then onion. Each addition needs its moment before the next goes in. Rush the tempering and you end up with raw dal and muted aromatics. Get the sequence right and the oil smells extraordinary before a single grain of semolina hits the pan. Bonus: cold leftover upma firms up into a sliceable cake. Fry thick slabs in a little ghee the next morning until the outside is crispy and the inside steams — arguably better than the original.


