Thank you for sharing! But we don't call this murukku. We call this "thenguzhal", even though the ingredients may be similar for both. Murukku literally means "twist" in Tamil. Traditionally murukku was (and still is) made by twisting by hand and making them into spiral shapes. These are neither twisted nor spiral.
@@goodsmile9014 sir I said the word "murukku" is also a tamil word. And in Tamil Nadu, murukku means a spiral shaped twisted fried snack with the same ingredients. Got it? This one here, maybe you call it murukku in Kannada, but we don't. Be happy.
सर आप बहुत अच्छे रेसिपी बनाते भी है और बताते भी है हम लोग को सीखने के लिए भी मिलता है 👌👌
Eakdum badhiya recipe ,all recipe ,best healthy , yammy hoti hai Sir 👍👌👌👌👌
Mast ❤❤❤❤❤Wonderful
!!!!!!!!Love From Guwahati. Assam!!!!!!!
Good recipe
Looks yummy,sir. Always sharing your videos to friends & relatives too sir.
Tasty man ,
Love from France
Yes, I'll try
You can press the dough right into the oil. That's how they make it in my place, Kerala.
Good 👍
Wonderful ☺️ Greetings from Scotland 😊 Have a great day everyone 🌻
Muje bahut achchi lagi 👌
Hi sir
Butter alternate we can use Dalda vansapathi
1kg Rice Flour how much dalda we can used
I will try
अति सुंदर!👍
Nice bohot achchi he
Haldiram ki Soya stick ki receipe shere kijiye
No something is missing in authentic murukulu
Yes they're not twisted. Murukku literally means "twist" in Tamil. These are thenguzhal.
@@rshiva08 it is a Karnataka recipe and murukku is a kannada word not Tamil
@@goodsmile9014 what it may be but it’s not a authentic dish
@@thegreatvasu9782 who told you it is authentic 🤔 it is just a snack like chakli
@@goodsmile9014 it should missing somthing
Super recipe Sir🙏✨👌👌👌👍👍
Superb recipe
बहुत बढिया
Nice recipe
Wonderful
I'm sure they are real soft and tasty.
Murukky is a crispy snack.
@@sanjeevkapoorkhazana Thanks a lot. sometimes they are hard, good enouhg to break a tooth or two.
Yummy
For how many days it can be stored
It stays well long enough when stored in an air-tight container.
Excellent 🎉🎉
Thank you! 😇
Thank you for sharing! But we don't call this murukku. We call this "thenguzhal", even though the ingredients may be similar for both. Murukku literally means "twist" in Tamil. Traditionally murukku was (and still is) made by twisting by hand and making them into spiral shapes. These are neither twisted nor spiral.
Murukku is a kannada word not Tamil. He used it correctly. 😀
@@goodsmile9014 it's also a tamil word, and what I said is based on how it's made and called in many parts of Tamil Nadu.
@@rshiva08 you have clearly mentioned that that we don't call this murukku. Now you are telling we call by that word. Get your facts properly 😀
@@goodsmile9014 sir I said the word "murukku" is also a tamil word. And in Tamil Nadu, murukku means a spiral shaped twisted fried snack with the same ingredients. Got it? This one here, maybe you call it murukku in Kannada, but we don't. Be happy.
@@goodsmile9014 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murukku
Nice recipe 😋
Yummy 👍
Achi lagi😊
Shukriya! 😄
Nice 😊😊😊😊
Murukku is a Tamil authentic snacks..
sir roj videos upload karo😁
👌👌
এটা কি অন্য রাজ্যের রেসিপি?
Music is too loud
Kranchi nahi hua naram ho gaya
Achi nai lagi sir bohat hi Jada achi lagi ☺️🙏
Pls pin
nice recipe