Kovil puliyodharai, a temple style tamarind rice recipe with full video and stepwise pictures. The spice powder added directly to the rice along with pulikachal makes it special.

Temple prasadams are always special, flavourful and tasty at a different level.
One of the prasadams that comes to your mind when you think about prasadam, next to sakkarai pongal ofcourse is, puliyodharai.
There are many temples which serves their signature puliyodharai. Do share your favorite temple's puliyodharai that is best.
Initially, during childhood days, I know only small temples near by, which serves hot prasadams prepared on either everyday basis or on special occasions.
In-spite of age and not much knowledge about food, we all loved the kovil prasadams. I am sure everyone have nostalgic memories when it comes to kovil prasadam.
These days prasadams are sold rather distributed. Yet there are many temples where temples serve food/ prasadam, follow the tradition.
The real purpose of prasadam is distribution of food to all, I believe.
My personal favorites of temple prasadams are sakkarai pongal, ven pongal, puliyodharai, ladoo, sundal and thattai.
Speciality
Kovil puliyodharai is really flavourful and unique than the one we prepare at home.
Though what we make is also flavourful, kovil puliyodharai has special flavours because of the spice powder.
We call puli sadham at home which amma makes with homemade pulikachal which has no spice powder/ grinding part at all.
Just she will do tadka and boil tamarind extract until it reduces to thick gravy.
Spice is from red chilli that is torn, added while tadka/ tempering. It is burst of flavour with the asafoetida we add mainly.
When the cookery shows started to emerge in the initial stages, or she read in some magazine, amma noted tried adding such spice powder.
The trick of adding half spice powder to rice, rest to thicken the gravy was known even that time.
Without any proper measurements, I tried several times after I started to cook. Added more of dhaniya, roasted it too much.
It over powdered the puliyodharai, killed its real flavour. I stopped adding coriander seeds itself.
Now recently I learn the knack of adding it just right without overdose.
My notes
What ever puliyodharai you make, main thing I noticed is it tastes best the next day.
Atleast give some standing time for best flavour. I got this recipe shared by my BIL, it sounded/ looked really promising and pushed me to try immediately.
As a puli sadam lover, wanted badly to try kovil puliyodharai for a long time and finally here it is.
Since tomorrow is aadi perukku, this might be helpful too.
Recipe card
Kovil puliyodharai Recipe
Ingredients
- 2 cups rice I use either basmati or sona masuri
- ¼ cup tamarind
- 1 teaspoon red chilli powder
- ½ teaspoon turmeric
- 1 teaspoon jaggery
- 1 sprig curry leaves
- 1 tablespoon Sesame oil
- Salt
To roast and powder
- 2 teaspoon oil
- 6 red chillies
- 1 & ½ tablespoon chana dal
- 1 & ½ tablespoon tablespoon coriander seeds
- 1 tablespoon urad dal
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 teaspoon fenugreek seeds
- 2 teaspoon sesame seeds
- 1 sprig curry leaves
To temper
- 2 tablespoon sesame oil
- 1 teaspoon mustard
- 1 tablespoon chana dal
- 1 tablespoon urad dal
- 6 red chillies
- ½ teaspoon asafoetida solid
- ½ cup peanuts
- 1 sprig curry leaves
Instructions
Cooking rice:
- Cook rice for 4 whistles with 1:2 water ratio.
- Once done, cool down in a broad vessel with a tablespoon of sesame oil.
- I usually add ½ teaspoon salt as my mom says it also helps in separating the grains.
Spice powder:
- Heat a kadai/ pan with 2 teaspoon oil.
- Add red chilli, chana dal, urad dal, methi seeds, coriander seeds and roast well in medium flame.
- Once dal is half roasted, add sesame seeds and roast until golden.
- Lastly add curry leaves and give it a roast.
- Set aside for cooling down and powder it coarsely.
Make pulikachal:
- First soak tamarind in water for 30 mins. Extract juice to make it total 4 cups of tamarind extract.
- In the same kadai, add sesame oil and temper with mustard, chana dal, urad dal, red chillies torn into small pieces, asafoetida.
- Once mustard pops and dals are golden, add curry leaves. Add turmeric, red chilli and immediately transfer to tamarind extract.
- Boil with enough salt until it is thick (for 10-15 mins). Lastly add jaggery.
- Add 2-3 tablespoon of the prepared spice powder. As it thickens further, switch it off.
Mixing:
- Take the cooked rice, fluff it to separate the grains.
- Sprinkle the remaining spice powder and add pulikachal. You may not require all, so add as needed.
- Tear some fresh curry leaves and add to it. Add salt if needed.
- Add sesame oil if needed to balance the spice level.
Video
Notes
- The puliyodharai will feel and look sticky, it is normal.
- I used kashmiri red chilli, best for the deep colour. Byadgi chillies works too.
- Though we use chilli for tempering, while roast/ powder, red chilli powder is also added along with black pepper. all these contribute in different flavour at different stages.
- Black pepper, sesame seeds and curry leaves in grinding part are the highlights of the spice mix.
- When you taste the puliyodharai after mixing, all the spice, salt and tangy notes should be on higher side as later rice tends to absorb a little.
- I used roasted peanuts, so added lastly while tempering. If using raw peanuts, add along dals.
Method
1. First soak tamarind in water for 30 mins. Extract juice to make it total 4 cups of tamarind extract.
2. Cook rice for 4 whistles with 1:2 water ratio. Once done, cool down in a broad vessel with a tablespoon of sesame oil.
I usually add ½ teaspoon salt as my mom says it also helps in separating the grains.
3. Heat a kadai/ pan with 2 teaspoon oil. Add red chilli, chana dal, urad dal, methi seeds, coriander seeds and roast well in medium flame.
4. Once dal is half roasted, add sesame seeds. Roast until golden. Lastly add curry leaves and give it a roast.
5. Set aside for cooling down and powder it coarsely.
6. In the same kadai, add sesame oil and temper with mustard, chana dal, urad dal, red chillies torn into small pieces, asafoetida.
7. Once mustard pops and dals are golden, add curry leaves. Add turmeric, red chilli and immediately transfer to tamarind extract.
8. Boil with enough salt until it is thick (for 10-15 mins).
9. Lastly add jaggery. Add 2-3 tablespoon of the prepared spice powder.
10. As it thickens further, switch it off. Take the cooked rice, fluff it to separate the grains.
11. Sprinkle the remaining spice powder and add pulikachal. You may not require all, so add as needed.
12. Tear some fresh curry leaves and add to it. Add salt if needed. Add sesame oil if needed to balance the spice level.
Give minimum 30 mins standing time before serving. Tastes best as you increase the standing time.
Rajee
Looks yumm. Nostalgic. I lived near perumal kovil and feel that taste seeing your recipe.
Raks Anand
Thank you 🙂
Swarna
Though I have been following your blog for quite sometime, this is the first time I have tried one of your recipes. And this pulihora tasted amazing. I was hesitant to add jaggery, but that brought a yummy taste. Thank you son much.
Raks Anand
Thank you so much for the feedback 🙂
Shiv Sivaraman
Hello, Ms. Anand,
You gave me some advice / suggestions couple of years ago which I found very useful. Thank you. Now I just wanted to say I enjoy your recipes and been very happy with them. The reason I prefer your recipes is the extra flavor you add by writing some interesting personal experience around them. You are unique!
Neera Satish
Hello Madam Can we make n keep this mixture without refrigerator for few days... n if we can then for how many days... n thanx for the lovely recipe...
Raks Anand
If you add more oil and boil it thick so that the oil floats on top, you can keep it for a week to 10 days. But make sure to boil thick and oil floats on top. Oil should form a layer above the paste.
Saradha
Hi, Recipe looks easy and output delicious!!! I usually make my own tamarind paste, how much would I have to use for the same quantity of rice? Thanks, MB
Raks Anand
Almost double or little less than double (here I have mentioned 1/4 cup tamarind, so 1/4 cup + 2 tbsp of your tamarind paste should be fine)
SMB
Thank you, will try.
Sangeetha
All ur recipes are no fail and super delicious recipes. Next time whenever u visit salem, pls visit Anjaneyar temple in Vijayaraghavan nagar. Near Sona college of Technology.. Their prasadams are tooo yumm
Raks Anand
Oh is it? Sure will try! Thank you for your feedback.
Asha
Hi,
I don't have coriander seeds, can seeds be replaced with pure coriander powder as such? If so wats d quantity of powder to be added?
TIA
Raks Anand
You can roast the powder slightly and use. Just until it heats up, do not roast for long time. 1 tbsp coriander powder will be enough for this.
anbu
Awesome!!!