Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka style Bisibelebath Recipe (2024)

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by Sowmya Venkatachalam

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Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka style Bisibelebath Recipe (8)

3.91 from 21 votes

Bisi bela bath is a popular rice variety made using rice, lentils, mix vegetables, tamarind and unique spice powder. Its a delicious and complete meal with the balance of vegetables, lentils and rice.

Prep Time 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time 40 minutes minutes

Total Time 55 minutes minutes

Jump to Recipe Jump to Video Print Recipe

Reading Time: 7 minutes

Bisi bela bathmeans “Hot Lentil Rice” in Kannada. Bisibelabath is a popular recipe in Karnataka. We make Sambar Rice in Tamilnadu which is much similar to Bisibelabath. The uniqueness of Bisi Bele Bath is its spice powder which has the tinge of masala. In our Tamilnadu version ofKadamba sambar, we also use the freshly ground sambar powder which has dal, coriander seeds, fenugreek, red chili and coconut. In addition to these spices, for Bisibelabath we use dry coconut, cinnamon, cloves, cardamom and fennel. These few spices really add a nice flavor and makes this sambar rice even more special.

Conventionally we cook rice and dal together in pressure cooker and prepare the bisibelabath gravy in another pan and combine everything together. Finally we can just add ghee roasted cashew.This is normally served with Khara Boondi or potato wafers. Bisi Bele Bath should be eaten hot, which is BISI in Kannada. This dish is popular in old Mysore region of Karnataka and not known to Coastal and North Karnataka where food culture is entirely different.

Click here to see theInstant Pot method of cooking Bisibelabath

We can follow this same recipe and use Poha orOatsor any millets in place of Rice. If we want to use poha, just wash it and sprinkle little water and mix till soft and add once the bisibelabath mixture is ready.

Tips for making Bisi Bele Bath:

  • We can use regular raw rice we use for our cooking. I used Sona masoori. We can also use basmati or ponni raw rice.
  • Cooking rice and dal separately makes it easier to mash it before mixing with sambar.
  • Shallots add nice flavor, but if you don’t have you can use regular onions.
  • The recipe uses freshly prepared Bisi Bele Bath powder. But we can also use store bought bisibelebath powder.
  • Vegetables are optional. We can just prepare only with shallots.
  • I used Kashmiri Red Chili for gettin natural color without making the rice spicier.. If you don’t want to use kashmiri red chili you can use 8 regular red chili for this recipe.
  • Top up the Bisi Bele Bath with a generous teaspoon of ghee before serving along with garnishing of coriander leaves.

You may also want to try:

  • Karnataka style Tamarind Rice
  • Arachuvitta Sambar
  • Udupi Sambar
  • Mysore Masala Dosa
  • Mysore Rasam

Recipe Card for Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka Style Bisibelebath:

Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka style Bisibelebath Recipe (9)

Pin Recipe

Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka Style Bisibelebath Recipe

Course: Dinner, Lunch, Rice Varieties

Cuisine: India, Karnataka

Equipments Needed
  • Pressure Cooker

  • Heavy Bottomed Pan

  • Mixer Grinder

Prep Time: 15 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 40 minutes minutes

Total Time: 55 minutes minutes

Servings: 6 people

Calories: 199kcal

Author: Sowmya Venkatachalam

Bisi bela bath is a popular rice variety made using rice, lentils, mix vegetables, tamarind and unique spice powder. Its a delicious and complete meal with the balance of vegetables, lentils and rice.

Print Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Raw Rice 1 cup = 250 ml
  • ½ cup Toor Dal (Pigeon pea)
  • 1 lemon size Tamarind
  • ¼ tsp Turmeric Powder
  • 2 tsp Salt

Vegetables

  • 1 Cup Shallots / Baby Onions
  • 1 nos Drumstick Chopped into 2" pieces
  • 10 nos Beans Chopped into 1" pieces
  • 1 nos Carrot Peeled, Cubed
  • 1 nos Potato Peeled, Cubed
  • ¼ Cup Green Peas
  • 1 nos Green Capsicum Cubed
  • ¼ pinch Asafoetida (Asafetida / Hing)
  • 1 tbsp Coriander Leaves For Garnishing
  • 2 tbsp Oil

Ingredients for Grinding

  • tbsp Coriander seeds
  • 1 tbsp Split Bengal Gram (Channa Dal / Kadalaparuppu)
  • 12 nos Kashmiri Red Chili or 8 Red Chili
  • ¼ tsp Fenugreek seeds
  • ½ tsp Cumin Seeds
  • 1 inch Cinnamon Stick
  • 3 nos Cloves
  • 2 nos Cardamom
  • 1 tbsp Desiccated Coconut Dry coconut
  • ½ tsp Fennel Seeds
  • ½ tsp Peppercorns

Ingredients for Tempering

  • 2 tbsp Ghee
  • 1 tsp Mustard seeds
  • Few Curry leaves
  • 1 tsp Cumin Seeds
  • 2 tbsp Cashews

Instructions

Cooking Rice and Dal

  • Take rice and dal in a vessel. Rinse it thoroughly twice or thrice. Add 4.5 cups fresh water to the rinsed rice and dal

  • Add a pinch of turmeric and pressure cook the rice and dal for 4-5 whistles. Once cooked, mash the rice and dal and set it aside.

Preparing Bisi Bela Bath Spice Powder

  • Heat a pan. Add coriander seeds, bengal gram, cumin, fennel, pepper, red chili, fenugreek seeds, cinnamon, cloves and cardamom. Dry roast the ingredients till dal turns light brown and we get nice aroma.

  • Next, adddry coconut and fry till light brown. Cool the dry roasted ingredients.

  • Take the roasted ingredients to a mixer jar. Grind it to smooth powder. Bisi Bele Bath Spice Powder Ready!

Cook Sambar

  • Heat 2 tbsp oil in a pressure cooker. Add shallots to the cooker and fry till translucent.

  • Then add other chopped veggies like drumstick, carrot, capsicum, potato, beans, green peas to the cooker. Stir-fry for couple of minutes.

  • Then add turmeric powder and a cup of water. Cover the pressure cooker with a lid and allow the vegetables to cook till soft and tender.

  • Once the vegetables are cooked completely, add tamarind juice to the cooker along with salt and asafoetida.

  • Let the tamarind juice boils for atleast 5 mins to get rid off the raw smell of tamarind.

  • Then add the prepared bisibelebath powder and stir continuously so that the powder gets mixed with the tamarind mixture without getting lumps.

  • Allow the sambar to cook for another 5 mins. Then switch off the flame.

  • Add the mashed rice+dal to to the sambar. Do not add all the rice and dal. Rice and dal absorbs the sambar so quickly. So add the rice and dal so that the bisi bele bath is not too thick but like a semi-solid. Mix nicely the rice+dal mixture with the sambar.

Tempering

  • Heat ghee in a pan. Add mustard seeds and cumin seeds and allow it to sputter. Then add cashews and fry till golden brown. Add few curry leaves and switch off the flame.

  • Add this tempering to the Bisi bele bath and give a good mix.

Serving

  • Bisi Bele Bath is now ready! Garnish with coriander leaves!

Video

Nutritional Info

Nutrition Facts

Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka Style Bisibelebath Recipe

Amount Per Serving (500 grams)

Calories 199Calories from Fat 36

% Daily Value*

Fat 4g6%

Sodium 922mg40%

Carbohydrates 33g11%

Sugar 6g7%

Protein 8g16%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

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INSTRUCTIONS WITH STEP BY STEP PICTURES:

SOAKING TAMARIND

  • Soak the tamarind in warm water for 10 mins. Extract the tamarind juice and set aside.

COOKING RICE AND DAL

  • Take rice and dal in a vessel. Rinse it thoroughly twice or thrice. Add 4.5 cups fresh water to the rinsed rice and dal.

  • Add a pinch of turmeric and pressure cook the rice and dal for 4-5 whistles. Once cooked, mash the rice and dal and set it aside.

PREPARING BISI BELA BATH SPICE POWDER

  • Heat a pan. Add coriander seeds, bengal gram, cumin, fennel, pepper, red chili, fenugreek seeds, cinnamon, cloves and cardamom. Dry roast the ingredients till dal turns light brown and we get nice aroma.

  • Next, adddry coconut and fry till light brown. Cool the dry roasted ingredients.

  • Take the roasted ingredients to a mixer jar. Grind it to smooth powder. Bisi Bele Bath Spice Powder Ready!

COOK SAMBAR

  • Heat 2 tbsp oil in a pressure cooker. Add shallots to the cooker and fry till translucent.

  • Then add other chopped veggies like drumstick, carrot, capsicum, potato, beans, green peas to the cooker. Stir-fry for couple of minutes.

    • Then add turmeric powder and a cup of water. Cover the pressure cooker with a lid and allow the vegetables to cook till soft and tender.

  • Once the vegetables are cooked completely, add tamarind juice to the cooker along with salt and asafetida.

  • Let the tamarind juice boils for atleast 5 mins to get rid off the raw smell of tamarind.

  • Then add the prepared bisibelebath powder and stir continuously so that the powder gets mixed with the tamarind mixture without getting lumps.

    • Allow the sambar to cook for another 5 mins. Then switch off the flame.

  • Add the mashed rice+dal to to the sambar. Do not add all the rice and dal. Rice and dal absorbs the sambar so quickly. So add the rice and dal so that the bisi bele bath is not too thick but like a semi-solid. Mix nicely the rice+dal mixture with the sambar.

TEMPERING:

  • Heat ghee in a pan. Add mustard seeds and cumin seeds and allow it to sputter. Then add cashews and fry till golden brown. Add few curry leaves and switch off the flame.

  • Add this tempering to the Bisi bele bath and give a good mix.

  • Bisi Bele Bath is now ready! Garnish with coriander leaves!

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Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka style Bisibelebath Recipe (35)

Sowmya Venkatachalam

IT Engineer turned full time Food Blogger. I ♡ FOOD. I also love food blogging. Did you make a recipe? Tag @Subbusktichen on Instagram. I WANNA SEE!

Hello aunty,

This recipe is slightly different.I generally boil the veggies in tamarind extract so that the raw smell of tamarind goes off.I also add the fried and grounded masala to this extract and boil for some more time and finally mix with the rice/ dhall

Iam going to try your method

Thanks

Suhasini

Reply

Hi aunty,

Thanks for all the wonderful recipes you've uploaded here.

In the above preparation, instead of adding tamarind juice to the cooked rice/dhal mix we have tried boiling the ground mix(coconut and other masala items) and the other necessary vegetables in the tamarind soaked water. This preheated mix when added to the cooked rice/dhal mix wont have the smell of the raw tamarind and will have an evenly mixed paste with good aroma.

I will surely look forward for more easy samaiyal items uploaded in this site.

thanks,
RV

Reply

Thanks RV. This certainly a better approach. I will surely give a try using this method and let you know. !.

Reply

Alternatively, you could also try one measure of rice and one measure of tuar dal (1:1) instead of the 2:1 measure of rice and dal (I also used to cook in this measure)… But based on a tip given by a friend (who is a Kannadiga), I tried the 1:1 measure… There is a subtle difference in taste and to me the taste is yum…

Reply

Thanks Malathy

I will try this measure and post the result here.

Subbalakshmi.

Reply

very tasty mami we keralites like this very much

Reply

The real bisibela ,instead of fresh coconut, or dry coconut is added and taste is yummy

Reply

Hello mam, i add copra instead of coconut and the result was super.

Reply

Hello Subbu aunty,

I made this yummy bisibelabath today. It turned out to be a real Sunday lunch special. Thank you for the wonderful recipe.
I followed the same recipe and incorporated the tips given in the comments. I boiled the tamarind juice with the veggies.

Thanks again!

Reply

Use Rice and Dal in equal quantity. The taste will be different and extraordinary.

Reply

Take Rice and Dal in equal quantity and find the difference. Also season with Sundaikkai vathal.

Reply

Really awesome receipe.. today i tried and it was so superb.. thanks aunty..

Reply

Thank you for your delicious Bisibelabath recipe. It was really nice to eat & easy to cook!

Reply

Osm ????

Reply

Hi, tried this delicious recipe yesterday ( which I wanted to try for many days), it came out very well. 🙂

Reply

Enter your comment… In your youtube recipe your grinding ingredients measurements are different from the text recipe. Which is the correct recipe to follow. Thanks

Reply

Hi, pls follow the video version. I will alter the text version according to the video version

Reply

Superb recipe. Made bisibelabath for the first time and it was a super hit. Thank you so much!

Reply

Can I make this with kuthiravali/ barnyard millet? Do I follow the same method and quantity as In the recipe to cook the Millets.

Reply

Surely we can very well do with the millets. We can cook the millet and dal separately and then add it to the cooked sambar

Reply

Hi
If making ahead of time, the bisi bele bath becomes dry. How do we keep it moist for a party?

Reply

I would recommend to keep the sambar and rice_dal separately till we are ready to serve. That way the sambar would not be absorbed fully.

Reply

This is amazing and delicious. Thanks for sharing.

Reply

😊

Reply

As a novice in Indian cooking, I really appreciate the detailed step-by-step instructions provided in this article. It makes it so much easier for beginners like me to follow along and recreate authentic dishes. The tips and techniques shared throughout the recipe are invaluable.
for more
Bisibelebath recipe in Kannada

Reply

Add Your Comment

Bisi Bele Bath Recipe | Karnataka style Bisibelebath Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What does Bisi Bele bath contain? ›

Bisi Bele Bath powder is made from fine grinding of chili, cloves, cumin, chana (Bengal gram), cinnamon, coconut, urad dal, coriander seeds and other ingredients. Vegetables such as drumstick, beans, capsicum and chopped carrots are often added to Bisi Bele Bath for enhanced taste.

Is bisi bele bath powder the same as sambar powder? ›

The only difference is in the masala. For both, freshly ground spices masala is prepared but different ingredients go in apart from khus-khus (poppy seeds) and the dry coconut (copra), which is used in the bisi bele bath but not in sambar rice.

What is the difference between bisi bele bath and khichdi? ›

Bisi bele bath is spicier, made using a spice mix called bisi bele bhath powder, toor dal, and a lot of vegetables. Dal khichdi is made using any dal (toor or moong) with basic Indian spices, may not contain vegetables, and is similar to south Indian pongal.

Why is Bisi Bele Bath famous in Karnataka? ›

According to historian KT Achaya, Bisi Bele Bath is probably a variation of a dish called Kattogara from 10th Century, which was made with rice, ghee, salt and garlic. Others believe that Bisi Bele Bath was born in Mysore Palace as an easy-to-digest meal with cashews, dried coconut, mustard seeds and cinnamon.

What is bisi bele in english? ›

The term “Bisi bele bath” translates to “Hot lentil rice dish”. “Bisi” is a Kannada word meaning “Hot” (temperature), “Bele” translates to “Lentils” and “Bath” is a word that denotes a “gooey dish cooked by immersing the ingredients in water”.

Is Bisibelebath good for weight loss? ›

1 It is very convenient to eat. 2 It fills you up. 3 It is rich in proteins, which means it helps build muscle. 4 The chili in it speeds up your metabolism and helps you lose weight.

What is the rate of Bisibelebath powder? ›

Buy Mtr Masala Bisibele Bath 100 Gm Pouch Online At Best Price of Rs 64 - bigbasket.

Why is my sambar powder bitter? ›

My sambar powder tastes bitter. Where did I go wrong? Methi (fenugreek) has a bit of a bitter flavor on its own, so if you are eating the spice mixture plain, it may end up tasting rather sharp or bitter. Once you add it to a sambar recipe, it should taste good!

Who invented Bisi bele bath? ›

It is said to have originated in the Mysore Palace and it took a 100 years for the dish to come out of the palace kitchens and another 200 years to spread across the state of Karnataka.

Why khichdi is better than dal chawal? ›

The reason is that a tadka is given to dal khichadi which makes the dal khichadi different from Dal Rice and this makes it tastier. Dal khichdi and dal chawal are two different kind of dishes and not to be confused. Dal khichdi is prepared rarely while dal chawal is essential food everyday.

Is khichdi better than roti? ›

Both are nutritious but khichdi is easy to digest and rich in protein. Khichdi is cholesterol free and fat free. It is a good option for those who want to lose their weight. Khichdi is made from moong dal and rice.

Why is khichdi better than rice? ›

High in protein

Eating a protein-rich diet is essential to a healthy weight loss. Eating khichdi is healthy since rice and lentils are a superior source of protein when combined. Lentils have a lot of protein, however they also lack lysine, a type of protein. Yet rice doesn't have sulfur-based protein.

Which is the famous food in Karnataka? ›

From the spicy curries of the coastal region to the hearty lentil dishes of the north, there is something for everyone to enjoy. No trip to Karnataka would be complete without trying some of the state's most famous dishes, such as bisi bele bath, gojju, and mysore pak.

What are the different types of bath in Karnataka? ›

Here are seven bath dishes from across India that you must try:
  • Bisi Bele Bath. Originating in Karnataka, this spicy dish is made with lentils, rice, mixed vegetables and flavourful spices. ...
  • Masale Bhaat. ...
  • Vangi Bath. ...
  • Kesari Bath. ...
  • Tomato Bath. ...
  • Chow Chow Bath. ...
  • Panta Bhat.
Jan 26, 2023

What is rice bath made of? ›

one such flavoured variety is the karnataka style rice bath or rice pulao recipe made with mint, coriander and coconut. as i mentioned previously there are many variations to the pulao or bath recipes and this rice bath recipe is one such variation from karnataka.

What is the origin of bissi Billi Bhat? ›

Bisi bele bhath (Kannada: ಬಿಸಿ ಬೇಳೆ ಭಾತು, romanized: bisi bēl̥e bhātu, lit. 'hot lentil [boiled] rice') or bisi bele huliyanna (ಬಿಸಿಬೇಳೆಹುಳಿಯನ್ನ) is a spicy, rice-based dish with origins in the state of Karnataka, India.

How many calories are in Bisibelebath? ›

Calories in Bisibelebath (100 gm.)
Calories74.37 Kcal
Carbohydrates12.56 gm.
Fiber1.65 gm.
Sodium2.67 mg.
Potassium169.13 mg.
6 more rows
Nov 29, 2018

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