Crispy mixed vegetable balls in a glossy Indo-Chinese sauce. The balls must hold together, stay firm when fried, and remain crisp when tossed. Three technical challenges, one dish.
Veg Manchurian was invented by Nelson Wang at the Cricket Club of India in Mumbai in 1975. He was asked to make something Chinese with Indian ingredients and no Chinese pantry available. He created a mixed vegetable fritter in a soy-based sauce and called it Manchurian — after the Manchuria region of China, which had no actual connection to the dish. It is entirely Indo-Chinese, entirely Indian in invention, and now one of the most ordered dishes in vegetarian Indian restaurants globally.
Combine all vegetables. Place in a clean cloth and squeeze out all moisture firmly. The squeezed-out liquid should be substantial. Transfer to a bowl. Add flour, cornflour, ginger-garlic paste, green chilli, soy sauce, salt and pepper. Mix well. The mixture should hold its shape when pressed.
Vegetable water content is the primary technical challenge of Manchurian balls. Cabbage is 92% water, carrot 88%, capsicum 92%. Without squeezing, the combined vegetable mixture releases water during frying — this water flash-vaporises and the balls crumble apart. The cornflour absorbs the remaining moisture in the squeezed mixture and forms a binding matrix when the mixture is shaped — the cornflour starch granules swell with the residual moisture, acting as a glue between the vegetable pieces.
Shape into 3cm balls. Fry in batches at 180°C for 3–4 minutes until deep golden and firm. The balls should float when done. Drain on paper.
At 180°C, the cornflour matrix gelatinises rapidly, forming a firm structure that holds the vegetable pieces together. The Maillard reactions on the outer surface produce the golden crust. The floating doneness indicator works for Manchurian balls for the same reason as medu vada — when the interior moisture has mostly converted to steam and the cornflour has set the structure, the overall density drops below oil density.
Heat wok to smoking. Garlic, ginger, chilli — 15 seconds. Add soy, chilli sauce, vinegar. Add cornflour slurry — sauce thickens in seconds. Add hot balls, toss 30 seconds, serve immediately.
The cornflour glaze on the sauce coats the balls in a thin, glossy film. This film provides a momentary moisture barrier between the sauce and the crisp crust — buying an extra 2–3 minutes of crispness compared to an unglazed sauce. The key word is momentary — the dish still must be served immediately.