Soft paneer and potato balls in a rich cream sauce — one of the most technically demanding vegetarian curries. The kofta must hold together in oil, stay soft inside, and not dissolve in the sauce.
Malai kofta presents three simultaneous technical challenges: the kofta must be bound tightly enough to hold in hot oil, soft enough to melt in the mouth when eaten, and stable enough to survive contact with the sauce without dissolving. Each challenge requires a specific technique. The binding agent (cornflour) must be minimal — enough to hold but not enough to make the kofta dense. The frying temperature (175°C) must be precise — too hot and the outside burns before the inside sets; too cold and the kofta absorbs oil and falls apart.
Mix grated paneer, mashed potato, cornflour, green chilli, coriander, garam masala and salt. Knead until the mixture holds together. Test: fry one kofta first. If it falls apart, add 1 more tbsp cornflour. If it holds perfectly, proceed.
The binding in malai kofta comes from two sources: the partially dried paneer proteins form a cohesive matrix when compressed, and the cornflour gelatinises on contact with hot oil, creating a rigid crust that holds the soft interior together. The test kofta is critical — different paneer brands have different moisture contents, so the correct cornflour quantity varies. The test prevents losing an entire batch.
Shape into 3cm balls (optionally stuff with cashew-raisin). Fry in batches at 175°C for 3 minutes until golden. Do not crowd. Drain on paper.
At 175°C, the outer cornflour layer gelatinises and begins Maillard browning within the first 60 seconds, forming a rigid shell before the soft interior can melt. The kofta is structurally stabilised by this early crust formation — which is why temperature precision matters so much. Below 165°C, the crust forms too slowly and oil saturates the kofta before the shell sets; above 185°C, the shell browns and sets too quickly while leaving the centre barely heated.
Fry onion, garlic, ginger, tomatoes until soft. Add cashews. Cool, blend smooth, sieve. Return to pan, add spices, cook 5 minutes. Add cream, kasuri methi, garam masala, salt. Add koftas only at the moment of serving.
The kofta structure that survived deep frying is vulnerable to the sauce environment because the sauce's water phase will gradually hydrate the cornflour crust, softening it. This process takes 5–8 minutes — serving within this window preserves the kofta texture. The sauce should be hot and ready before the koftas are added — never let koftas sit in sauce before serving.