Maharashtra's everyday breakfast — flattened rice tempered with mustard seeds, onion, turmeric and lemon. Ready in 15 minutes. The rinsing step determines everything.
Poha (flattened rice) is one of the easiest Indian breakfasts to make and one of the easiest to ruin. There are two failure modes: too wet (mushy, sticky, heavy) and too dry (hard, crunchy, unpleasant). Both failures trace back to the rinsing step — the single variable that determines the final texture. The correct technique: rinse briefly under cold water until just moistened, drain completely, and let the poha rest for 3 minutes to absorb the residual moisture evenly.
Place poha in a colander. Rinse under cold water for 15–20 seconds — just enough to moisten. Shake the colander gently. Leave to drain for 3 minutes. The poha should be just moist enough to press into a clump but not wet.
Flattened rice is hygroscopic — it absorbs water very rapidly due to its high surface area and pre-gelatinised starch structure. A brief 15-second rinse provides enough moisture for the pre-gelatinised starch to complete its hydration during the 3-minute rest. Over-rinsing saturates the starch, producing waterlogged flakes that cannot absorb any further moisture from the cooking stage and become mushy. The 3-minute rest allows the absorbed moisture to distribute evenly through each flake.
Heat oil. Pop mustard and cumin seeds. Add curry leaves and green chilli. Add onion — cook 3 minutes. Add potato cubes if using — cook 5 minutes on medium until soft. Add turmeric.
Turmeric added to the hot oil dissolves into the fat phase — curcumin is fat-soluble, producing the uniform golden-yellow colour that defines Maharashtrian poha. Turmeric added to water-phase ingredients produces patchy, uneven colour because it cannot dissolve into the water base.
Add rinsed poha to the tadka. Add sugar and salt. Toss gently to coat all flakes with the turmeric oil — do not stir vigorously. Cover and cook 2 minutes on low. Remove lid, add lemon juice, peanuts and coriander. Serve immediately.
Gentle tossing rather than stirring preserves the flake structure — vigorous stirring breaks the partially-hydrated flakes into fragments. Sugar and salt added simultaneously cancel each other perceptually at low concentrations — the sugar does not make poha sweet but reduces the perception of saltiness and increases overall flavour complexity. The peanuts added last retain their crunch as they have not absorbed any moisture during cooking.