The thick South Indian pancake — fermented batter cooked with toppings pressed in. Uses the same batter as dosa but the older, more sour version. The opposite technique to dosa.
Uttapam is traditionally made with older, more soured fermented batter — the batter that has been sitting for 2–3 days and has become too sour and slightly thick for dosa. The extra sourness works perfectly in a thicker pancake where the flavour is more present. The toppings — onion, tomato, green chilli, coriander — are pressed into the wet batter surface before it sets, cooking into the pancake rather than sitting on top of it.
Mix onion, tomato, green chilli and coriander together. Keep ready. Check batter consistency — it should be slightly thicker than dosa batter. If too thick, add a small amount of water.
Removing seeds from the tomato before chopping reduces moisture — tomato seeds are surrounded by gel-like locular fluid that releases water when chopped. Excess water from tomato seeds would make the uttapam surface wet rather than cooking cleanly, delaying Maillard browning on the topping surface.
Heat tawa on medium. Oil lightly. Pour one ladle of batter — do not spread. The batter should settle into a thick 12cm round. Immediately scatter topping mixture over the surface. Gently press toppings into the wet batter with a spoon. Cover with a lid.
Pressing toppings into wet batter is the defining technique of uttapam. The toppings submerge partially into the batter matrix — as the batter gelatinises around them, they become structurally integrated into the pancake rather than sitting on top. Covering with a lid traps steam that cooks the top surface of the thick batter without the bottom burning — necessary because the 5–6mm thickness cannot be cooked through by bottom heat alone.
After 3–4 minutes, when the base is golden and the batter looks set on top, carefully flip. Cook the topping side for 2 minutes until the vegetables caramelise slightly. Serve immediately.
Unlike dosa, uttapam is flipped because its thickness prevents the top from cooking through with lid-steam alone. The topping side cooked against the hot tawa undergoes Maillard browning — the onion caramelises and the tomato reduces slightly against the metal, producing a more complex flavour than the wet-steamed topping surface before flipping. The caramelised topping side is traditionally served face-up.