Maharashtra's fasting food — tapioca and potato patties fried until crispy. Eaten during Navratri fasts. The soaking time is everything.
Sabudana vada is Maharashtra's most popular fasting food — eaten during Navratri, Ekadashi and other Hindu fasting days. Made from tapioca pearls (sabudana), mashed potato, roasted peanuts and green chilli, shaped into patties and deep-fried until crispy. The most common problem with sabudana vada is the pearls not soaking correctly — either remaining hard and crunchy inside or becoming waterlogged and sticky. Getting the soaking exactly right is the entire technique.
Wash sabudana thoroughly in cold water until water runs clear. Place in a bowl. Add just enough water to cover — the water level should be exactly at the top of the pearls, not above. Cover and rest at room temperature for 4–6 hours or overnight. After soaking, the pearls should separate easily and feel soft but not slimy.
Tapioca pearls are compressed starch granules. Water absorption is gradual — the outer starch layer hydrates first, forming a protective gel that slows further absorption. Too much water causes the outer gel to dissolve, leading to sticky, waterlogged pearls that clump. The 'just covered' water level is precise — it provides exactly enough water for full hydration without excess. Overnight soaking at room temperature gives slower, more even hydration than warm water soaking.
Combine soaked sabudana, mashed potato, ground peanuts, green chilli, cumin, lemon juice and salt. Mix well — the mixture should hold its shape when pressed. Shape into flat round patties 1.5cm thick.
Mashed potato provides the binding — its gelatinised starch acts as a matrix that holds the non-binding sabudana pearls together. Ground peanuts add fat, protein and texture. The fat from peanuts also coats the sabudana pearls, preventing them from absorbing frying oil excessively.
Heat oil to 175°C. Fry vada for 3–4 minutes per side until golden and the sabudana pearls are translucent and no longer opaque white.
Sabudana pearls turn from opaque white to translucent when fully cooked — the starch completes its gelatinisation in the hot oil. Opaque white pearls in the finished vada indicate undercooking. The potato exterior browns through Maillard reaction, creating a golden crust.