Impossibly soft, spongy spheres of milk solids and flour, deep-fried to a burnished mahogany and soaked in rose-and-cardamom-scented sugar syrup until they double in size with absorbed sweetness. One bite and they practically dissolve on the tongue in a warm, perfumed flood of pure pleasure.
Ingredients
1 cup milk powder
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1/4 tsp baking soda
2 tbsp ghee, softened
3-4 tbsp whole milk for binding
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups water for syrup
4 green cardamom pods, lightly crushed
1 tbsp rose water
Pinch of saffron threads
Vegetable oil or ghee for deep frying
Instructions
1Prepare the sugar syrup first by dissolving sugar in water over medium heat. Add the crushed cardamom pods and simmer for eight minutes until slightly sticky. Remove from heat, stir in rose water and saffron, and set aside to stay warm while you prepare the dough.
2Combine the milk powder, flour, and baking soda in a bowl. Add the softened ghee and rub it into the dry ingredients with your fingertips until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Add milk one tablespoon at a time, mixing gently until a soft dough forms.
3Knead the dough very lightly for just one minute. Over-kneading develops gluten and produces hard gulab jamuns instead of soft, melt-in-your-mouth ones. The dough should be smooth, slightly oily, and crack-free when you roll it between your palms.
4Divide the dough into twenty small portions and roll each into a perfectly smooth ball with no visible cracks on the surface. Any cracks will cause the balls to split open during frying. If the dough feels dry, moisten your palms with a drop of milk.
5Heat oil or ghee in a deep pan to one hundred and twenty degrees Celsius, which is lower than typical frying temperature. Fry the balls in small batches, turning constantly with a slotted spoon for eight to ten minutes until they are uniformly deep reddish-brown all over.
6Transfer the hot fried balls directly into the warm sugar syrup. Let them soak for at least two hours, during which they will absorb the cardamom and rose-scented syrup and expand to nearly double their fried size, becoming soft and spongy throughout.
7Serve the gulab jamun warm or at room temperature in small bowls with generous spoonfuls of the fragrant syrup. Garnish with crushed pistachios and dried rose petals. These beloved Pakistani sweets are indispensable at celebrations, weddings, and festive gatherings.
Did You Know?
Gulab jamun derives its name from the Persian words 'gulab' (rosewater) and 'jamun' (a dark berry it resembles). It is so beloved in South Asia that it was once voted Pakistan's national dessert, despite being equally claimed by India.