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Sorghum flour cooked with jaggery and buttermilk into a thick, cooling porridge eaten in summer — the traditional farm worker breakfast of Telangana. Sajja is sorghum; ambali is the term for this specific porridge preparation in Telugu.
Mix jowar flour with cold water first: In a bowl whisk 1 cup jowar flour with 1 cup cold water until completely smooth with no lumps. Mixing with cold water first prevents lumps from forming when poured into hot water.
Bring remaining water to a boil: Bring the remaining 2 cups water to a full boil in a pot.
Pour the flour paste into boiling water: Pour the mixed jowar paste into the boiling water while stirring continuously and vigorously. Lumps form if you stop stirring even briefly.
Add jaggery: Add grated jaggery immediately. Stir until the jaggery dissolves into the thickening porridge.
Cook while stirring: Cook on medium heat, stirring continuously for 5 to 7 minutes. The jowar flour will cook through and the porridge will thicken to a smooth, flowing consistency. Taste — no raw flour flavour should remain.
Add a pinch of salt: Add salt. Stir.
Add buttermilk: Remove from heat. Stir in the buttermilk. The buttermilk adds a cooling, slightly tangy character that makes this appropriate as a summer morning preparation. Do not boil after adding buttermilk.
Check consistency: The sajja ambali should be thick but pourable — similar to a smooth pancake batter that flows slowly. Add water if too stiff.
Taste and adjust: The porridge should be mildly sweet from jaggery, slightly tangy from buttermilk and earthy from the sorghum. Adjust sweetness if needed.
Serve warm: Serve in wide cups or bowls. The sajja ambali is drunk rather than eaten with a spoon — a cup of warm porridge consumed quickly before the day's farm work.
Note: Sajja Ambali is the traditional morning drink-meal of the farming communities of Telangana — consumed before the long hours of agricultural work during the hot summer months. The combination of jaggery (energy) and buttermilk (cooling) in a sorghum base is specifically designed for the nutritional and thermal needs of field workers in the Deccan heat. This preparation predates commercial breakfast foods by centuries in this region.
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