Sprouted moong cheela: an easy protein-rich breakfast

Sprouted cheela Recipe for protein

In This Article

Sprouted moong cheela is a savoury pancake made by blending sprouted green moong with onion, spinach, garlic, cumin and a little besan. The batter is spread on a hot pan and cooked on both sides until crisp. Mint or peanut chutney makes an easy pairing.

The recipe gives you a pulse-based breakfast rather than a meal built only around refined flour. Sprouted moong provides protein and fibre, while spinach and onion add vegetables. Two tablespoons of besan help bind the batter and make it easier to spread.

Sprouting changes the texture of moong, but the sprouts still need clean handling. This recipe cooks the batter fully, which is a practical choice for families and for people who find raw sprouts difficult to digest.

Why sprouted moong cheela works for breakfast

Moong is a pulse, so it provides vegetarian protein. Turning it into cheela makes it easier to portion than eating a large bowl of sprouts. The batter can also carry vegetables and spices without needing a separate side dish.

Indian dietary guidance includes pulses and beans as useful protein foods. It also encourages variety, so this breakfast can rotate with idli, poha, paneer bhurji, ragi dishes and other home foods.

A balanced cheela plate

Cheela gives pulse and vegetables, but the meal may still need a side depending on hunger. Add curd, chutney, fruit or a vegetable filling. A very thin chutney alone may not be enough for a long morning.

Ingredients and easy adjustments

Recipe of Sprouted moong cheela
  • 1 cup sprouted moong
  • One-fourth cup chopped onion
  • One green chilli, optional
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • Half a cup chopped spinach
  • 2 tablespoons besan
  • Half a teaspoon cumin seeds
  • Salt to taste
  • One-fourth teaspoon turmeric
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • Water as needed
  • A small amount of ghee or oil for cooking

Make it mild

Skip green chilli and reduce garlic for children or sensitive stomachs. Add grated carrot or coriander for colour. If spinach makes the batter watery, squeeze out extra moisture after washing and chopping.

Why besan is included

Besan helps hold the coarse moong batter together. If the batter already spreads well, use less. Too much besan can hide the fresh moong taste and make the cheela dense.

How to make sprouted moong cheela

  • Rinse the sprouts well. Steam them for a few minutes if they are very firm or if you prefer a gentler texture.
  • Add sprouts, garlic, cumin, turmeric, salt and lemon juice to a mixer.
  • Blend with a little water into a coarse batter. Do not make it completely watery.
  • Transfer to a bowl and mix in onion, spinach, chilli and besan.
  • Rest the batter for five to ten minutes. Add a spoon of water if it becomes too thick.
  • Heat a flat pan and grease it lightly with ghee or oil.
  • Pour a ladle of batter and spread it gently into a medium-thick circle.
  • Cook until the edges lift and the base is golden. Flip and cook the other side until the centre is fully set.
  • Serve hot with mint chutney, peanut chutney or curd.
  • Keep the cheela medium-thick. If it is spread too thin before the sprouts are finely blended, it may tear. A smaller cheela is easier to flip and cooks more evenly.

    Cooking and digestion tips

    Cook the centre fully

    The surface may brown before the middle cooks if the pan is too hot. Use medium heat and give each side enough time. Lower the flame after flipping if needed.

    Start with a smaller portion

    Sprouted moong and besan both contain fibre and complex carbohydrates. If you are not used to pulses at breakfast, start with one cheela and increase slowly. Chew well and avoid rushing.

    Keep sprouting clean

    Use clean water and containers, rinse the beans during sprouting and refrigerate finished sprouts. Discard sprouts that smell unpleasant, feel slimy or show mould. General food safety guidance applies even when food is homemade.

    People with severe digestive problems, reduced immunity or a medically restricted diet should ask a clinician whether sprouts are suitable and how thoroughly they should be cooked.

    Pairings, storage and meal-prep ideas

    Chutney options

    • Mint-coriander chutney
    • Peanut chutney
    • Tomato chutney
    • Plain curd with roasted jeera

    Prepare ahead

    You can sprout the moong in advance and refrigerate it. The batter can be made the night before and chilled, but onion and salt may release water. Stir and adjust thickness in the morning.

    Use leftovers

    Cooked cheelas taste best fresh. If needed, refrigerate for one day and reheat on a pan rather than a microwave so the edges regain some crispness. The batter can also be used for small uttapam-style rounds topped with vegetables.

    The reminds us to include several food groups across the day. Pair the cheela with curd or chutney and include fruit or vegetables at another meal rather than expecting one breakfast to cover every need.

    Taste the batter before cooking the full batch. Salt, lemon and chilli become stronger after the cheela cooks, so begin lightly. Make one small test cheela, then adjust water or besan. This saves the rest of the batter if the first texture is not right.

    FAQs

    1. Can I make moong cheela without sprouting?

    Yes. Soak whole green moong overnight, drain and blend it. The flavour and texture will be slightly different, but the method is similar.

    2. Why does my cheela break while flipping?

    The batter may be too watery, the pan may not be hot enough or the cheela may be too large. Add a little besan and make smaller rounds.

    3. Do sprouts need to be steamed first?

    The cheela cooks the sprouts, but a short steam can make firm sprouts easier to blend and digest. It is also a useful extra safety step.

    4. How many cheelas make a serving?

    One to two medium cheelas may suit many people, depending on size, side dishes, age and activity. Start with one and check your hunger.

    5. Can I pack sprouted moong cheela in a lunch box?

    Yes. Cool it briefly before packing so steam does not make it soggy. Use a clean box and include chutney separately when possible.

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