Make crispy and flaky samosas with melt-in-mouth filling at home any time of the year when you are craving these delicious bites following this simple samosa recipe.
This samosa recipe is vegetarian/vegan and can be served as an appetizer, snack, or finger food with mint chutney, dates chutney, or tomato ketchup/sauce.
What is Samosa?
Samosa or Singara or Sambusa is popular South Asian, Indian street food where the pastry is filled with savory fillings like vegetables or meat and are then deep-fried or baked or air-fried. It can be triangular, conical, half-moon or cresent shaped.
Samosa filling variations
Filling or stuffing inside samosa can vary from potato (aloo), onion, lentils, paneer, noodles for vegetarian variations. For non-vegetarian versions, the fillings include egg, keema, lamb, chicken, or any meat of your choice. The filling choice varies depending on the region you are from and your local food habits.
My all-time favorite is the one with potato and green peas filling (a Punjabi samosa), and nothing can replace this 🙂
Do you know how popular samosa is in India?
Any birthday party, office party, get together, or quick office meeting you attend samosa and cup of chai is quite common. Am I right, folks?
They are popular during Ramadan eaten as Iftar snacks, and during festivals like Diwali, Holi, Rakhi, or Christmas .
And during the rainy season, all I want is a cup of steaming hot chai (tea) or coffee and some spicy samosa.
Tips to make the best samosa at home every single time?
After the first few failures in making the samosa, I learned these few tips.
- To get that flaky and crispy outer cover, you have to rub the flour into the oil. This process is similar to making pie crust dough. This step is a must.
- For crispy samosa, the dough should be stiff. If you add too much water or the dough is too soft upon kneading, you will not get that crispy crust.
- Always fry the samosa on medium flame, and for street style or traditional authentic results fry on low flame. You can check that method here on ALOO KACHORI. Never be in a hurry and fry on high flame. Frying on a high flame may turn the outer surface of the samosa cover to brown soon, while the dough remains uncooked.
Ingredients for Samosa Recipe
For the samosa dough
2 cups All-purpose flour or Maida
½ teaspoon Salt
¼ cup Cooking oil of your choice (I use coconut oil)
¼ cup + 3 tablespoon of Water
For the potato peas filling or aloo matar filling (Adjust all the spices to taste)
4 medium Potatoes
2 tablespoon Oil
1 tablespoon crushed Coriander seeds
1 teaspoon Cumin seeds
1 teaspoon Saunf or Fennel seeds
Hing or Asafoetida (powder or whole), pinch
1 tablespoon Ginger, finely chopped
2 Green chilies, chopped
¾ cup Green peas (fresh or frozen)
½ teaspoon Garam masala or Tandoori masala or Curry powder
½ teaspoon Chaat masala or Amchur powder
½ teaspoon Red chile powder
½ to ¾ teaspoon Salt, adjust to taste
1 tablespoon Coriander leaves or Cilantro, chopped
Oil for frying
How to make perfect street style or halwai style samosa at home? Samosa banane ka tarika
Step I (Prepare the samosa dough)
- In a bowl, add flour, salt, and mix. To this, add oil in parts and mix using your fingers. Rub the flour in oil till oil is incorporated with flour. When you take a portion of the mixture and press it between your palm, it should not crumble but hold the shape.
- Now add the water in parts and mix till everything comes together and a stiff dough is formed. This will be similar to pie dough. Do not add all water at once. First, add ¼ cup and then in 1 tablespoon increments.
- Cover the dough and let it rest for 30 to 45 minutes.
Step II (Prepare the filling)
- Boil potatoes in any way you prefer (stovetop, pressure cooker, instant pot, or microwave). I generally place a trivet in a pressure cooker filled with enough water and then place the bowl with potatoes and pressure cook for 3 to 4 whistles. After natural pressure release peel the skin of potatoes, roughly chop if needed and keep them aside.
- In a pan, add oil, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, fennel seeds, and hing and saute till this sizzles on medium flame.
- To this, add ginger and green chilies and saute for another 30 seconds to 1 minute
- Now add potatoes, green peas, garam masala, chaat masala, red chile powder, salt, coriander leaves, and using a potato masher, nicely mash till everything is well combined.
- Switch off the flame and let the mixture cool.
Check out the full detailed samosa video here
Step III (Shaping Samosa / How to fold Samosa)
- Once the dough is rested, divide them into 8 balls.
- Take one dough ball at a time, keep others covered.
- In a small bowl, mix water with little flour to form a slurry. This slurry is used as glue while forming samosa.
- Roll them into an oval shape and cut them in the center to create two parts (for better understanding, check my video on making samosa).
- When you cut, it may pull back, so you gently roll each part again if needed.
- Apply the slurry to half the side of the cut part and half the side of the oval.
- Now bring the ends of the cut part together and pinch to form a cone. Check the video on how to fold samosa.
- Fill the samosa with filling. Finally, pinch the edges together. Trim off any excess dough from the ends if needed. Your 1st samosa is ready.
- Repeat the process for remaining dough. Keep the filled samosas covered till you are ready for frying
Step IV (Frying Samosa)
- In a pan on medium flame, heat oil for frying. To check if the oil is hot, drop a small scrap piece of dough into the oil, and it should sizzle slowly and come up.
- Once the oil is hot, drop 3 to 4 filled samosas depending on the size of the pan. Do not flip or disturb them immediately upon dropping them in the oil. Flip after a minute or two once they become firm and fry them on medium flame till the outer cover gets browned and crispy on all the sides, flipping it during the cooking process.
- Repeat the process for the remaining filled samosas.
- Enjoy the fried samosas with sweet chutney, mint chutney, tomato ketchup, and a hot cup of tea or chai or coffee.
Quick Tips :
- Always fry the samosas on medium flame. Do not fry on high flame. Frying on a high flame may turn the outer surface of the samosa cover to brown soon, while the dough remains uncooked.
- Adjust all the spices to taste.
- The number of samosas you make will vary depending on their size.
- The addition of crushed coriander and fennel seeds is a must in Punjabi samosas. However, if you are not a big fan of whole spices, you can skip this altogether.
How to boil potatoes in an Instant Pot?
Place a trivet with 1 cup of water in the bottom of your pot. High pressure for 10 to 12 minutes with natural release.
Can I substitute all purpose flour with wheat flour in this samosa recipe?
Don't substitute completely. Make 1 :1 ratio! For 1 cup flour use 1 cup wheat flour or atta. The outer texture may vary slightly.
Can I substitute oil with ghee or butter?
Yes. To make it richer, you can use desi ghee or butter. But to make it vegan, oil is best. I generally use coconut oil. Use any oil of your choice. You can even use vegetable shortening or dalda. The addition of fat (oil/ghee) will give you a flaky crust or outer covering for the samosa. Just make sure you rub oil into the flour until well incorporated.
Can I use store bough spring rolls sheets, puff pastry sheets or phyllo sheets as the outer cover for samosas?
Yes. to speed up the process you can use spring roll wrappers (check my recipe for SCHEZWAN SAMOSA) or puff pastry sheets as outer covering for samosas (see my recipe for PUFF SAMOSA).
How to store and reheat any leftover samosa?
You can place them in an airtight container at room temperature for a day or in refrigerator for up to 5 days. You can reheat in an oven preheated at 350 degrees F till it gets warm, or reheat in a microwave for 1 minute.
Can I make samosa ahead of time?
Yes. you can fill the samosas and place them in a plate or a baking tray lined with parchment paper and freeze till it becomes firm. Once firm, remove and place them in a Ziploc bag and use as needed. You can deep fry, air fry or bake samosas once thawed to room temperature.
Air Fryer Samosa :
Once the samosas are filled and shaped, you can brush them with oil and air fry at 350 degree F for 20 minutes.
Oven Baked Samosa :
Line the filled and shaped samosas on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper in a single layer with sufficient space for heated air to circulate. Bake in preheated oven at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes or until it is cripsy and golden brown.
Leftover Samosa or Samosa Filling?
If you have leftover samosas, you can make the popular samosa chaat using chole, sweet chutney, mint chutney, sev, and chopped onions. You can also sandwich them between slices of chutney lathered bread or pav or bun or rolls.
If you have leftover samosa filling, the best recipe to make is aloo peas tikki or potato peas kebab. This would be a great snack with tea or coffee.
Some other recipes with leftover fillings would be samosa rolls, roll ups, batata vada, or simply mix it with some curds and serve it with steamed rice.
Why is my samosa not crispy?
Your samosas may not have turned crispy only for two reasons - either your dough was soft or you fried it on high flame and removed it from oil early. Therefore, make sure the dough is stiff (low water content, and proper oil:flour ratio), and fry samosas on low/medium flame for a longer time to get crispy samosas every single time.
Why did my samosa turn hard?
If your dough did not have the right amount of water (resulting in a very stiff dough), then samosas will turn hard.
Why is my samosa oily?
If you add too much water while making the dough or form a soft dough then the samosas absorb oil while frying and turns oily. Also if you drop samosas in oil when it is not hot enough, it will absorb oil.
Step by step samosa video
Detailed recipe for homemade crispy and flaky samosa or punjabi aloo samosa | Samosa banane ki vidhi
Recipe card
Samosa Recipe | How To Make Samosa
Ingredients
For the samosa dough
- 2 cups All-purpose flour or Maida
- ½ teaspoon Salt
- ¼ cup Oil , of your choice
- ¼ cup + 3 tablespoon Water
For the potato peas filling or aloo matar filling (Adjust all the spices to taste)
- 4 medium Potatoes
- 2 tablespoon Oil
- 1 tablespoon Coriander seeds , crushed
- 1 teaspoon Cumin seeds
- 1 teaspoon Fennel seeds or Saunf
- Asafoetida or Hing (powder or whole), pinch
- 1 tablespoon Ginger , finely chopped
- 2 Green chilies , chopped
- ¾ cup Green peas (fresh or frozen)
- ½ teaspoon Garam masala or Tandoori masala or Curry powder
- ½ teaspoon Chaat masala or Amchur powder
- ½ teaspoon Red chile powder
- ½ to ¾ teaspoon Salt , adjust to taste
- 1 tablespoon Cilantro or Coriander leaves, chopped
Other ingredient
- Oil , for frying
Instructions
STEP I (Prepare the Samosa Dough)
- In a bowl, add flour, salt, and mix. To this, add oil in parts and mix using your fingers. Rub the flour in oil till oil is incorporated with flour. When you take a portion of the mixture and press it between your palm, it should not crumble but hold the shape.2 cups All-purpose flour, ½ teaspoon Salt, ¼ cup Oil
- Now add the water in parts and mix till everything comes together and a stiff dough is formed. This will be similar to pie dough. Do not add all water at once. First, add ¼ cup and then in 1 tablespoon increments.¼ cup + 3 tablespoon Water
- Cover the dough and let it rest for 30 to 45 minutes.
STEP II (Prepare the Filling)
- Boil potatoes in any way you prefer (stovetop, pressure cooker, instant pot, or microwave). I generally place a trivet in a pressure cooker filled with enough water and then place the bowl with potatoes (with skin) and pressure cook for 3 to 4 whistles. After natural pressure release, peel the boiled potatoes, roughly chop if needed and keep them aside.4 medium Potatoes
- In a pan, add oil, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, fennel seeds, and hing and saute till this sizzles on medium flame.2 tablespoon Oil, 1 tablespoon Coriander seeds, 1 teaspoon Cumin seeds, 1 teaspoon Fennel seeds, Asafoetida
- To this, add ginger and green chilies and saute for another 30 seconds to 1 minute.1 tablespoon Ginger, 2 Green chilies
- Now add potatoes (from above), green peas, garam masala, chaat masala, red chile powder, salt, coriander leaves, and using a potato masher, nicely mash till everything is well combined.¾ cup Green peas, ½ teaspoon Garam masala, ½ teaspoon Chaat masala, ½ teaspoon Red chile powder, ½ to ¾ teaspoon Salt, 1 tablespoon Cilantro
- Switch off the flame and let the mixture cool.
STEP III (Shaping Samosa / How To Fold Samosa)
- Once the dough is rested, divide them into 8 balls. Take one dough ball at a time, keep others covered.
- In a small bowl, mix water with little flour to form a slurry. This slurry is used as a glue while forming samosa.
- Roll them into an oval shape and cut them in the center to create two parts (for better understanding, check my video on making samosa). When you cut, it may pull back, so you gently roll each part again if needed.
- Apply the slurry to half the side of the cut part and half the side of the oval. Now bring the ends of the cut part together and pinch to form a cone. Check the samosa video.
- Fill the samosa with filling. Finally, pinch the edges together. Trim off any excess dough from the ends if needed. Your 1st samosa is ready.
- Repeat the process for the remaining dough. Keep the filled samosas covered till you are ready for frying.
STEP IV (FRYING SAMOSA)
- In a pan on medium flame, heat oil for frying. To check if the oil is hot, drop a small scrap piece of dough into the oil, and it should sizzle slowly and come up.Oil
- Once the oil is hot, drop 3 to 4 filled samosas depending on the size of the pan. Do not flip or disturb them immediately upon dropping them in the oil. Flip after a minute or two once they become firm and fry them on medium flame till the outer cover gets browned and crispy on all the sides, flipping it during the cooking process.
- Repeat the process for the remaining filled samosas.
- Enjoy the fried samosas with sweet chutney, mint chutney, tomato ketchup, and a hot cup of tea or chai or coffee.
Notes
- Always fry the samosas on medium flame. Do not fry on high flame. Frying on a high flame may turn the outer surface of the samosa cover to brown soon, while the dough remains uncooked.
- Adjust all the spices to taste.
- The number of samosas you make will vary depending on their size.
- The addition of crushed coriander and fennel seeds is a must in Punjabi samosas. However, if you are not a big fan of whole spices, you can skip this altogether.
- If you are making samosas for the first time, then read the entire post for better understanding or watch the video where I show how to make samosas.
Nutrition
If you like this Samosa recipe - a popular Indian street food
Don't miss to check out some of my delicious Indian street food recipes to try this festival and holiday season, parties, or any time of the year.
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Rach
I've never heard of Samosa before but that is looking quite delicious! Definitely want to try someday.
Lyanna Soria
I don't think I've eaten a samosa before but I'm always up for trying out new dishes. That looks quite tasty as well.
khoingn | The Broad Life
Wow, this Samosa looked yummy for an afternoon snack. Surely I will try making and tasting it. I would love to have its in my list of afternoon snack after ate. Thanks for sharing the recipe!
Njkinny
I love samosa! Love your simple recipe and will try it out. Thanks for sharing!
Emman Damian
Wow! I love samosa. I can't wait to try this recipe. Thanks for sharing it. It's so useful for newbies like me.