If you are confused between the 2 choices, you may simply choose one based on the availability of ingredients. No matter which method you follow, these oats dosas make for a great breakfast or light dinner. In the end you will be satisfied for eating a wholesome healthy meal. Serve them with a good Chutney, Tiffin Sambar or Potato Masala.

About Oats Dosa

Instant Oats Dosa is simply made by mixing together ground rolled oats, rice flour, semolina, spices and herbs with water to make a runny batter. This batter is just poured on a hot griddle which cooks up to a lacy, thin & crisp crepe. These instant oats dosas are made much the same way as the Rava dosa, Neer dosa and Wheat dosa. The other way is to just mix some ground oats with premade fermented dosa batter. For this having a ready to use traditional dosa batter is required. There are no shortcuts to this other than you go for the store bought dosa batter. While the instant oats dosas are additive and are a fun to eat, they are slightly time consuming too cook. Since the batter is runny of almost water like consistency they take a lot of time to cook, about 4 minutes per dosa. Making these for smaller families makes sense. The second method is a great way if you are trying to eat healthy and want to include oats in your daily diet. You can make these dosas daily, as cooking each dosa takes about 2 minutes only. These can be made easily even for a larger family. So based on this we make instant oats dosas only when we crave for something similar to those restaurant style crisp rava dosas. All the other times I prefer adding some ground oats to our regular dosa batter. You may also like these 30 Oats RecipesOats cheelaOats upmaOatmeal uttapamOats IdliOats egg omelette

How to Make Instant Oats Dosa (stepwise photos)

  1. Add half cup oats to a blender jar.
  2. Make a fine powder.
  3. Transfer to a mixing bowl.
  4. Add

½ teaspoon salt½ teaspoon cumin seeds ¼ cup rice flour ¼ cup fine semolina (fine rava).

  1. Add

2 tablespoon very fine chopped onions1 sprig fine chopped curry leaves1 tablespoon coriander leaves (optional)½ teaspoon grated or minced ginger 1 very fine chopped green chilli

  1. Add ¼ cup yogurt and 1 ¼ to 1½ cups water.
  2. Mix the ingredients to a free flowing batter like we make for rava dosa. You can add more or less water to adjust the consistency. It must be runny and thin. Rest this for 10 to 15 minutes.

Seasoning pan

  1. If using a non-stick pan, you can straight away make the dosas by heating it. But if you are using a cast iron pan, then heat it first. When it is hot enough add a few drops of oil to the hot pan. Smear the oil all over the hot pan with a kitchen tissue or a cut onion. Rub the oil all over and heat it until smoky hot. Turn off the stove. This process creates a non-stick patina on your pan. Carefully wipe off the excess oil with a kitchen tissue or a cloth. You can also do this the previous night.

Pouring batter

  1. Turn on the stove again and heat the pan well. Check if it is hot enough by sprinkling some water. It has to sizzle immediately, meaning it is hot enough. Don’t try this water test on your non-stick pan as it will warp your pan & spoil it. Stir the batter well every time before you use, as the solids settle at the bottom. Begin to pour the batter slowly all around the pan, starting from the sides of the pan. If you are new to this oats dosa, you may check my video on neer dosa post where I show the same method.
  2. Pour the batter making a roundel. Do not spread the batter just pour it. Fill up the gaps if any.
  3. Pour 1 teaspoon oil around the edges and cook on a medium heat.
  4. After few minutes, you can see the edges become loose from the pan and the dosa begins to turn golden on the base, lift it gently with a wooden spatula.
  5. Flip it and cook until done. Flip it back and cook again until the oats dosa turns crisp. Remove to a serving plate. To make the next oats dosa, ensure your pan is hot enough and also stir the batter well before pouring it every time. If the pan is too hot, cool down the pan a bit. If it is not hot enough, heat it well before making the next dosa. These crisp oats dosas are best served hot with chutney or potato masala. They tend to turn softer upon cooling. You may want to try this tomato chutney, peanut chutney or coconut chutney.

Pro Tips

Seasoning tawa /griddle: If you make oats dosa on a non-stick pan, then you don’t need to grease it. But if you are using a cast iron pan then it is essential to grease it and season it well. This prevents the oats dosas from sticking to the griddle. Here is the right way is to season – Heat the cast iron pan first until it becomes quite hot. While you continue to heat, add a few drops of oil and spread it well, rubbing with a kitchen tissue or a cut onion. Once it begins to smoke, turn off. This way the fats in the oil burns off creating a layer of coating/ patina over your griddle. Then wipe off the excess oil with a kitchen tissue. Your griddle is ready to use. Consistency: Consistency of batter has to be thin and free flowing similar to the rava dosa batter. Very runny batter may break the dosas or make them paper thin like papad or even limpy. Too thick batter will make the oats dosas soft, dense and thick. Fixing the batter: Once the batter is ready, test it by making 1 oats dosa first. If it comes out limpy, thin or even papad like, it means the batter is too runny. To fix it just add 1 to 2 tbsps of rice flour. If the batter is too thick, oats dosas will come out dense, soft and thick. In this case pour 1 to 2 tbsps of water.This way correct the consistency a little until you get perfect oats dosas. Veggies: Make sure the onions are very fine chopped otherwise they don’t get cooked well & you will taste the raw batter coated to the onions. You can also add 2 tbsps grated carrots or coconut to enhance the nutrition.

Temperature:

Ensure the griddle is moderately hot enough before pouring the batter. Very hot griddle will brown the oats dosas instantly due to the addition of curd. If the pan is not hot enough, then the batter will stick to the pan. So it has to be hot enough, yet not smoking hot that it instantly discolors the dosa without cooking the batter well. Also it has to be hot enough that it sizzles the moment the batter hits the griddle. So it is the right temperature together with a runny batter that gives a lacy texture to the oats dosas. Stirring batter before pouring to the pan every time is very important as the solids settle down at the bottom, so all the water comes on top. Ensure you stir the batter everytime before you pour to the griddle, this will bring the batter to consistency. Pouring the batter Instant oats dosa batter is poured to the hot pan and not spread like the TRADITIONAL DOSA. You will have to just pour the batter evenly all over the pan starting across the sides to the center and then fill the gaps if any.Do not try to pull the dosa out of the pan while it is still under cooked. When it is cooked you can see the edges leave the pan. This is the time to flip it.

Faqs

How to make oats dosa with dosa batter

Ingredients

1 cup thick fermented urad dal dosa batter 2 to 3 tbsps. Semolina/ upma rava (optional) ¼ cup of powdered oats Water as needed Salt to taste

Method

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Recipe Card

Oats Dosa Recipe First published in October 2012. Updated and republished in July 2022.