Vada Pav - Spiced Potato Fritter Roles Recipe by Julius Fiedler

What started as an affordable snack for Mumbai’s textile workers in the late 1960s has since taken the city by storm. Today, vada pav is considered the king of street food. To taste it amid honking rickshaws and chattering crowds is to experience the buzz of the city;  yet when it comes to flavour, I dare to claim that the homemade version reigns supreme.

Vada pav is one of Mumbai’s cheapest street foods, sold for a few rupees apiece, which means most vendors need to use the chutneys sparingly. But it’s these chutneys that transform the stuffed soft roll (called ladi pav) into an orchestra of flavours, balancing sweet, tangy and spicy. At home, you become the conductor, creating the balance that is right for you, and revealing the fascinating complexity of Indian food with every bite

Read our exclusive interview with Julius about the best vegan ingredients and flavours around the world here.

Naturally Vegan: Delicious Recipes From Around The World That Just Happen To Be Plant-Based by Julius Fiedler is out now, £25. DK RED


Ingredients for Vada Pav - Spiced Potato Fritter Roles Serves: 4

  • 8 Pav or small soft rolls
  • 3 potatoes, about 400g in total
  • 1¼ tbsp salt
  • 20 fresh root ginger
  • 2 large garlic cloves
  • 2 green finger chillies, plus 8 to garnish (optional; see Note, opposite)
  • 30 small fresh curry leaves
  • 20g coriander
  • 1 litre vegetable oil for deep-frying
  • 1 tsp brown mustard seeds
  • ⅓ tsp asafoetida
  • ⅓ tsp ground turmeric
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (from ½ lemon)

Ingredients for Batter


How to make Vada Pav - Spiced Potato Fritter Roles

  1.  Start with the pav, if making your own.
  2. To make the vada put the potatoes in a saucepan, cover with water, season with 1 tablespoon of the salt, bring to a boil and simmer for 30-40 minutes, or until knife tender. Drain and allow to cool slightly, then peel and mash. Make the chutneys in the meantime.
  3. Peel the ginger and garlic, trim the chillies, then use a pestle and mortar to mash them to a paste. Pick the curry leaves; trim and discard the lower stems of the coriander and roughly chop the rest.
  4. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil in a small frying pan and add the mustard seeds. Once they sizzle, add the curry leaves, asafoetida, and the ginger-garlic paste. Saute until aromatic, then stir in the turmeric and turn off the heat. Mix in the mashed potatoes, lemon juice, coriander, and remaining salt, then tip everything into a bowl and, once cooled, mix well with your hands. Shape the mixture into eight patties about 2.5cm thick.
  5. Heat the remaining vegetable oil in a large, heavy-based saucepan. If making the fried chillies, fry them first (see Note at step 8). Bring the oil temperature to 170°C. If you don’t have a thermometer, place the end of a wooden spoon into the oil; if it’s hot enough, tiny bubbles will form around the tip. In a bowl, whisk together the batter ingredients with 140ml of water. Coat four of the patties, one at a time, in the batter and add immediately to the hot oil. Fry until golden (around 4 minutes), turning  them occasionally, then transfer to kitchen paper to drain. Continue with the rest.
  6. After frying the vada, slowly drizzle the rest of the batter into the hot oil. It will puff up into crispy bits (these are called chura). Once golden, use a slotted spoon to transfer them to kitchen paper to drain.
  7. Cut open each pav (bread roll), spread the hari (coriander) chutney over the lower half, the imli (tamarind) chutney over the upper, and sprinkle the lasun (dry garlic) chutney over both. Add the vada, top with the chura and chillies, then close the sandwich and serve the chutneys alongside to dip into with each bite.
  8. Note: The chillies make a fiery garnish, but they will split in the hot oil, so only use them if you’re confident with deep-frying. Heat the oil to 140°C and pierce each of the 8 chillies to prevent them from bursting. Place them on a slotted spoon and carefully dip it in and out of the hot oil, making sure to lift it up as soon as they sizzle. Continue this way until they stop sizzling in the oil and are blistered all over. Transfer to kitchen paper to drain. 
© Speciality Cooking Supplies Limited 2026



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