Roller Kulfi : the strangest dessert machine you ever saw!
  • 10 years ago
A tasty innovation - the yummy Roller Kulfi roller - Indian ice cream, if you will! Not sure about the hygiene aspect, but we're pretty certain the kulfi is superb! Put in manual labour to get your ice cream...?

We are told this kulfi tradition comes from Indore, Madhya Pradesh.

This is one tasty innovation seen at 3rd National Street Food Festival organised by NASVI at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium Complex from 20th - 22nd December, 2013.
The kulfi is scraped off a giant roller.

The roller consists of a cylinder of salted ice. The cylinder should be continuously rotated so that when it heats up, the ice melts. Over the melting ice, a person pours mixtures of the ingredients in liquid form which gets solidified because of the cold of the ice. The kulfis is then scaped off the roller.

The taste of the Roller Kulfi is nothing extraordinary, its the preparation procedure that takes place in front of you, makes it a feast for your eyes. and you get to taste several flavours in each bite.

National Street Food Festival was held at Jawahar Lal Nehru Stadium Complex from 20th to 22nd December, 2013. This festival is the third edition of the festival organised by National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI). Around 140 vendors from 20 states of India participated in the festival.

Thousands of foodies got to taste and experience the exotic flavours and aroma of around 300 recipes: dal batti churma, pyaaz and mewa ki kachouri, different kinds of pakore and sweet cooling kulfis, pao bhaji from Rajasthan; Haryana's tikkis; special chhole bhature of Chandigarh, sarson ka saag, makki ki roti butter pulao and paneer green chilli pakora from Punjab; palak chicken, pao, zarda biryani from Madhya Pradesh; litti chokha, mutton litti, bengan chokha, rabri jalebi from Bihar; chicken boti keba, rumali roti, multanjan biryani, lahsun ki kheer and sweet and salty desserts of Uttar Pradesh; Odisha, Karnataka's famous puddu , tamarind rice, kathi kebab, thukpas and momos from Sikkim; rice pithas from Assam and many more. Delhi bags the largest number of stalls boasting of dishes from spring rolls, varieties of chaaps, chhole bhature, bhelpuri, tawa rotis, seekh kebabs, paranthas to bhelpuri, jalebis, pakore and even chai.

The main aim of organising this food festival is
1) promotion of street food
2) the transformation of street food into a professional enterprise that would help people involved to compete and avail available opportunities
3) providing awareness about cleanliness, health and hygiene particularly to street food vendors.

Union Ministers Tariq Anwar and Girija Vyas, celebrity chef Kunal Kapoor and foodies like Vir Shangvi graced the inaugural ceremony of the festival.

Apart from the delicacies, exciting cooking competitions and other entertainment programmes formed a part of the festival.

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