Bread Pakoda

Servings: 4 Total Time: 45 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Bread Pakoda pinit

Ever notice how some snacks don’t just taste good… they feel nostalgic?

Bread pakoda is one of those.
Crispy on the outside, soft and spicy inside, and best eaten hot with chai, this snack is pure comfort.

If you’ve ever tried recreating street-style bread pakoda at home but couldn’t get that same crispy coating or balanced filling, this version fixes that.

What Bread Pakoda Tastes Like

This snack is all about contrast.

You get:

  • crisp gram-flour coating
  • soft bread layer
  • warm spiced potato filling
  • slight tang from chaat masala
  • mild heat from chillies

It’s filling, satisfying, and perfect for evenings when you want something fried but homemade.

Where This Snack Comes From

Bread pakoda is a famous street snack across India and especially popular in:

  • North Indian roadside stalls
  • railway station snack counters
  • tea shops and college canteens
  • monsoon snack menus

Different regions tweak it slightly:

  • Delhi style → thick filling, very spicy
  • Punjab style → sometimes includes paneer
  • Street vendors → often double fry for extra crunch

Why This Recipe Works

Bread pakoda solves multiple kitchen needs at once.

It’s:

  • budget friendly
  • filling for guests
  • perfect for tea time
  • easy to scale for parties
  • kid-friendly snack
  • great use for extra bread

It’s also one of the fastest ways to turn basic pantry items into something special.

Ingredient Breakdown

Bread: The base of the snack. Slightly firm bread works best because it holds the filling and batter better.
Potatoes: They create the soft, comforting inside layer. They absorb spices beautifully and give structure.
Onion, Green Chilli, Ginger: These build the flavor base. Onion gives sweetness, chilli gives heat, ginger gives warmth.
Spice Powders: Turmeric adds color, chilli powder adds heat, coriander and cumin bring depth, garam masala gives that street-food aroma, and chaat masala adds tangy punch.
Gram Flour: This forms the crisp outer shell. It fries up nutty, golden, and crunchy.
Ajwain: Tiny ingredient, huge impact. Helps digestion and adds a subtle savoury note that makes the pakoda taste authentic.

How the Dish Comes Together

First, you start by heating a little oil in a pan and sautéing the onions, green chillies, and ginger until they soften and smell aromatic. This base is what gives your filling that street-style depth.

Then come the spice powders. Let them cook briefly in the oil so they lose their raw taste. Once the mashed potatoes go in, everything comes together into a soft, flavourful filling. Finish with coriander leaves, they lift the entire mixture.

Now you assemble your sandwiches. Spread the masala over a bread slice, cover with another slice, and cut into triangles. This shape fries evenly and feels more like the classic roadside version.

Next comes the batter. Mix gram flour with spices, ajwain, and enough water to make a thick, coating batter.

Dip each sandwich fully so every corner is covered. Slide it gently into medium-hot oil. Let it fry undisturbed for a bit before flipping. This helps the coating seal and prevents tearing.

As they fry, the batter puffs slightly and turns deep golden while the bread softens inside. That contrast is what makes bread pakoda irresistible.

Pro Tip💡 : Whisk the batter for a minute to aerate it. This tiny step gives a lighter, crispier coating.

Vegan Swap 🌿: This recipe is already vegan. Just ensure your bread is dairy-free if needed.

What Problems This Recipe Solves

  • Fuick evening snack solution
  • Filling tea-time dish
  • Perfect rainy-day comfort food
  • Budget-friendly party snack
  • Good use of leftover bread
  • Easy vegetarian starter

It’s also great when you need something:

  • Fast
  • Satisfying
  • Kid-approved
  • Crowd friendly

What Goes Along With Bread Pakoda

Best chutneys

Best drinks

  • Masala chai
  • Ginger tea
  • Filter coffee

How to Serve

Serve immediately while hot.

For street-style plating:

  • Sprinkle chaat masala
  • Add sliced onions
  • serve with green chutney
  • Drizzle tamarind chutney on top

This makes it feel just like a roadside snack plate.

Packing Tips

If packing for travel or lunch:

  • Cool slightly before packing
  • Line box with tissue
  • Keep chutney separate
  • Don’t seal airtight while hot

This keeps them from turning soggy.

Party or Bulk Preparation Tips

Cooking for guests?

  • Make filling earlier in the day
  • Assemble sandwiches just before frying
  • Mix batter fresh
  • Half fry once, refry before serving

This method keeps pakoda crispy for parties.

How to Store Bread Pakoda

  • Refrigerate in airtight container up to 2 days
  • Store without chutney
  • cool completely before storing

How to Reheat Bread Pakoda

Best methods:

  • Air fryer at 180°C for 6–7 minutes
  • Oven at 200°C for 8–10 minutes
  • Tawa reheating for small batches

Substitutions You Can Try

  • Potatoes → paneer filling
  • bread → brown bread or sandwich bread
  • Bjwain → cumin seeds
  • Besan → mix with rice flour for extra crunch

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Batter too thin → coating slips off
  • Oil too hot → outside burns, inside stays soft
  • Oil too cold → pakoda absorbs oil
  • Too much filling → sandwich breaks while frying
  • Skipping ajwain → flavour feels incomplete

Other Related Recipes You Might Like

  • Onion Pakoda – classic rainy‑day fritter
  • Aloo Bonda – soft potato filling with crisp coating
  • Vegetable Bajji – simple gram‑flour fritters
  • Chickpea Pancake – quick savoury snack option

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 20 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 45 mins
Servings: 4 Calories: 260
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year, Winter

Description

Bread Pakoda by Hema Subramanian is a crispy deep‑fried snack made with bread stuffed with spiced potato filling, dipped in gram flour batter, and fried until golden. Perfect tea‑time treat.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Main

To make potato masala

To make batter

Instructions

Prep Work

  1. Chop vegetables

    Finely chop onions, green chillies, ginger and coriander leaves.

  2. Prepare potatoes

    Boil potatoes, peel and mash them until smooth.
  3. Slice bread

    Keep bread slices ready for assembling sandwiches.
  4. Mix dry batter base

    In a bowl combine gram flour with spices and ajwain.

Method

  1. Saute base

    Heat oil in a pan and saute chopped onions with green chillies and ginger.

  2. Add spice powders

    Add turmeric, chilli powder, cumin powder, coriander powder, garam masala and salt.
  3. Cook masala

    Mix well and cook until onions turn golden.
  4. Add potatoes

    Add boiled mashed potatoes and mix thoroughly with masala.
  5. Finish filling

    Add fresh coriander leaves and mix well.
  6. Assemble sandwiches

    Spread masala on a bread slice, cover with another slice and cut into triangles.
  7. Make batter

    Mix gram flour with spices and ajwain, then add water gradually to form thick batter.
  8. Coat bread

    Dip the bread sandwiches in batter so they are fully coated.
  9. Fry pakoda

    Heat oil and fry coated sandwiches until golden and crisp.
  10. Drain and serve

    Remove fried pakoda and drain excess oil.

Equipment

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Nutrition Facts

Servings 4


Amount Per Serving
Calories 260kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 12g19%
Saturated Fat 2g10%
Sodium 280mg12%
Potassium 320mg10%
Total Carbohydrate 32g11%
Dietary Fiber 4g16%
Sugars 3g
Protein 7g15%

Calcium 40 mg
Iron 1.8 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Keywords: bread pakoda, pakoda, pakoda recipe, bread recipes, snacks recipes, snacks recipe,
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pinit

Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Why mash potatoes smoothly?

Smooth potatoes spread evenly and hold the sandwich together better.

Can I skip onions?

Yes, but onions add sweetness and texture to the filling.

Why should batter be thick?

Thick batter coats the bread well and gives a crisp outer layer.

My batter is sliding off bread, why?

It’s too thin. Add a little gram flour to thicken it.

How hot should oil be?

Medium hot. Too hot burns outside, too low makes pakoda oily.

Why cut bread into triangles?

It fries evenly and looks more like street-style pakoda.

Can I make filling earlier?

Yes, it can be made a few hours in advance.

Why drain on tissue paper?

It removes excess oil and keeps pakoda crisp.

Can I air fry instead?

You can, but texture will be different from classic version.

How to keep pakoda crispy longer?

Serve immediately and avoid covering them tightly while hot.

Hema Subramanian
Hema Subramanian Food and Lifestyle Blogger

I love to cook! And through Home Cooking Show, I hope to make cooking fun, easy, and approachable for everyone.

My way of sharing recipes is all about keeping it simple and delicious—no complicated steps, no fancy ingredients, just real home-cooked food that anyone can make. Cooking should be a joy, not a chore! Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned cook, you’ll find something here to inspire you. If you love good food made with love, then you’re in the right place!

- Hema Subramanian

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