If you’ve ever opened your fridge, seen mullangi sitting there, and wondered, “What now?”, this chutney is the answer.
This Andhra-style mullangi chutney is spicy, earthy, and deeply satisfying. It doesn’t try to hide the radish. Instead, it treats it gently. A quick sauté removes that strong raw smell, and once it blends with coconut, roasted spices, and a good tempering, the chutney turns beautifully balanced and aromatic.
This is the kind of chutney that makes plain idli feel special and crispy dosa taste complete. Simple ingredients, no deep frying, and ready before your idlis even cool down.
Why Mullangi Works So Well in Chutney
Radish has a reputation. Sharp smell, strong taste, not everyone’s favourite. But when handled correctly, it becomes something else entirely.
Here’s what makes this chutney work:
High-flame sautéing softens radish quickly and removes rawness
Coconut adds body and mild sweetness
Coriander and cumin give warmth and depth
Tamarind balances the pungency
Tempering brings everything together with aroma
The result is a chutney that tastes bold but not harsh.
A Very Andhra Way of Cooking Radish
In many Andhra homes, radish isn’t overcooked or drowned in oil. It’s treated simply, cooked just enough, and paired with strong but familiar spices.
This chutney follows that same thinking:
No deep frying
No complicated steps
Strong flavour, but still homely
It’s the kind of chutney that feels familiar even the first time you make it.
Ingredient Notes
Radish: Fresh, firm radish works best. Older radish tends to be bitter.
Coconut: Fresh coconut gives the best taste, but frozen works too.
Red chillies: Dried chillies add heat without overpowering the radish.
Coriander & cumin seeds: Always dry roast for aroma. This step changes everything.
Tamarind: Just a little. Too much will dominate the chutney.
Oil: Use regular cooking oil. Tempering oil carries the aroma into the chutney.
How This Mullangi Chutney Comes Together
First, the radish goes into hot oil. High flame is important here. You’re not trying to brown it, just soften it and drive away that raw smell. Once it starts looking slightly tender, onions go in and cook until translucent.
Coconut, curry leaves, tamarind, salt, and a pinch of turmeric are added next. This forms the base. At this stage, the kitchen already smells comforting. Turn off the heat and let this mixture cool completely.
Separately, coriander seeds, cumin seeds, and dried red chillies are dry roasted. Not until dark- just until fragrant. These are ground into a fine powder.
Now comes the blending. The cooled radish mixture and spice powder are ground together into a slightly coarse chutney. Not too smooth. Texture matters here.
Finally, hot oil is heated for tempering. Mustard seeds crackle, cumin follows, broken red chillies, hing, and curry leaves go in. This sizzling tempering is poured directly over the chutney and mixed in.
That’s it. Simple, traditional, and full of flavour.
Pro Tip💡 : This chutney is meant to be slightly spicy. Reduce chillies only if you prefer mild chutneys.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRSBv_MC95M
Texture Matters More Than You Think
This chutney tastes best when:
Slightly coarse
Not watery
Not paste-like smooth
That rough texture lets you taste radish, coconut, and spices separately while still feeling balanced.
Mullangi Chutney by Hema Subramanian is a spicy South Indian chutney made with radish, coconut, roasted spices, and tamarind. A flavorful side dish for idli, dosa, or hot rice.
Ingredients
To make radish chutney
4tsp oil
2radish(finely chopped)
1onion(chopped)
1/2cup coconut (grated)
curry leaves (as needed)
tamarind pieces (small pieces)
1tsp salt
turmeric powder (a pinch)
2tbsp coriander seeds
2tsp cumin seeds
8red chilli (dried)
For tempering
oil (as needed)
mustard seeds (as needed)
cumin seeds (as needed)
red chillies (broken)
hing (a pinch)
curry leaves (as needed)
Instructions
Prep Work
1
Chop radish
Wash, peel, and finely chop radish
2
Prep onionPeel and chop onion evenly
3
Grate coconutGrate fresh coconut and keep aside
4
Break chilliesBreak dried red chillies into pieces
5
Soak tamarindKeep tamarind pieces ready
Method
6
Sauté radish
Heat oil and sauté radish on high flame until slightly soft
7
add onionAdd onion and cook until translucent
8
Mix coconutAdd coconut, curry leaves, tamarind, salt, and turmeric
9
Cool mixtureRemove from heat and allow to cool
10
Roast spicesDry roast coriander, cumin, and red chillies until fragrant
11
Grind spicesGrind roasted spices into a fine powder
12
Grind chutneyGrind radish mixture with spice powder to coarse chutney
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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!