Rasam Recipe (South Indian Hotel Style) - Swasthi's Recipes (2024)

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Rasam Recipe – Simple, easy & quick recipe to make delicious Hotel style Rasam at home. Also known as Saaru in Kannada and Chaaru in Telugu, Rasam is a most basic and essential dish served in a South Indian meal. It is commonly eaten with plain rice and a vegetable side dish. But it can also be served as a soup. This South Indian rasam recipe needs no rasam powder, no dal & can be made in a jiffy with pantry staples. Make this Hotel style Rasam at home with my easy recipe. Bonus! I also share a fast garlic rasam in the same post.

Rasam Recipe (South Indian Hotel Style) - Swasthi's Recipes (1)

About Rasam

So What is Rasam? Rasam is a South Indian traditional soup made with tamarind, tomatoes, warming spices and aromatic herbs. The word Rasam means “juice” in Tamil and Telugu. It may mean any juice.

Here in this context, Rasam is a soup like dish where juices of tangy Tamarind or tomatoes are simmered with tempered whole spices like mustard seeds, cumin seeds, fenugreek & black pepper. These spices apart from adding flavor also aid in digestion.

This humble and comforting soup is said to possess a lot of medicinal values as it is simmered with healing spices. Since it aids digestion it is great to have even during cold & stomach upsets.

Rasam is a staple in many traditional South Indian homes. I make this when I have no pre-made rasam powder & in a hurry to make dinner.

Contents hide

1 About Rasam

2 How To Make Rasam (stepwise photos)

3 Faqs

4 Basic Rasam vs Tomato Rasam

5 How to make Garlic Rasam?

6 Recipe Card

My Rasam Recipe

The taste of this rasam comes very close to the one served with a South Indian meal in any good restaurant. It tastes slightly tangy, mildly sweet & flavorful from cumin, pepper powder and garlic.

This is so simple that even beginners can make it. This rasam is also suitable to serve babies & toddlers. For babies skip the red chilli and black pepper. Pass the rasam through a strainer before mixing it with mashed rice. For toddlers skip red chili and reduce black pepper.

You can also refrigerate and consume within 2 days. Bring it to a rolling boil before serving.

Here are some vegetable stir fry dishes to serve with rice & rasam
Potato stir fry
Sweet potato stir fry
Brinjal stir fry
Bhindi stir fry
Carrot stir curry / fry

How To Make Rasam (stepwise photos)

1. To a pan, add ¼ teaspoon methi seeds & one dried red chilli. On a low flame, dry roast them until methi turns slightly aromatic. Then add 1½ teaspoon cumin seeds (jeera) and ¼ to ½ tsp pepper corn.

Roast all of them until methi seeds turn slightly dark in color and aromatic. If making for baby or toddler skip red chili and use less pepper. Cool them and add to a grinder jar.

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2. You can also coarsely crush it in a mortar pestle. Set aside. You can also skip this roasting part & just powder the spices directly but the aroma is great when roasted.

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3. Add 1½ tablespoon oil to a hot pot. When the oil turns hot, add half broken red chili, ½ teaspoon cumin seeds and ½ teaspoon mustard seeds.

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4. Soon they begin to splutter, then add 3 to 4 crushed garlic, 1 sprig curry leaves and then a pinch of hing. Saute well until the leaves turn crisp.

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5. Add 1 to 1½ cups chopped or mashed tomatoes or pureed (about 2 to 3 medium tomatoes). Sprinkle ½ teaspoon salt and 1/8 teaspoon turmeric.

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6. Cover and cook or saute until the tomatoes turn mushy.

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7. Add spice powder or rasam powder from step 1.

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8. Mix and saute for 2 to 3 minutes. The spice powder must smell good.

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9. Pour 2½ to 3 cups water. Add 1 teaspoon tamarind. Less is fine but don’t a lot.

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10. Add jaggery to taste. I use about 1 to 2 tablespoons to balance the flavors. So adjust to your taste.

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11. Bring it to a boil & let simmer for 5 minutes. Rasam boiled on a low flame tastes good. Stir well and take little rasam in a tablespoon. Cool it and taste test. Add more salt, tamarind and jaggery if needed.

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12. Add ¼ cup chopped coriander leaves with stalks. Cover and turn off the stove.

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Serve Rasam with steamed rice and some papad, stir fry veggies.

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You may like to check these
Tomato rasam
Tamarind rasam – without tomato
Lemon rasam

Rasam powder recipe.

Faqs

Is rasam good for health?

Yes rasam is considered to be one of the healthiest South Indian dishes. Spices like cumin, fenugreek & pepper are said to improve digestion and help in building immunity by detoxifying the body naturally.

What does rasam taste like?

It tastes slightly sour, spicy and hot with bursting flavors of spices. A well-made rasam has the right balance or sour, sweet and hot tastes.

Can I use store bought rasam powder?

Yes use any store bought rasam powder. But the specialty of my rasam recipe is in the spice powder I mentioned in the recipe below. With the spice powder mentioned here it is super flavorful and delicious.

Is there any substitute for spices?

Whole spices are the key to a good rasam. So there are no substitutes.

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Basic Rasam vs Tomato Rasam

For a basic recipe, the spice powder is made without lentils and coriander seeds. Roasted cumin, pepper and fenugreek seeds are crushed or powdered and used. But the spice powder used to make tomato rasam has a small amount of lentils & coriander seeds added to it as a thicker.

So both the versions taste completely different & even the consistency is different. Basic rasam is on the thinner side.

How to make Garlic Rasam?

Pour ½ cup water to a pot and heat it. Add a lemon sized ball of tamarind and let it soften. Then add another 1½ cups water and extract the juice. Discard the pulp.

To the same bowl, add the spice powder we made in the recipe along with 8 well crushed medium garlic cloves. Add jaggery and salt to taste. Bring this to a boil and then reduce the flame to low. Simmer it for 5 minutes. Add coriander leaves and turn off.

Make a tempering in 1 tsp hot ghee by adding ½ teaspoon mustard seeds, 4 crushed garlic cloves, 1 red chilli & 1 sprig curry leaves. When the garlic cloves turn slightly golden, add 1/8 tsp hing. Pour this to the garlic rasam.

Tomato Rasam Reci...

Tamarind Rasam wi...

Rasam Powder | Ra...

Sambar Recipe, Ho...

Medu Vada Recipe ...

Recipe Card

Rasam Recipe (South Indian Hotel Style) - Swasthi's Recipes (22)

Rasam Recipe | South Indian Hotel Style

Rasam is a light South Indian traditional soup made with basic spices, ripe tomatoes, tamarind and herbs. It is very soothing to the tummy and helps in digestion. This Hotel style Rasam is served with rice but can also be enjoyed as a soup.

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For best results follow the step-by-step photos above the recipe card

Prep Time5 minutes minutes

Cook Time15 minutes minutes

Total Time20 minutes minutes

Servings3 to 4

AuthorSwasthi

Ingredients (US cup = 240ml )

  • 2 to 3 medium tomatoes or (1 to 1½ cups) chopped or pureed
  • teaspoon turmeric
  • ½ to ¾ teaspoon salt
  • 2½ to 3 cups water
  • 1 teaspoon Tamarind (optional, use as needed) or lemon juice
  • 1 to 2 tablespoon jaggery or sugar (or as needed)
  • ¼ cup coriander leaves with stems chopped finely

for tempering or seasoning rasam

  • 1 ½ tablespoon oil or ghee
  • ½ teaspoon mustard seeds
  • ½ teaspoon cumin seeds (jeera)
  • 1 dried red chili (broken) (less spicy kind)
  • 1 sprig curry leaves
  • 1 pinch hing (asafoetida)
  • 3 to 4 cloves garlic crushed (optional)

To roast & powder ( or use 1 tsp cumin powder & ½ tsp pepper powder)

  • ¼ teaspoon fenugreek seeds (methi seeds)
  • ¼ to ½ teaspoon pepper corn (black pepper)
  • teaspoon cumin seeds (jeera)
  • 1 small dried red chili optional (use less spicy kind)

Instructions

  • Add ¼ teaspoon methi seeds and 1 dried red chilli to a small pan and begin to dry roast them on a low to medium heat.

  • When the seeds turn light golden, then add 1½ teaspoon cumin seeds & ¼ to ½ teaspoon pepper corn. Roast them briefly until the seeds begin to smell good. Turn off the heat.

  • Cool & add this to a grinder or spice jar or mortar pestle. Grind them to a fine powder.

Tempering

  • Heat oil or ghee in a pot.Add mustard seeds, cumin seeds & red chili.

  • When they begin to splutter, add 3 to 4 crushed garlic, 1 sprig curry leaves and a pinch of hing.

  • Saute well for a minute till the leaves turn crisp.

How To Make Rasam

  • Add tomatoes, salt and turmeric. Saute until the tomatoes breakdown, become mushy & soft.

  • Then add the ground spice powder. Saute for 2 to 3 minutes. The spice powder must begin to smell good.

  • Next pour water. Add tamarind and jaggery. Bring this to a boil.

  • Then simmer for 5 minutes after it comes to a boil. Soon It thickens slightly.

  • Stir well and take little rasam in a tablespoon. Cool this and taste test. Add more salt, jaggery or tamarind to adjust the taste. I make it sweet, sour & hot.

  • Add chopped coriander leaves. Simmer for a minute. Cover and turn off the stove.

  • Serve rasam hot with rice or as a soup.

Notes

  1. Feel free to use more jaggery & tamarind as needed. I usually make rasam that tastes sour, sweet & spicy.
  2. If you have rasam powder ready then skip roasting and powdering the ingredients mentioned under “To roast and powder. Use rasam powder as desired.
  3. You can also make this rasam recipe just with 1 tsp cumin powder and half tsp pepper powder.

Alternative quantities provided in the recipe card are for 1x only, original recipe.

For best results follow my detailed step-by-step photo instructions and tips above the recipe card.

Video

NUTRITION INFO (estimation only)

Nutrition Facts

Rasam Recipe | South Indian Hotel Style

Amount Per Serving

Calories 151Calories from Fat 36

% Daily Value*

Fat 4g6%

Sodium 333mg14%

Potassium 816mg23%

Carbohydrates 26g9%

Fiber 5g21%

Sugar 15g17%

Protein 5g10%

Vitamin A 725IU15%

Vitamin C 66mg80%

Calcium 105mg11%

Iron 4.9mg27%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Tried this recipe?Mention @SwasthisRecipes or tag #swasthisrecipes!

© Swasthi’s Recipes

Rasam recipe first published in December 2012. Updated & Republished in November 2022.

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About Swasthi

I’m Swasthi Shreekanth, the recipe developer, food photographer & food writer behind Swasthi’s Recipes. My aim is to help you cook great Indian food with my time-tested recipes. After 2 decades of experience in practical Indian cooking I started this blog to help people cook better & more often at home. Whether you are a novice or an experienced cook I am sure Swasthi’s Recipes will assist you to enhance your cooking skills. More about me

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