When growing up in South Africa, I enjoyed meat samosas or "samoosas". These were thin, crisp, deep fried, perfect equilateral triangle pastry that enclosed a somewhat spicy, savory meat filling. These were one of my favorite snacks served with tea!
In many South East Asian restaurants, there is always some type of samosa. Samosas come in different shapes, wrapper thickness and "regional" fillings. My meat samosa recipe is what I grew up with in South Africa, and I usually make my own since it's hard to find those kind of samosas here in the USA!
Tips to make South African Indian meat samosas.
Samosa wrapper.
I don't make my own samosa wrappers, since I usually buy ready-made samosa wrappers that can be found in the frozen pastry section in most South Asian grocery stores. However, I have found that the samosa wrappers are just like the Chinese spring roll wrappers except for the shape. You can make samosa wrappers from spring roll wrappers by cutting them into thirds.
Samosa wrappers found in frozen section at South Asian ethnic markets.
8" or 20 cm Chinese spring roll wrapper can be cut into thirds.
Filling.
Meat.
You can make the filling with a meat of your choice such as ground chicken, turkey, lamb and beef. They all taste delicious. You can use diced potatoes if you want a vegetarian alternative.
Chili.
The spiciness of the samosa filling can be customized to your heat tolerance by adding or omitting the fresh chilis. You can also alter the amount of chili powder you add to the filling. My suggestion is to start with 1/4 teaspoon of chili powder and keep tasting the filling until you get the heat level that is appropriate for you!
Onion.
This recipe uses both cooked, caramelized onions and raw onions. The fried onions add "sweetness" to the filling and the raw onion gives a little bite and crunch to the samosa. However, when the samosas are baked or fried, the raw onion and other veggies / herbs do get cooked.
Caramelized onions and garlic.
Meat filling for samosa.
Raw onion, other fresh herbs and garam masala is added after the meat filling has cooked. This really brings out the taste and aroma! I also add petit pois for added vegetable!
Flavoring herbs needed for samosas.
Frozen peas.
There is a texture difference between regular frozen peas and petit pois. Petit pois are smaller peas and tend to be less mushy! Mushy peas are probably one of the few things that I don't enjoy eating! So, I never buy or use regular frozen peas.
Add fresh cilantro and raw onions to the meat mixture before folding the samosa wrappers.
Wrapping the meat samosas.
A flour-water paste is used to seal the samosa wrappers properly. Folding the samosa is the tricky part, because it is somewhat difficult to get that rectangle into an equilateral triangle. See video for tips.
Cooking the meat samosas.
Traditionally, meat samosas are deep fried. You can shallow fry samosas in a pan of oil to reduce the amount of oil needed. Turn them over once one side of the samosa is golden brown. Fried samosas are golden brown and crisp. After frying the samosa, drain the excess oil from the samosa by turning it so that a tip of the triangle faces down onto a paper towel.
Frying samosas in a small shallow saucepan of oil.
Cooling and draining fried samosas
Fried samosas
I have brushed samosas with cooking oil and baked them for a healthier alternative. They are not as crispy as the deep fried version, but definitely healthier and less oily!
Freeze meat samosas by placing them on a baking sheet, keeping them separate. Place them in a freezer bag when frozen.
Baked samosas
Freezing meat samosas.
When I make samosas, I make a large batch, eat some fresh and freeze the rest. Place the wrapped samosas on a baking tray, making sure they do not touch each other. Freeze the samosas. Once frozen, they can then be placed in a freezer bag.
Freeze meat samosas by placing them on a baking sheet, keeping them separate. Once frozen, place them in a freezer bag.
1packagesamosa wrappersChinese spring roll wrappers cut into thirds will work.
Instructions
Making the filling
Dice onions. Half will be used during cooking, half will be used after cooking.
1½ medium diced onions, 1½ medium diced onions
In a large saucepan, preheat oil.
3 Tbsp cooking oil.
Add garlic, ginger and half of the onions.
2 Tbsp garlic ginger paste, 1½ medium diced onions
Saute onions until caramelized.
Add fresh chilis.
2 finely diced green chilis
Add chili powder, ground tumeric, salt, white pepper, black pepper, ground coriander and ground cumin to "roast" briefly.
1½ tsp salt, ½ tsp ground tumeric, ¼ tsp white pepper, ¼ tsp black pepper, ½ tsp ground coriander, ½ tsp ground cumin, ½-1 tsp chili powder
Add ground meat and stir ingredients together.
750 g ground meat
Cook until done.
Remove from heat.
Add the garam masala spice blend, rest of the raw, diced onion, fresh chopped coriander, fresh chopped mint, fresh chopped green onion and frozen peas.
1½ medium diced onions, 1 Tbsp garam masala, 50 g fresh chopped coriander, 15 g fresh chopped mint, 5 g chopped green onion, ½ cup frozen petit pois (green peas)
Add additional salt and chili powder to taste if necessary.
salt to taste
Assembling the samosa
In a small bowl, mix the flour and water together to form a "glue" paste.
3 Tbsp water, 1 Tbsp flour
See video on how to wrap the samosas.
Frying the samosas
Preheat oil in a saucepan over medium heat. NOT HOT!
Place samosas in oil and flip over when golden brown.
clevermike
Hall Of Fame
49907 posts
Posted by: clevermike (49907 posts)
Nov 18, 2023, 07:32
Good luck with your samoosas though. I love to eat sammosas - but not all those I buy. They even nowadays have once with a boerewors meat content. I found that too rich to eat though.
To my mind samoosas should have a curry taste. But "mother-in-law hellfire curry - sold in the Indian Bazzar in Durban is too strong to my mind.
The curry you can buy is not quality stuff though - or at least that is what I was told by Saffas living in the USA. Every time they came to SA they bought Mrs Balls Chutney and curry to take back to the States.
Anyway thanks for the samoosas recipe provided by you. . .
clevermike
Hall Of Fame
49907 posts
Posted by: clevermike (49907 posts)
Nov 18, 2023, 07:32
Good luck with your samoosas though. I love to eat sammosas - but not all those I buy. They even nowadays have once with a boerewors meat content. I found that too rich to eat though.
To my mind samoosas should have a curry taste. But "mother-in-law hellfire curry - sold in the Indian Bazzar in Durban - is too strong to my mind.
The curry you can buy is not quality stuff though - or at least that is what I was told by Saffas living in the USA. Every time they came to SA they bought Mrs Balls Chutney and curry to take back to the States.
Anyway thanks for the samoosas recipe provided by you. . .
DbDraad
Hall Of Fame
20220 posts
Posted by: DbDraad (20220 posts)
Nov 18, 2023, 11:03
Befok Blob...vrek oorie goed...luckily easy to come by in my Cape Town.
Beeno1
Hall Of Fame
37882 posts
Posted by: Beeno1 (37882 posts)
Nov 18, 2023, 13:45
Blobbrain your recipes are going to become out dated if the WEF have their way.
Have you got a recipe for insect filled samosas. A loon like you of course wouldn't mind as it's all in a "good" cause.
blobbok
Rugby Legend
4586 posts
https://sammywongskitchen.com/meat-samosas/
When growing up in South Africa, I enjoyed meat samosas or "samoosas". These were thin, crisp, deep fried, perfect equilateral triangle pastry that enclosed a somewhat spicy, savory meat filling. These were one of my favorite snacks served with tea!
In many South East Asian restaurants, there is always some type of samosa. Samosas come in different shapes, wrapper thickness and "regional" fillings. My meat samosa recipe is what I grew up with in South Africa, and I usually make my own since it's hard to find those kind of samosas here in the USA!
Tips to make South African Indian meat samosas.
Samosa wrapper.
I don't make my own samosa wrappers, since I usually buy ready-made samosa wrappers that can be found in the frozen pastry section in most South Asian grocery stores. However, I have found that the samosa wrappers are just like the Chinese spring roll wrappers except for the shape. You can make samosa wrappers from spring roll wrappers by cutting them into thirds.
Samosa wrappers found in frozen section at South Asian ethnic markets.
8" or 20 cm Chinese spring roll wrapper can be cut into thirds.
Filling.
Meat.
You can make the filling with a meat of your choice such as ground chicken, turkey, lamb and beef. They all taste delicious. You can use diced potatoes if you want a vegetarian alternative.
Chili.
The spiciness of the samosa filling can be customized to your heat tolerance by adding or omitting the fresh chilis. You can also alter the amount of chili powder you add to the filling. My suggestion is to start with 1/4 teaspoon of chili powder and keep tasting the filling until you get the heat level that is appropriate for you!
Onion.
This recipe uses both cooked, caramelized onions and raw onions. The fried onions add "sweetness" to the filling and the raw onion gives a little bite and crunch to the samosa. However, when the samosas are baked or fried, the raw onion and other veggies / herbs do get cooked.
Caramelized onions and garlic.
Meat filling for samosa.
Raw onion, other fresh herbs and garam masala is added after the meat filling has cooked. This really brings out the taste and aroma! I also add petit pois for added vegetable!
Flavoring herbs needed for samosas.
Frozen peas.
There is a texture difference between regular frozen peas and petit pois. Petit pois are smaller peas and tend to be less mushy! Mushy peas are probably one of the few things that I don't enjoy eating! So, I never buy or use regular frozen peas.
Add fresh cilantro and raw onions to the meat mixture before folding the samosa wrappers.
Wrapping the meat samosas.
A flour-water paste is used to seal the samosa wrappers properly. Folding the samosa is the tricky part, because it is somewhat difficult to get that rectangle into an equilateral triangle. See video for tips.
Cooking the meat samosas.
Traditionally, meat samosas are deep fried. You can shallow fry samosas in a pan of oil to reduce the amount of oil needed. Turn them over once one side of the samosa is golden brown. Fried samosas are golden brown and crisp. After frying the samosa, drain the excess oil from the samosa by turning it so that a tip of the triangle faces down onto a paper towel.
Frying samosas in a small shallow saucepan of oil.
Cooling and draining fried samosas
Fried samosas
I have brushed samosas with cooking oil and baked them for a healthier alternative. They are not as crispy as the deep fried version, but definitely healthier and less oily!
Freeze meat samosas by placing them on a baking sheet, keeping them separate. Place them in a freezer bag when frozen.
Baked samosas
Freezing meat samosas.
When I make samosas, I make a large batch, eat some fresh and freeze the rest. Place the wrapped samosas on a baking tray, making sure they do not touch each other. Freeze the samosas. Once frozen, they can then be placed in a freezer bag.
Freeze meat samosas by placing them on a baking sheet, keeping them separate. Once frozen, place them in a freezer bag.
MEAT SAMOSAS (SOUTH AFRICAN STYLE)
Ingredients
Filling
Flour paste
Baking / Frying samosas
Wrappers
Instructions
Making the filling
Assembling the samosa
Frying the samosas
clevermike
Hall Of Fame
49907 posts
Good luck with your samoosas though. I love to eat sammosas - but not all those I buy. They even nowadays have once with a boerewors meat content. I found that too rich to eat though.
To my mind samoosas should have a curry taste. But "mother-in-law hellfire curry - sold in the Indian Bazzar in Durban is too strong to my mind.
The curry you can buy is not quality stuff though - or at least that is what I was told by Saffas living in the USA. Every time they came to SA they bought Mrs Balls Chutney and curry to take back to the States.
Anyway thanks for the samoosas recipe provided by you. . .
clevermike
Hall Of Fame
49907 posts
Good luck with your samoosas though. I love to eat sammosas - but not all those I buy. They even nowadays have once with a boerewors meat content. I found that too rich to eat though.
To my mind samoosas should have a curry taste. But "mother-in-law hellfire curry - sold in the Indian Bazzar in Durban - is too strong to my mind.
The curry you can buy is not quality stuff though - or at least that is what I was told by Saffas living in the USA. Every time they came to SA they bought Mrs Balls Chutney and curry to take back to the States.
Anyway thanks for the samoosas recipe provided by you. . .
DbDraad
Hall Of Fame
20220 posts
Befok Blob...vrek oorie goed...luckily easy to come by in my Cape Town.
Beeno1
Hall Of Fame
37882 posts
Blobbrain your recipes are going to become out dated if the WEF have their way.
Have you got a recipe for insect filled samosas. A loon like you of course wouldn't mind as it's all in a "good" cause.