These are also popular on the street carts, shops, cafes and restaurants. Most households also make these often. We make pakoras with so many different ingredients like just with onions, just with lentils, with paneer, with bread etc. So these palak pakoda are one of the kind and they turn out crisp, addictive and delicious. These spinach pakoras are a great way to use up any excess spinach that’s in your fridge. We mostly eat healthy at home and don’t prefer to deep fry or even over cook our greens. But these palak pakodas happen sometimes when we have a lot of spinach and it’s not too fresh to make anything else.

About this recipe

This spinach pakora recipe uses gram flour, carom seeds, onions, few herbs and some more spices. Palak is a super light leafy green so I prefer to use onions as they add volume to the pakora batter. Also fried onions impart a great flavor, taste and texture to the fritters. For a nutty taste, I also add some split cashews. These are optional and can be skipped. I make these the same way I make these crispy Onion pakoda If you don’t eat onions then you may simply replace them with sliced cabbage or even with mix vegetables. I have similar recipes here – cabbage pakora and Vegetable pakora but these 2 recipes have no palak in them. To make onion palak pakoda, you can simply use any of those recipes and just add as much palak as you want.

2 ways to make

Basically there are 2 ways to make pakoda with leafy greens. I have shown the first method here where all the ingredients are mixed. Portions of this is fried in hot oil until crunchy. We follow the second method when we have firm, mature, crisp and very fresh leaves. With this method we make pakoda/ bajji with spinach, betel leaves or vaamu aaku /carom leaves. The whole leaf is dipped in the bajji batter and fried in hot oil similar to these Bread pakora. These kind of fritters are very popular in the Telugu speaking households. In this post I have shown the first method. These are best if deep fried and don’t turn out good in the air fryer or oven. These palak pakoras like any other fritters are best served immediately and hot. They will lose their crispness as they cool down. However they can be reheated by refrying or air frying or baking in oven. To crisp them in the oven, bake for 5 to 6 mins at 220 C in a preheated oven. In the air fryer it just takes 2 mins. If you overdo they will burn or taste bitter. More palak recipes herePalak parathaPalak paneerDal palakPalak rice

How to make palak pakoda

  1. Pluck and rinse spinach leaves (not stalks) in a large pot of water. Drain the water and repeat rinsing a few times. Drain them to a colander. Shake off the colander in your kitchen sink to drain excess water completely. Set this aside & slice the onion. I used about 2 ½ cups of chopped spinach. You can use more or less as much as you have.
  2. Meanwhile slice 1 large onion (1 cup slices). Slice them evenly and not too thin or too thick. If the slices are too thin pakoras will burn quickly before the besan fries. If they are too thick pakoras won’t turn crispy. You will have soft onions in your palak pakora. Add chopped spinach and sliced onions to a mixing bowl. Sprinkle salt over the onions.
  3. Add 2 to 3 chopped green chilies, handful of mint leaves and coriander leaves. Skip if you don’t have mint leaves. But they make your palak pakoda super flavorful.
  4. The add ½ teaspoon ginger garlic paste or 1 teaspoon fine chopped ginger, ½ teaspoon carom seeds (ajwain), ½ teaspoon red chilli powder and ¼ teaspoon garam masala or ½ teaspoon coriander powder.
  5. Mix all of these well gently without crushing the palak. Set this aside for 10 mins. Meanwhile you can make your chutney or tea to with these fritters.
  6. After 10 mins, begin to heat the oil on a medium heat & then make the pakora mixture.
  7. To the bowl, sprinkle ½ cup gram flour & 2 tablespoons rice flour.
  8. Mix to make a slightly tight but moist dough. If the mixture is too dry, sprinkle water and mix. Do not pour water, just sprinkle as we don’t want a lot of moisture in the mixture. If you feel there is not enough flour in your mixture add more in the same proportions. The amount of water to use depends on how much moisture the onions and spinach will release.
  9. Taste test at this stage and add more salt if needed. Also add 6 to 10 cashew nuts. Split them and use. You can also break them to small pieces.

Frying spinach pakora

  1. Before frying ensure the oil is hot enough. Check by dropping a small portion of the mixture in the oil. It has to sizzle and rise without browning a lot. If it does it means the temperature is right. It won’t rise but will sink if the oil is not hot enough.
  2. Ensure the temperature is right & the flame is medium. Then take small portions of this mixture and drop gently to the oil.
  3. Do not disturb them immediately. Wait for a minute or so then stir and fry them until crisp. Remove the palak pakoda to a steel colander. Serve palak pakoda hot or warm with tea.

Pro tips

Taste gram flour before using: Ensure you use good quality gram flour/besan. Store bought flour goes rancid too quickly & turns bitter within a few months even when it is within the shelf life. So always taste test it before using in the recipe. Rice flour or semolina or corn starch: Basically pakoras are always made with gram flour/ besan. A small amount of rice flour is used to make them extra crisp. If you do not have rice flour you may use fine semolina or corn starch for that great texture. Gram flour is the basic flour used to make spinach pakoras. However you can also use wheat flour but the taste will be different and will have a nutty flavour. Onions have to be sliced evenly so they fry evenly without burning or under cooking. You can substitute onions with cabbage. Consistency of the spinach pakora mixture has to be thick like dough and not like batter. This is what gives them the crisp texture. If you want soft palak pakoda instead of crisp ones, sprinkle more water while you mix the ingredients and make make a slightly loose batter. Also note that loose batter makes oily pakoras. Fry the pakoras only when the oil is hot enough. If you fry in oil that is not hot enough they will soak up oil. If you fry them in extremely hot oil they will brown quickly on the outside without cooking inside. Fry spinach pakoras on a medium flame. Frying them on low flame will make them hard Related Recipes

Recipe card

Palak pakora recipe first published in September 2016. Updated & republished in January 2021.