Last night I realized I have not posted any sweet/dessert recipes for this week. Going by my sweet tooth and how I have been updating my blog, I wanted to post a dessert to welcome the weekend πŸ™‚ As I have said many a times on this blog, I love sweets. That said, I don’t particularly like butter-milk or yogurt. So Amma used to make me a cup of fresh curd every day growing up. I used to beat it with a teaspoon of sugar and enjoy it as a dessert πŸ˜€ I still do it sometimes these days as well, but then keeping in mind the additional calories, fitness regime etc etc (basically the boring grown up stuff), I just gulp down plain curd – just for the nutritional value. Last weekend, when I was craving for some dessert I looked into the refrigerator to find some inspiration. Find I did, a big bowl of curd. My initial thought was to prepare frozen fruit yogurt – as I had some mangoes and oranges. Then, the wild me decided to use pomegranate and I ended up making some shrikhand. Shrikhand is a rich creamy dessert made with hung curd. It has to be one of the easiest desserts one can make. I loved the pale pink colored shrikhand, thanks to the pomegranate juice. I also added some fresh pomegranate into the shrikhand and used some for garnish. One of the good things is, with pomegranate being added, the amount of sugar used for sweetness is too less – making this guilt-free.

To prepare Pomegranate Shrikhand Serves – 2 || Time to prepare – 1 hour + 5 mins || Difficulty level – Easy What I used –

Thick Curd/Yogurt, 2 cups Pomegranate Kernels, Β½ cup + 1 tbsp Sugar, 2 tsp

How I made –

Note –

Hanging of the curd and straining as much water as possible is the single crucial step of preparing Shrikhand. Adjust the quantity of sugar as per preferences. As I added pomegranate juice, I did not add much sugar. Serve the Shrikhand chilled for better taste results. The additional shrikhand can be frozen too and stays good for days. Adding pomegranate kernels to the Shrikhand is optional. If you wish a creamier version, skip that step. I liked the bite those kernels gave.