You ever had one of those mornings where you NEED food, but the idea of cooking feels like climbing Everest?
That’s when this fluffy, soft, weirdly satisfying dhokla comes to the rescue.
And yes, if you’re here Googling Instant Oats Rava Dhokla at an odd hour (I see you, 2:14am search history), you’re in the right place.
Why I Swear By This Dhokla (And Why You Will Too)
Okay, true story: I used to think oats were just sad diet food.
Like… “here’s your punishment porridge” vibes.
Then one day, my mom casually dropped oats dhokla into our Sunday breakfast rotation.
I was like, “Mom, WHAT is this sorcery?!”
She just smiled smugly (moms LOVE when they one-up you in the kitchen).
Ever since then, I’ve made this Instant Oats Rava Dhokla probably 300 times.
It’s:
- Fluffy but filling
- Light but flavorful
- Healthy-ish but not boring
- Steamed, not fried (so you can eat 5 pieces without guilt. Allegedly.)
What You’ll Need (aka The Minimal Effort Grocery List)
No fancy ingredients, promise. If you’ve got a semi-stocked Indian-ish pantry, you’re golden.
- 1 cup oats (rolled or quick oats—either works. I usually grab Quaker)
- 1/2 cup rava/sooji/semolina (regular fine sooji)
- 1 cup plain yogurt (not Greek; plain Dahi is best)
- 1 tsp ginger paste
- 1-2 green chilies, finely chopped
- Salt, to taste
- 1 tsp Eno fruit salt (yes, this is the magic ingredient)
For Tadka (optional but highly recommended):
- 2 tsp oil
- 1 tsp mustard seeds
- A pinch of hing
- Curry leaves
- Green chilies, slit
- Sesame seeds (trust me, they make it pop)
How to Make Instant Oats Rava Dhokla (Even If You’re Half Awake)
1️⃣ Prep the batter
- Blitz oats in a dry mixer till you get oat flour. Not too fine, a bit grainy is fine.
- In a big ol’ bowl, mix oat flour, rava, yogurt, ginger paste, chopped chilies, and salt.
- Add about 1/2 cup water gradually — you want a thick batter, like idli batter. Not runny.
- Let it sit for 10 mins.
(You can totally sip coffee and scroll IG during this part.)
2️⃣ Steam it
- After 10 mins, the batter will be thicker. If it’s too thick, add a splash of water.
- Grease a dhokla plate or cake tin.
- Now right before steaming, add ENO and mix gently.
- Pour the batter into the tin.
- Steam in a steamer or big pot for 15-18 mins.
To test doneness: poke with a knife — if it comes out clean, you’re good.
3️⃣ Tadka time
While the dhokla is cooling slightly.

Variations I’ve Tried (Some Genius, Some Questionable)
- With grated carrots in the batter — awesome
- With spinach puree — green dhokla FTW
- With grated zucchini — makes it super moist (but watch water content)
- With cheese on top — controversial but delicious
One time I tried adding cocoa powder thinking I’d invent chocolate oats dhokla.
Do not recommend. 😂
How to Serve Instant Oats Rava Dhokla
- Classic: With green chutney + sweet chutney
- Brunch: With masala chai
- Party: Cut into cute little squares with toothpicks
- Midnight snack: Cold, straight from the fridge. It slaps.
Real Talk: Instant Oats Rava Dhokla Tips
Problem: Dhokla is dense, not fluffy.
Fix: Make sure your ENO is fresh! And don’t overmix after adding it.
Problem: Dhokla tastes too plain.
Fix: Don’t skimp on ginger, chilies, tadka. And salt — bland dhokla is sad dhokla.
Recommended Links:
- Hebbar’s Kitchen Oats Dhokla Variation — for when you wanna mix it up
- Serious Eats Guide to Indian Breakfasts — deep dive into delicious chaos


















