Ragi mudde
| Alternative names | Ragi sangati, ragi kali, baadi |
|---|---|
| Course | Lunch or dinner |
| Place of origin | India |
| Region or state | Karnataka, Andhra and Telangana, Tamil Nadu |
| Serving temperature | Hot |
| Main ingredients | Finger millet |
| Variations | Akki tari mudde (coarse rice flour), jorwar millet mudde |
Ragi mudde, ragi sangati or ragi kali, colloquially simply referred to as either mudde or hittu which means 'lump' or 'dough', is a finger millet swallow dish from South India. In Rayalaseema Region in Andhra Pradesh it is called Ragi Sangati. In Tamil Nadu, it is called ragi kali. Ragi mudde is a staple food in the districts of Mysuru, Mandya, Ramanagara, Chamarajanagar, Hassan, Tumakuru, Bengaluru Rural in Karnataka. A similar variation known as dhindo is also eaten in Northeast India, Nepal and Bhutan. In Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh in northern India, a similar variation is known as baadi and baari respectively.