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Indian Sweets have many many options of Burfis. Burfis can be fudge like or candy like bars that can be made from grains, bean flours, coconut, nuts, milk solids and more. Burfis in general depend on dairy for ghee (clarified butter) or milk (milk solids, milk powder, condensed milk etc). There are also options that are by default dairy-free. Every year I vegan-ize a few options for the Indian festivals.Â

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This year we have a fudgy condensed milk Besan Burfi (Chickpea flour fudge) made dairy-free with a condensed non dairy milk! Just 5 main ingredients and ready in 25 minutes if you roast the flour while the milk mixture thickens! The non dairy condensed milk uses almond milk + ground cashew. You can also soak the 3 tbsp whole cashews for a few hours then blend in with the almond milk and proceed. The mixture will thicken slightly faster than the ground cashew version. Â
There are many variations of Besan Burfis depending on family recipes and regions. They are also called other names (Burfi, Mysore Pak, Mohanthal) depending on the method, consistency etc. Besan (gram flour) or chickpea flour can be dry roasted, roasted in the fat, roasted with some other flours or with dairy. The burfi can use dry sugar, sugar syrup, sugar syrup added at a particular time, other sweet syrups based on jaggery or milk and on and on for different textures and flavor profiles. The resulting mixture can be shaped into Burfi bars or into round Ladoos. We know the common theme here, sweet + besan (pronounced bay-sun or bae-sun).
Make some Indian or fusion sweets or savory snacks for Diwali and drop by your neighbors (preferably unannounced :)), and share some happy stories of the year! Happy Diwali!

More vegan Indian Sweets for the festival season
- Fudgy Coconut Ladoo – GF
- Chickpea flour Ladoo – GF
- Saffron Almond Burfi – Kesar Burfi,Â
- Kaju Katli – Cashew Fudge – GF
- Amaranth coconut Burfi – GF
- Gulab Jamun – GF option
About 15 more options in my book. You can use flavors like cardamom, saffron, vanilla, kewra or rose in the burfi.Â

Steps:
Make the fudge mixture. Transfer to parchment, even it out using s spatula or another parchment.Â

Slice into squares.

Stick some slivered nuts on top (optional). Cool and store.Â

Besan Burfi with Condensed Milk (Dairy-free) - Chickpea flour fudge

Ingredients Â
For the roasted Besan/chickpea flour:
- 1 tbsp oil
- 1 cup besan , or chickpea flour
For the condensed non dairy milk:
- 1 cup almond milk, or soy milk or other not too thin non dairy milk
- 1/2 cup +1 tbsp sugar
- 1 tbsp refined coconut oil , or use vegan butter
- 2.5 tbsp cashew flour, grind cashews with a bit of starch or flour. or without. pulse till somewhat evenly ground/just starting to get buttery, and use
- a pinch of salt
Other:
- Flavor additions: 1/4 tsp ground cardamom, 5 strands of saffron, 1/2 tsp vanilla extract, 1 tsp rose water or other
- slivered almonds or pistachios for garnish
InstructionsÂ
Roast the besan/chickpea flour:
- Heat oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add besan or chickpea flour, preferably sieved if using besan. Mix and roast for 10 minutes. Stir every 20-30 seconds once the skillet is hot. If the flour starts to brown too quickly, reduce the heat. The overall mixture should change color slightly and smell nutty. To make oil-free, dry roast the flour. it takes the same time. You can roast the flour while the condensed milk is thickening.
Meanwhile make the condensed non dairy milk:
- In a skillet heat non dairy milk + oil + sugar over medium heat. Cook for 10 minutes or until boiling well for a few minutes.
- Add cashew flour, salt and whisk in. Reduce heat to medium-low and continue to boil for 10 minutes or until the mixture thickens to just about condensed milk consistency. Because the mixture is hot, it might seem runny, but if you take some in a spoon and let cool for a minute, the mixture thickens to a caramelly condensed milk consistency. Add any flavor additions like cardamom at this point and mix in. ***
- Add the roasted flour and mix into the condensed milk over medium low heat. Mix well by dragging to break the lumps if any and incorporate with the wet. This is a good time to get help from the eaters who are hanging out around the kitchen. **If you know your besan/chickpea flour from experience does get lumps, sieve the roasted flour before adding.
- The mixture will thicken and start to feel stiff and start to leave the sides within a minute or 2.*
- You can also add in 1-2 tbsp chopped nuts and currants at this point and mix in. You can also add 1 to 2 Tbsp powdered sugar and mix in, if you like sweeter burfi. (Traditional burfi is very sweet).
- Drop the mixture onto parchment. Use another parchment or greased spatula to even it out. Cut into pieces using pizza cutter while still warm. Press chopped or slivered nuts on top (optional)
- Cool completely, separate the pieces and store. While the mixture is cooling, treat yourself or your kitchen helpers to the burfi bits left in the skillet.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
** Besan can get small lumps that end up unbroken in the burfi and taste raw (and awful). If your batch of besan is prone to lumpyness, sieve and use for each step. I prefer Chickpea flour to besan for this reason. Besan (gram flour) is flour of brown chickpeas and is more finely ground than the chickpea flour. (garbanzo bean flour) available in the US. Read more about their differences here.
Troubleshoot: If the burfi ends up being too chewy (like candy), well its candy then, or reheat the burfi with additional non dairy milk and mix in to make besan halwa (pudding).











I don’t have rosewater but I have dried rose petals. How would I use these to flavour the burfi?
Hi there,
Just love your site & recipes!
My family & I are not completely vegan yet, would it be possible to just use condensed milk instead of making my own, would it ruin the recipe?
I dont recommend using dairy. I also havent used in more than a decade, so i dont know how it will behave
Hi, Besan Burfi looks awesome… going to try soon. I am wondering if you could help me find a recipe for making vegan butter at home. Since most Indian sweets are made of butter, I am looking for an alternative. Thanks for your help in advance.
There are many on the web. https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=vegan+butter+recipe&*
Vegan baking butter, miyoko schinner’s vegan butter and nina’s aquafaba vegan butter are great. In general you want to use refined coconut oil and blend it with a small amount of non dairy milk and salt until it emulsifies and use that. You can also use refined coconut oil directly. For Indian sweets, i use refined coconut oil or regular safflower/canola oil depending on the recipe.
Any chance you can use Agave Nectar instead of sugar – my family loves Burfi, but they are diabetic, so want to make a version where their blood sugar doesn’t spike so much!
you can possibly use agave and substitute some of the milk with it. So 1/2 cup agave and 1/2 cup non dairy milk. I think the result will be quite chewy though as agave tends to get chewy.
Have you tried my besan halwa? The texture of the halwa will not change much with agave. use 1/3 cup agave in that with 1/2 cup hot water.
https://fettabbau-trim.today/2016/10/besan-halwa.html%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Hey.. this is brilliant, will try for sure. Can I use coconut milk instead of almond milk?? If I can.. then I past whenever I boil coconut milk it separates please advise
coconut milk should work fine. The milk is blended up with cashews so it thickens well so it will not separate.
hi, how long will this last if not refrigerated b in air tight container? how long will it last in fridge?
any covered container will do. In an open container or plate the fudge will dry out a bit after about a day or 2.