First of all, grease a pan or plate with ghee and keep it ready.
Measure a half cup of ghee and a half cup of oil and start heating in a separate pan (choose a pan with handle, so that you can pour quickly & keep it back on the stove to heat). If the liquid is hot enough, then reduce the flame to medium.
Now in another heavy bottom pan, which is easy to scrap and mix, take the sugar with a cup of water and boil it.
Let the sugar syrup boil for 5 minutes until you get the bubbly texture.
Now check the one string consistency as shown in the figure. Try always to be available near the stove, because you may miss this stage and sugar syrup goes to the next stage, which is not useful for Mysore Pak.
When you get the one string consistency, immediately start adding Besan flour gradually in batches. Use a ladle or small cup to add slowly.
Quickly mix the syrup so that the besan flour incorporates well within the sugar syrup.
Before adding the next batch of Besan flour make sure to mix the first batch completely.
Add all the besan flour batch by batch and mix thoroughly.
You have to do the whole process by mixing and scrapping quickly.
This is relatively a quick sweet to make but all you need is your arm strength for continuous mixing.
Mix all besan flour with the sugar syrup completely without any lumps as shown. The mixture starts bubbling, now quickly add the very hot Ghee+ oil on top of it as shown. Mix quickly. All the oil will be absorbed. Keep the ghee pan back on the stove to maintain the heat.
Continue adding hot liquid, mixing and scraping.
Every time when you add hot oil, it will be completely absorbed by the besan.
Quickly in 10 to 15 minutes, it reaches the final stage, so please be ready to act fast.
At one stage the mixture transfers from liquid paste texture to grainy texture as shown. The ghee added at this stage will be oozing out. If you continue cooking beyond this stage, your Mysore Pak will become powder or very hard.
When you see this crumbly texture, quickly transfer the contents into the greased pan and quickly tap and shape the extra crumbs.
Keep aside until it becomes warm.
When the Mysore Pak becomes little hard and warm, make shapes.
Serve or store after it completely cools down.