Mughlai Catering in Noida: A kitchen that only cooks Mughlai, live dum biryani and kebab counters at your event
Three regional schools define Mughlai cooking: Awadhi, Delhi, and Hyderabadi, and each follows a different spice philosophy. Sheffy routes every order to a kitchen that cooks only one school, grinds its own masala fresh, and builds gravy from its regional base. The difference between Lucknowi white korma and Hyderabadi tamarind salan comes down to hands and pantries, and your guests taste it. This is Sheffy’s model. It assembles 65 highly rated, specialist kitchens across 11 cuisines and sends the right combination to your event. The menu covers 309 dishes across 11 categories and 3 regional styles. Starting at Rs 220 per plate for 20+ guests.
Real Mughlai events, served by Sheffy
Sheffy films at the venue with permission and posts without filters. Every reel below is from a genuine event, not a staged shoot or stock photo. What you see in the handi is what lands on the plate.
Pick a school, get that school's kitchen
Lucknow builds on delicate white gravies and slow-braised meats. Delhi layers charcoal smoke and tandoor crust. Hyderabad piles tamarind heat over long-grain rice. Mughlai cooking is not one tradition, and Sheffy separates these into distinct kitchens so each school stays pure on your plate.
8 dishes that disappear first at every event
Across 750+ events in Noida, these dishes run out before the rest, whether the guest list is mixed or single-cuisine.
Dahi Ke Kebab
Crack through the paper-thin golden shell and cool, tangy hung curd oozes out in a slow white ribbon. The chilli heat builds after the crunch fades, leaving your tongue tingling.
Galawat Kebab
Thirty-six spices hiss as the mutton patty touches the hot pan, crisping to a thin bronze shell in seconds. It melts on your tongue like warm butter, raw papaya having broken every fibre down to silk.
Butter Chicken
Silky tomato-butter gravy bubbles slow and orange in the pan, tandoori chicken pieces bobbing in the cream. Fenugreek leaves crumble on top and the whole pot exhales warm, sweet, smoky steam.
Hyderabadi Mutton Biryani
Dough seal cracks open and trapped steam rushes out carrying saffron milk and fried onion perfume. Raw mutton has slow-cooked under the rice until it falls off the bone, the bottom layer crisp with caramelized fat.
Phirni
Chilled clay cups hold a trembling, set custard of ground rice, saffron, and slow-reduced milk. Scrape the surface and it gives way to a cool, creamy, cardamom-scented pudding with a faint clay earthiness underneath.
Veg Galouti Kebab
Twenty-four spices dissolve into raw banana and cashew, pan-seared to a whisper-thin crust. Press your tongue to the roof of your mouth and the patty vanishes into warm, perfumed silk.
Kakori Kebab
So fine-ground the mutton looks like pale silk on the skewer, barely holding shape over the low charcoal glow. One bite and it collapses into warm, roasted-spice velvet that coats your entire mouth.
Mutton Galouti on Coin Parathas
Tiny crisp parathas crunch under melt-soft galouti patties, saffron drizzle pooling in gold threads on top. The kebab dissolves before the paratha finishes crackling between your teeth.
Mughlai menu packages by event size
Each of the three tiers is customizable after booking, and the experience scales with the package. Dawat Starter gets you matching crockery and pressed uniforms. Dawat Classic adds a service captain who manages the floor and a live kebab counter where your guests watch galouti hit the sigri. With Dawat Royal, you get starched damask linen, fresh flowers arranged that morning, and bone china plating with a captain who walks your guests through every dish by name.
8 Dishes
- 2 Kebab varieties
- 1 Biryani
- 2 Gravies
- 1 Bread
- 1 Raita
- 1 Dessert
Starting at Rs 220/plate
20+ guests
12 Dishes
- 3 Kebab varieties
- 2 Biryani
- 3 Gravies
- 2 Breads
- 1 Raita
- 1 Dessert
Starting at Rs 350/plate
40+ guests
18 Dishes
- 5 Kebab varieties
- 2 Biryani
- 4 Gravies
- 3 Breads
- 2 Raita
- 2 Desserts
Starting at Rs 500/plate
80+ guests
Prices shown are starting ranges. Your final quote is based on the menu you pick, guest count, and any add-ons. All prices exclude applicable taxes.
Mughlai catering prices in Noida
Plates range from Rs 220 to Rs 500 depending on the package tier and menu you pick. Even the Dawat Starter at Rs 220 includes the food, kitchen team in pressed uniforms, matching crockery and cutlery, proper serving spoons, temperature-controlled service so hot food stays hot, buffet replenished before trays dip, setup completed before your first guest arrives, used plates cleared promptly, a built-in food buffer so nothing runs short, and complete cleanup. Higher tiers scale the experience further with bone china, starched linen, service captain, and live counters. The quote you receive is the invoice you pay. Service charges, hourly staff billing, and transport surcharges are not added to your bill.
Veg Mughlai
Starting at Rs 220/plate
Paneer kebabs, veg biryani, dal Mughlai, breads, dessert. 20+ guests.
Non-Veg Mughlai
Starting at Rs 280/plate
Galouti kebabs, chicken biryani, mutton korma, breads, dessert. 20+ guests.
Biryani Spread
Starting at Rs 350/plate
Dum biryani (choice of meat), 2 kebabs, salan, raita, phirni. 30+ guests.
Live Kebab Counter
Rs 4,500/counter
Sigri grill at your venue. Galouti, seekh, and tandoori cooked to order. Includes kitchen team and fuel.
Dum Biryani Counter
Rs 5,000/counter
Sealed handi cracked open at the table. Includes kitchen team, handis, and dough seal.
Prices shown are starting ranges. Your final quote is based on the menu you pick, guest count, and any add-ons. All prices exclude applicable taxes.
309 dishes across 11 categories
The menu spans 309 dishes organized into 11 categories, each tagged by region and diet.
Vegetarian Kebabs 26 dishes
Crack through the paper-thin golden shell and cool, tangy hung curd oozes out in a slow white ribbon. The chilli heat builds after the crunch fades, leaving your tongue tingling.
Twenty-four spices dissolve into raw banana and cashew, pan-seared to a whisper-thin crust. Press your tongue to the roof of your mouth and the patty vanishes into warm, perfumed silk.
The kachori plunges into shimmering hot oil with a violent sizzle, its pastry shell puffing into a golden orb that crackles with an audible snap when you press a thumb through the crust. Inside, a spiced potato filling steams gently, fragrant with asafoetida and green chilli, waiting for a drizzle of tangy tamarind.
Three styles of paneer hit the tandoor and come back blistered, each cube cracked open to a molten white centre. Malai, achari, pudina - golden on the outside, steam curling off the plate.
Crisp-shelled seekh, crumbling shami, melt-soft galouti - all soya, all sizzling from the pan. Each one cracks under your teeth to a different spice rush, steam rising from the platter.
Cubes of hung-curd-marinated paneer char over glowing coals with a soft, steady sizzle, their edges turning a gorgeous smoky gold while the interior stays cool and creamy. The tandoor heat unlocks waves of ajwain and black pepper from the marinade, each piece arriving with a faint crackle and the scent of smoldering charcoal.
Vegetable seekh kebabs wrapped in fine strips of bell pepper and onion sizzle over charcoal, the vegetables blistering and charring into a smoky lattice. Each bite crunches through the caramelized wrap into a soft, spiced core still pulsing with tandoor heat.
Golden crust shatters to reveal sweet corn and soft potato, still steaming from the oil. Each bite pops with tiny kernel bursts against a crisp breadcrumb shell.
Emerald green patties hiss as they hit the hot pan, crisping to a dark spinach crust. Break one open and bright green steam escapes, chaat masala tingling on contact.
Mint-green skewers crackle off the grill, crushed cashews poking through the charred surface like tiny golden studs. Pull one off the stick and the herb-paneer centre stretches, still smoking.
Lentil fritters, fried to a crackling golden puff, are soaked until spongy and drowned in thick, chilled yogurt that pools around them in a cool, white sea. A shower of roasted cumin, red chilli powder, and tangy tamarind chutney transforms each bite into a collision of soft, cold, tangy, and gently spiced.
Cubes of paneer, battered in a spiced chickpea flour coat, plunge into hot oil with an eruption of crackling, emerging as crisp, golden nuggets with a fiery red glaze. Tossed with curry leaves that shatter on contact and green chillies that hiss and pop, each piece crunches audibly to reveal a molten, creamy interior.
Long green chillies, stuffed with a tangy masala of roasted peanut and tamarind, are dipped in a chickpea batter and fried until the coating crackles into a golden, bubbly shell. The first bite crunches through the batter, hits the soft chilli, then the nutty-sour filling explodes with a gentle heat that builds in waves.
Ivory cream cheese bubbles and chars across broccoli florets pulled straight from the tandoor. Dip into the ruby pomegranate chutney and each seed pops tart against the smoky cream.
Whole mushrooms split open on the skewer, spiced paneer stuffing bubbling from the centre. The tandoor chars the caps to a deep brown while the inside stays juicy and steaming.
Crumbled paneer mixed with roasted chana dal and a hundred-spice masala sizzles on the tawa in a pool of ghee, forming a delicate crust that crackles like caramelized sugar. The interior is impossibly soft and yielding, melting on the tongue with the warmth of mace, nutmeg, and a breath of rose.
Golden-fried paneer slices, stuffed with a sweet-spiced cashew paste, bob gently in a shimmering saffron-cream gravy that barely simmers, its surface trembling with quiet, aromatic heat. The first bite delivers a satisfying crunch of the fried exterior, then a molten rush of stuffing followed by the cool silk of the sauce.
Chana dal and crumbled paneer are pounded smooth, shaped into golden discs, and shallow-fried until the crust crackles with a crisp, audible snap. Inside, the kebab is a warm, yielding cloud of spiced softness, finishing with the bright punch of fresh coriander and a whisper of roasted cumin.
Crunchy toasted rounds snap under smoky tandoori paneer, mint chutney dripping down the edges. Two textures collide - crisp bread base, then warm, yielding, charred cheese on top.
Touch one with your fork and it collapses, soft as velvet, steam blooming from the spiced kidney bean centre. These dissolve on your tongue before you finish chewing - silky, warm, gone.
Roasted gram flour gives these a nutty crunch that shatters loud in a quiet room. Inside, warm soya and caramelized onion melt together into a savoury, grainy paste.
Baby potatoes split their charred skins, pickle-red spice paste crackling in the tandoor heat. The cold pineapple salsa hits like a sweet shock against the smoky, mustard-oil burn.
Soya chaap chunks blister deep red in the clay oven, tandoori spice paste crackling at every edge. Pull one apart and the spongy centre has soaked up all the smoke, still steaming and dripping marinade.
A basket woven from crisp, fried potato strands crackles audibly as it's filled with spiced chickpeas, tangy yogurt, and a shower of sev that crunches like static. Sweet tamarind and fiery green chutney collide in a symphony of textures — crisp, creamy, tangy, and sharp — inside their edible golden cage.
Shallow oil sizzles as flat rounds of chana dal and vegetables crisp to a deep amber shell. Snap one in half - the steaming centre crumbles soft with cumin and green chilli warmth.
Saffron-orange yoghurt chars to a blistered skin across each paneer cube, clay oven smoke still clinging. Bite through and the warm, creamy centre glows turmeric-yellow with saffron threads.
Non-Veg Kebabs 41 dishes
Thirty-six spices hiss as the mutton patty touches the hot pan, crisping to a thin bronze shell in seconds. It melts on your tongue like warm butter, raw papaya having broken every fibre down to silk.
The kebab touches the ghee-slicked tawa and dissolves into a sizzling, golden disc so tender it threatens to fall apart before it reaches the plate. One hundred and sixty spices meld into a single, intoxicating perfume — raw papaya, rose petal, mace — as the surface crackles into a paper-thin crust over a molten, melt-in-mouth interior.
Pan-fried patties of twice-ground lamb and chana dal crack open to reveal a hidden pocket of mint-lime hung curd that oozes cool and tangy against the hot, spiced meat. The crisp, bronzed exterior shatters while the surprise yogurt center floods each bite with a cold, sharp contrast.
So fine-ground the mutton looks like pale silk on the skewer, barely holding shape over the low charcoal glow. One bite and it collapses into warm, roasted-spice velvet that coats your entire mouth.
Tiny crisp parathas crunch under melt-soft galouti patties, saffron drizzle pooling in gold threads on top. The kebab dissolves before the paratha finishes crackling between your teeth.
Kashmiri red chilli stains the whole leg crimson as it emerges from the clay tandoor, skin blistered and cracking. Tear into it and the juices run clear down your wrist, smoky yoghurt marinade still steaming off the bone.
A legend pressed flat on the tawa, the kebab sputters and crackles in a pool of clarified butter, its surface crisping to a wafer-thin shell that shatters at the merest touch of a spoon. Inside, the meat is a warm, yielding cloud perfumed with over a hundred spices, finishing with the haunting sweetness of ittar and rose.
Buffalo meat, minced four times until silk-smooth, is shaped into discs and pan-fried in ghee until the exterior sizzles into a paper-thin crust that crackles at the lightest touch. The interior is pure velvet — warm, spiced, and so tender it seems to evaporate on the tongue in a cloud of roasted spice.
The samosa hits the oil with an explosive crackle, its paper-thin pastry shell crisping to a shattering golden armor in seconds while the spiced lamb keema inside stays moist and intensely fragrant. Bite through the audibly crisp shell and a rush of cumin, coriander, and green chilli steam escapes in a tiny, aromatic eruption.
Chana dal and mutton, pressure-cooked until inseparable, are shaped into discs and shallow-fried until the exterior crackles into a crisp, dark-gold shell with an audible snap. The interior stays impossibly smooth and yielding, releasing the warm fragrance of stone-ground spices and fresh mint.
Chunks of mutton, marinated in a paste of raw papaya and yogurt, grill over slow embers with a rhythmic sizzle, their edges caramelizing into a dark, smoky bark. Pull one from the skewer and the meat stretches briefly before surrendering, releasing the heady perfume of charred fat and black cardamom.
Cream cheese melts and bubbles across chicken chunks, charring to golden spots under tandoor flames. Bite down and the smoky exterior gives way to a soft, oozing, white-pepper centre.
Mozzarella stretches in long strings as you pull a kebab off the skewer, garlic sizzling on the charred surface. The mince crumbles soft and steaming, cheese pooling in every bite.
Fennel and nigella seeds pop and crackle on the charred chicken surface, mustard paste blistering in the heat. Each piece snaps to a juicy, pickle-sharp centre that stings the back of your throat.
Ivory-white chicken glistens with cream as it slides off the clay oven skewer, barely charred at the edges. Cardamom and mace perfume rises with the steam - tender, pillowy, almost sweet.
Charcoal smoke curls around mutton seekh wrapped in julienned peppers that blister red and green on the grill. The mince is juicy inside while the pepper jacket crackles and pops with each bite.
Lamb brain, lightly spiced and pan-fried in ghee, sizzles gently as its exterior sets into a delicate, golden crust while the interior stays creamy and impossibly soft. The aroma of turmeric and green chilli rises from the pan in warm waves, each piece yielding with a custard-like collapse on the tongue.
Cubes of mutton, marinated in raw papaya and a crimson paste of Deccani spices, char over open coals with a steady, insistent sizzle that sends up plumes of peppery smoke. The charred edges crackle and snap while the interior stays ruby-pink and buttery, each piece carrying the smoky signature of the Hyderabadi grill.
Chicken cubes, marinated in a fiery Deccani spice paste of red chilli, ginger, and raw papaya, char in the tandoor with a sharp hiss as fat drips onto the coals below. The surface crackles with a blackened, spice-crusted char while the interior stays juicy and pink-tinged, each piece trailing wisps of peppery smoke.
Triangular pastry shells, stuffed with coarsely minced mutton fragrant with green chillies and fresh mint, plunge into shimmering oil with an explosive crackle, each one ballooning slightly as steam builds inside. The first bite shatters the flaky crust with an audible snap, releasing a rush of spiced meat steam scented with cumin and coriander.
Flaky pastry squares stuffed with spiced keema fry to a deep, crackling gold in hot oil, their layered shells shattering at the first bite. The minced meat filling steams inside its crisp shell, fragrant with cinnamon, green chillies, and fried onion.
Cubes of liver hit the smoking kadhai with a fierce, splattering sizzle, each piece searing to a dark, crispy crust while the center stays tender and mineral-rich. Green chillies and curry leaves crackle in the residual oil, their perfume mixing with the iron-sweet scent of caramelized liver in a heady, primal rush.
Coarse mutton keema sizzles in the pan with caramelized onion bits that have turned deep mahogany. Garam masala blooms in the hot fat, filling the room while the surface crisps to a rough, crackly skin.
Rib chops, braised tender in spiced yogurt then seared on a smoking tawa, hit the iron with a violent hiss that sends up a cloud of cumin-scented smoke. The bone handle stays cool while the meat crackles with a charred, caramelized crust that gives way to yielding, pink-centered flesh within.
These square pastry pockets, filled with spiced keema, hit the oil with a sharp crackle and fry to a blistered, golden-brown shell that shatters audibly between the teeth. Inside, the minced meat is moist and fragrant with green chilli and fresh coriander, a burst of savory warmth against the crisp, flaky exterior.
Velvety chicken seekh glows pale gold over low charcoal, cream and cashew paste glistening on the surface. Slide one off the skewer and it yields without resistance, soft as risen dough, impossibly smooth.
Whole drumsticks emerge from the tandoor with blistered cream-gold skin, juices dripping and hissing on the coals below. Tear the meat off the bone and it pulls away in long, steaming, butter-soft shreds.
Golden blisters dot the white cream-cheese crust as each chicken piece comes off the grill smoking. Cut one open and the creamy centre oozes out slow, warm, impossibly rich against the charred exterior.
Cream-and-cheese-marinated chicken cubes turn lazily on the skewer, their pale ivory surfaces blistering into golden spots that crackle and weep tiny beads of milky fat. The aroma is a hushed lullaby of green cardamom, white pepper, and the clean sweetness of fresh malai.
Cubes of marinated mutton hit the scorching sigri with an aggressive hiss, their edges charring into a crackly mahogany crust while the interior stays blushing and impossibly juicy. The smoky perfume of raw papaya tenderizer and black cardamom rolls off the grill in thick, intoxicating waves.
Charcoal sparks fly as fat drips off the mutton seekh, the surface crackling to a smoky dark crust. Squeeze a lime wedge and it sizzles on contact, steam and citrus rising in one sharp burst.
Thin patties crack with an audible snap when you break them, the slow-cooked mutton and dal centre crumbling warm and grainy. The outside is bronze-crisp from the pan, the inside still steaming soft.
Bright green mint crust chars to a deep forest colour on the grill, coriander oil bubbling at the edges. The chicken inside is juicy and pale, a cool herb rush against the smoky char.
Three seekh varieties line the charcoal grill, each one sizzling at a different pitch as fat renders and drips. Chicken, mutton, gilafi - pull them off the iron skewers and smoke chases every piece to the plate.
Minced mutton cylinders wrapped in a mosaic of julienned peppers and onions sizzle fiercely over glowing charcoal, their fat dripping and igniting tiny flares that kiss the surface with smoky blisters. The crunch of the charred vegetable skin gives way to a molten, spice-drenched core that practically melts on the tongue.
Pan oil hisses as flat mutton-dal rounds hit the surface, crisping to a crackling amber shell in seconds. Fresh mint stings through the warm, crumbling interior that falls apart at the first press of a spoon.
Mutton and chana dal, ground to a silky paste and shaped around a pocket of tangy hung curd and fresh mint, are pan-fried until the crust crackles with a satisfying, audible snap. Bite through and the cool, sharp yogurt center erupts against the warm, spiced meat in a textural and thermal collision.
Classic red yoghurt marinade blisters and blackens at tandoor temperatures, sealing the chicken in a smoky shell. The centre stays pink-white and impossibly juicy, pulling apart in clean, steaming strips.
A charcoal-grilled seekh kebab, still crackling from the grill, is rolled into a butter-slicked paratha that sizzles on the flat tawa, its edges crisping into a flaky golden wrap. Green chutney and raw onion crunch sharply against the smoky, yielding lamb, each bite a riot of textures and the aroma of street-side charcoal.
Three chillies collide in the mutton mince - green sharp, red smoky, Kashmiri sweet - as the pan sears each patty dark. Heat builds in slow waves, the crust crackling while the centre stays dangerously soft and juicy.
Sizzling plate arrives smoking, barbeque glaze bubbling and caramelizing across charred tandoori chicken. The sweet-smoky sauce pops and crackles on the hot iron, sticky and dark at the edges.
Chicken Mains 34 dishes
Silky tomato-butter gravy bubbles slow and orange in the pan, tandoori chicken pieces bobbing in the cream. Fenugreek leaves crumble on top and the whole pot exhales warm, sweet, smoky steam.
Crack the dough seal and a gust of trapped steam escapes - green chilli, fried onion, saffron milk all at once. Raw chicken has cooked in its own juices under the rice, every grain separate, the meat falling-apart tender.
Kewra water perfume hits you before the lid is even off, each rice grain standing separate and glistening. The chicken underneath is pre-cooked tender, layered so the juices have steamed upward through every saffron-streaked layer.
A whole chicken, stuffed with boiled eggs and spiced keema, roasts until its skin turns a glistening, lacquered mahogany that crackles when the carving knife breaks through. The gravy beneath is a dense, amber pool of fried onion and ground spice, simmering with low, meditative bubbles that release the perfume of saffron and kewra.
Chicken simmers in a pale, cashew-cream sauce threaded with white pepper and cardamom until the gravy turns satiny and ivory. Each piece lifts from the pot trailing ribbons of fragrant, buttery sauce that pools warm and gentle.
Tandoor-kissed chicken chunks plunge into a molten river of tomato-butter gravy, the saffron-streaked sauce bubbling lazily around each piece with soft, rhythmic pops. The aroma is a velvet collision of dried fenugreek, cream, and slow-roasted tomatoes that fills every corner of the room.
Steam erupts as the sealed lid cracks open, saffron and fried onion perfume flooding the room. Long basmati grains tumble apart around bone-in chicken, each one glistening with spiced ghee.
Fiery red gravy bubbles thick and angry, dried chillies bobbing in the tomato-yoghurt sauce that coats every chicken piece. Old Delhi heat - it hits the back of your throat before the flavour even lands on your tongue.
A regal preparation where chicken simmers in a sauce of pounded cashews and poppy seeds, the gravy so pale and lustrous it catches the light like liquid pearl. The soft gurgle of the pot releases waves of rose water and mace, each bubble carrying a whisper of the Mughal court.
Pale gold cashew gravy simmers gentle, saffron threads bleeding orange streaks through the cream. Chicken falls off the bone into the warm, cardamom-scented sauce - thick, mild, coating everything it touches.
Charred seekh kebab pieces tumble into a sizzling onion-tomato masala, the gravy bubbling up around each chunk. The smokiness from the grill bleeds into the wet curry, steam rising in thick, spiced clouds.
Butter melts across the surface of a deep-red tomato-cream gravy, charred tikka pieces half-submerged and glistening. Spoon through and the gravy is velvet-thick, coating the smoky chicken in a rich, clinging sauce.
Grilled tikka pieces simmer in a spiced orange gravy that bubbles slow at the edges, cream swirling in. The charred chicken absorbs the sauce until each piece is dripping, tender, stained deep masala-red.
Smoky chicken tikka, still popping with residual tandoor heat, is wrapped in a paper-thin roomali roti so delicate it rustles like silk in the hand. The mint chutney hisses faintly against the hot meat, a sharp green coolness cutting through the char and cream of the marinade.
Chicken pieces braise in a pale almond-cream gravy that thickens to a velvety pour, each piece staining ivory with saffron threads floating on the surface. The sauce tastes of crushed almonds and mace, rich and gentle with a whisper of rose.
Chicken sealed in a flour-dough lid and slow-cooked over dying embers, the crust cracking open with a dramatic pop to release a fragrant monsoon of saffron, cardamom, and kewra steam. The meat, impossibly tender from hours of dum, falls from the bone in silky ribbons drenched in its own concentrated, aromatic juices.
Whole chicken pieces, sealed in a handi with yogurt and whole spices, cook in their own steam until the meat surrenders from the bone with a gentle, yielding sigh. The lid lifts to a cloud of saffron and green cardamom, revealing a glossy, amber-hued gravy barely thick enough to cling to each piece.
Saffron-orange rice steams around halved boiled eggs, their golden yolks glowing against the white basmati. Whole spices crackle between your teeth as you scoop through the fragrant, ghee-slicked grains.
Deep-fried chicken chunks tossed in a slick of curry leaves, green chillies, and ginger that crackles in hot oil seconds before serving. The crust stays loud even under the sauce. Each piece stains your fingers red.
Bone-in chicken, marinated in a paste of ginger-garlic and fiery red chilli, is shallow-fried until the skin crackles into a darkened, spice-crusted shell that crunches with every bite. The oil sputters and snaps around each piece, and the finished chicken glistens with a lacquer of caramelized masala and curry leaf.
Chicken on the bone, slow-cooked in a clay handi with yogurt and caramelized onions, arrives at the table in its cooking vessel, the sauce still bubbling with tiny, aromatic pops. The clay pot concentrates the flavors to an almost syrupy intensity, each piece of chicken glazed in a dark, lustrous sauce fragrant with whole garam masala.
Chicken pieces braised in a coconut-poppy seed paste, the gravy turning a pale, creamy ivory as the coconut milk simmers down with soft, rhythmic bubbles. The fragrance is distinctly Deccani — curry leaf, star anise, and the warm, sweet undertone of fennel — each bite yielding tender meat in a silky, aromatic sauce.
Chicken winglets, frenched to expose the bone handle, are battered and fried until the coating crackles into a fiery red shell that crunches with percussive sharpness. Tossed in a sticky sauce of chilli-garlic that sizzles on contact, each lollipop arrives glistening, its crisp armor barely containing the juicy meat within.
Deep-fried chicken strips, their batter crackling with a sharp, golden crunch, are tossed in a smoking wok with curry leaves, dried red chillies, and a sticky sweet-spicy sauce that sizzles on contact. The coating crunches loudly against the yielding chicken within, each piece glazed in a lacquer of caramelized chilli and tamarind.
Chicken simmers in a thick, peanut-sesame gravy spiked with tamarind and dried coconut, the sauce bubbling in slow, measured pops that release a nutty, tangy fragrance. The tempering of mustard seeds and curry leaves crackles sharply as it's poured over the finished dish, adding a final layer of smoky, aromatic heat.
A whole chicken, rubbed with a fiery paste of Deccani spices and roasted until the skin turns a crackling, lacquered mahogany, is brought to the table still hissing from the oven. The knife cuts through the crisp skin with an audible crunch, revealing juicy, spice-stained flesh that fills the room with the perfume of ginger, garlic, and curry leaf.
Chicken tossed in a dry masala of coarsely cracked black pepper and curry leaves sizzles in a smoking kadhai, the pepper corns crackling and popping with a sharp, staccato rhythm. The finished dish is dark, dry, and intensely aromatic, each piece coated in a crunchy pepper crust that delivers a slow, building heat.
Spiced mince clings to every grain of basmati, fried onions caramelized to deep brown scattered throughout. The dum-cooked pot steams with whole spice perfume when the lid lifts, each spoonful heavy with meat and rice.
Clay kullad pot arrives steaming, the earthen walls still radiating tandoor heat into the biryani inside. Crack it open and smoky, ghee-rich rice tumbles out around tender boneless chicken, each piece clay-scented and warm.
Butter-enriched basmati gleams golden under a creamy saffron-almond gravy pooling around each chicken piece. The rice grains are slick with ghee, the sauce is thick and pale, almond slivers toasted to a warm brown.
Chicken breast, pounded thin as parchment and stuffed with a jeweled paste of dried fruits and nuts, simmers in a pale saffron sauce that murmurs with gentle, creamy bubbles. The knife slides through the rolled fillet with zero resistance, revealing a spiral of pistachio-green filling against the white meat.
Chicken on the bone simmers in a velvety white gravy of fried onion paste, yogurt, and melon seed, the sauce barely trembling as it cooks at the gentlest possible heat. The aroma is refined and restrained — white pepper, green cardamom, and the faint, floral whisper of kewra water.
Slice through the golden-fried mince shell and a perfect boiled egg sits inside, yolk still bright yellow. The korma gravy bubbles warm around it, spiced cream clinging to the crisp mince coating.
Saffron threads bleed crimson into a pale cream-almond gravy, chicken pieces simmering slow and low. Green cardamom pods float on the surface, the whole pot glowing warm amber, thick with slow-braised richness.
Mutton and Lamb 45 dishes
Wheat, lentils, and mutton, pounded and stirred for eight relentless hours, merge into a thick, porridge-like stew that glistens under a crown of fried onions crackling like spun glass. The first spoonful is a warm, yielding avalanche of texture — silky, grainy, meaty — finished with a squeeze of lime that sizzles against the hot surface.
Dough seal cracks open and trapped steam rushes out carrying saffron milk and fried onion perfume. Raw mutton has slow-cooked under the rice until it falls off the bone, the bottom layer crisp with caramelized fat.
Hours of slow cooking have dissolved mutton, wheat, barley, and lentils into one thick, steaming porridge. Drag a spoon through and it pulls slow like warm toffee, fried onions and lime piled on top crackling as you stir.
Overnight stewing has turned the bone marrow to liquid gold pooling on the surface of a deep-red, forty-spice gravy. The shank meat slides off the bone at a touch, soft as custard, the broth thick enough to coat a spoon.
A slow-simmered cathedral of bone marrow and spice, the mahogany broth glistens with rivulets of saffron-laced fat that crackle softly as you tear a shard of naan through its velvet depths. The meat surrenders at the slightest touch, collapsing into silky threads that carry the ghost of cardamom and the warmth of overnight patience.
Thin slices of marinated mutton are laid on a slab of granite heated over open flame, and the instant they touch the stone, a ferocious sizzle fills the air as the meat sears in its own fat. The aroma of charred spice and rendered tallow rises in thick, primal waves, each slice curling at the edges into a smoky, caramelized crisp.
Deep red oil floats on the surface - that is the rogan, rendered slow from Kashmiri chillies and mutton fat. Fennel perfumes every spoonful, the meat falls apart in the dark gravy, no tomato, just pure chilli warmth and spice.
A whole leg of mutton, marinated for two days in a crimson cloak of yogurt and Kashmiri chilli, roasts in the tandoor until the surface crackles like parchment and the bone slides clean from the flesh. The first cut releases a rush of steam scented with mace, nutmeg, and the primal sweetness of slow-rendered fat.
Mutton braised in a tangy pickle-spice masala, the oil separating into a fiery red slick as mustard seeds, fenugreek, and nigella crackle in the pot. Each piece of meat carries the bold, sour punch of raw mango powder and the deep, fermented warmth of sun-dried spice.
Mutton shanks, slow-cooked through the night in a broth of roasted flour and a secret potli of whole spices, yield a gravy so thick and gelatinous it clings to the spoon in trembling amber sheets. The garnish of fried onions crackles sharply against the silky broth, and a squeeze of lime cuts through the richness like a bright, citrus whisper.
Thin mutton fillets, pounded to silk and stuffed with a paste of toasted almonds, simmer in a pale cream gravy so quiet you can hear the gentle tick of cardamom pods rolling against the pot. The sauce clings like satin, its surface scattered with slivered pistachios and a faint shimmer of edible silver.
Mutton braised in a white, yogurt-based gravy sharpened with green chillies and cashew paste, the sauce so pale it glows against the dark meat with an almost lunar luminescence. The pot murmurs with a gentle, creamy simmer, releasing the refined fragrance of white pepper, mace, and the faintest breath of kewra.
Mutton and potatoes simmer together in a fiery, tomato-based gravy, the potatoes absorbing the meaty juices until they glow a deep, saffron-tinged gold and crumble at the edges. The gravy sputters with thick, volcanic pops, each bubble releasing the earthy scent of turmeric and the sharp bite of green chilli.
Mutton simmered in spiced buttermilk, the gravy splitting into a pale, tangy sauce laced with green chillies and curry leaves that gives off a gentle, sour fragrance. The meat, impossibly tender from the lactic acid tenderization, carries a bright, refreshing acidity that cuts through its own richness.
Split chickpeas and mutton, slow-braised together until the dal collapses into a thick, golden gravy that envelops each tender piece of meat, the pot simmering with quiet, contented bubbles. A final tempering of garlic slivers and dried red chillies crackles into the stew, adding a smoky, sharp accent to the earthy richness.
Coarse-ground mutton mince is sealed in a pot with whole spices and slow-cooked until every crumb is saturated with the concentrated essence of its own juices, the lid trapping a universe of aroma. When opened, the keema glistens with a sheen of rendered fat, each bite crumbly, intensely savory, and perfumed with the quiet hum of mace and nutmeg.
Mutton braised with tart sorrel leaves until the greens dissolve into a sharp, olive-green gravy that sputters with the fierce acidity of the gongura. The tempering of mustard seeds and garlic crackles into the pot, and each bite of meat carries the sour, earthy tang of the Deccan's most beloved leaf.
Mutton chunks braise with chana dal until the lentils dissolve into a thick, meaty gravy that glistens amber under a sheen of ghee. Each spoonful collapses into layers of tender meat and silky dal, tamarind tang cutting through the rich depth.
Mutton simmered in the iconic salan gravy of roasted peanuts, sesame, and tamarind, the sauce thick and tawny with lazy bubbles that pop and send up wisps of nutty, tangy steam. The meat, falling-apart tender, has absorbed the sweet-sour depth of the salan until each piece is a concentrated burst of Deccani complexity.
Slow-cooked overnight, the lamb shank surrenders its marrow into a silky, spice-dark gravy that coats the bowl like mahogany paint. The first sip is a wave of warmth — ginger, black pepper, and saffron building in slow, rolling layers.
Thin escalopes of mutton, pounded to uniform delicacy, are braised in a cream-and-almond gravy so pale and refined it barely colors the plate. The sauce simmers with a quiet, aristocratic murmur, each bubble releasing the gentle fragrance of white pepper, saffron, and the barest whisper of rose water.
Coarsely minced mutton and sweet green peas sizzle together in a dry masala, the keema crackling as it browns and releases its juices into a concentrated, deeply savory base. Whole cumin and coriander seeds pop in the hot oil, each pea bursting with a tiny, sweet snap against the earthy, spiced mince.
Mutton on the bone simmers in a coconut-free, tomato-onion gravy darkened with roasted spices, the pot gurgling with thick, lava-like bubbles that send up puffs of cumin and coriander steam. The meat, slow-cooked until it slides from the bone, absorbs the deep, rust-red gravy until each piece is a concentrated capsule of Deccani heat.
Bone-in mutton pieces, pressure-cooked tender then tossed into a smoking-hot kadhai, sizzle fiercely as they caramelize in a dry masala of curry leaves, green chillies, and cracked pepper. The result is a dark, crackling tangle of deeply spiced meat, each piece coated in a sticky, charred crust that crunches with primal satisfaction.
Goat trotters, simmered for hours until the cartilage dissolves into a trembling, amber jelly, are served in a broth so thick with collagen it sets as it cools. Each slurp of the gelatinous meat yields with a soft, sticky pull, the broth warming the throat with the deep, restorative heat of ginger and black pepper.
Marinated mutton pieces deep-fried in a heavy kadhai until they crackle with an aggressive, golden-brown crust that shatters on contact, the oil popping and sputtering around each piece. Lifted from the oil glistening and mahogany-dark, each bite delivers the satisfying crunch of fried masala over tender, juice-soaked meat within.
Mutton pieces, braised tender then shallow-fried in a scorching kadhai, crackle and spit as they develop a dark, caramelized crust of dried spices and curry leaf. The meat is pulled from the oil glistening and mahogany-dark, each piece crunchy on the outside and yielding within, carrying the deep, smoky warmth of the Deccan.
Rose water and kewra essence drift up as the handi opens, each basmati grain separate and gleaming. The mutton underneath is pre-braised tender, its rich juices steaming up through layers of saffron-streaked rice.
Bone-in mutton pieces sit heavy under fluffy basmati, their dark spiced juices staining the rice in patches. Lift the lid and the dum-trapped steam hits you - whole clove, cinnamon bark, bay leaf, all at once.
Smoky biryani meets its partner - a tangy peanut-sesame gravy with slit green chillies bobbing in the sauce. Spoon the salan over the rice and it soaks in, tart and nutty cutting through the rich, heavy meat.
Mutton and chana dal merge in a slow-cooked stew, the dal breaking down into a thick, golden gravy that clings to each piece of tender, falling-apart meat. The tempering hits the pot with a fierce sizzle — mustard seeds, curry leaves, and whole red chillies crackling in unison, perfuming the stew with a smoky, tangy intensity.
Minced mutton and liver hit the screaming-hot kadhai with a ferocious sizzle, the cumin seeds crackling and popping as they perfume the oil with their earthy, toasted fragrance. The keema dries to a crumbly, intensely spiced texture while the liver stays just pink inside, yielding a rich, iron-kissed bite.
Cashew-yoghurt gravy simmers to a pale gold, caramelized onions melted into the sauce until it turns thick and glossy. Mutton pieces have braised so long they tremble on the spoon, whole spices releasing one last perfume burst.
The dawn stew of Old Delhi, its bone-deep broth shimmers with a slick of golden fat and the quiet hum of overnight spices — nutmeg, mace, and the peppery bite of long pepper. Shreds of mutton shank dissolve on the tongue as fried onion crisps and a squeeze of lime crackle through the richness.
The overnight broth trembles in the pot like liquid amber, its surface alive with a slow, glistening shimmer of marrow-enriched fat and the quiet pop of whole spices rising to the surface. Shredded ginger and fresh coriander crackle as they hit the hot stew, and each spoonful coats the mouth in a silky, deeply savory warmth.
A lighter Awadhi curry where mutton simmers in a thin, aromatic broth of yogurt and whole spices, the surface shimmering with a delicate film of clarified butter that catches the light. Each piece of meat is tender enough to break with a spoon, releasing a warm, clean fragrance of green cardamom and fresh ginger.
Mutton simmers in a pale, yogurt-white gravy studded with whole green chillies and cashews, the pot murmuring with a gentle, creamy simmer that never breaks into a boil. The sauce is sharp, aromatic, and deceptively fiery, its surface glistening with clarified butter and the fragrance of green cardamom.
Slow-braised mutton pieces float in a lake of fiery red oil rendered from Kashmiri chillies, the sauce bubbling in lazy, volcanic plops that send up wisps of fennel-scented steam. The meat, fork-tender and deeply crimson, falls apart with a whisper, each strand saturated with the warmth of cinnamon bark and dried ginger.
Clear yoghurt broth shimmers with fennel and dry ginger, mutton pieces sitting tender in the light, pale soup. Steam carries a clean spice perfume - no heaviness, just warmth and bone-deep comfort in every sip.
Basmati cooked in rich bone broth has absorbed every drop of mutton flavour, each grain plump and glistening. Saffron streaks and crispy fried onion shards crown the top, the whole pot exhaling savoury, meaty steam.
A Deccani take on the dawn stew, this nahari simmers all night with trotters and shank until the broth turns a deep, ruddy amber, thick with dissolved collagen that coats the mouth in a warm, trembling film. The garnish of crisp fried onion and raw ginger crackles against the hot surface, adding texture and bite to the silky, marrow-rich depths.
Flattened mutton steaks hit the hot pan with a sharp sizzle, raw papaya marinade having turned them butter-soft. Cream gravy pools around each seared piece, pale and rich, the meat so tender it tears with a spoon.
Deep crimson Mathania chilli gravy bubbles fierce and angry, mutton pieces stained warrior-red to the bone. Yoghurt has barely tamed the heat - it hits your lips first, then your throat, then your whole chest burns warm.
Poppy seed and coconut paste thicken the korma to a cream-white sauce that clings to every mutton piece. Nawabi richness - the gravy barely moves when you tilt the bowl, slow-braised and impossibly dense.
Fragrant bone broth has soaked into every basmati grain, bay leaf and cinnamon bark still sitting in the pot. The rice steams clear and aromatic, each spoonful tasting of slow-simmered marrow and green cardamom.
Fish and Seafood 18 dishes
Firm fish steaks simmer in a turmeric-bright onion gravy spiked with whole cumin and black mustard, the sauce thickening to a golden cling around each piece. The fish holds its shape but yields at the slightest pressure, the flesh soaked through with warm, peppery spice.
Fish fillets drop into the classic peanut-sesame-tamarind salan and the pot hisses, the thick, nutty gravy closing around each piece like a warm, tawny glove. The tempering arrives last: mustard seeds, curry leaves, and dried red chillies crackling in rapid-fire succession across the surface.
Jumbo prawns threaded onto iron skewers sizzle and blister inside the tandoor, their shells turning a deep char-streaked orange. Pull one free and the meat snaps clean from the shell, smoky, sweet, and still steaming at the centre.
Mustard oil crackles across fish fillets as pickle spices blister in the tandoor heat. The flesh flakes apart at the touch, steaming white under a deep golden, fennel-seed crust.
Thick fish strips coated in a spiced chickpea batter hit the oil with a roar and puff into golden, blistered pillows that crackle audibly when lifted from the fryer. Bite through the shattering crust and the fish inside is white, flaky, and soaked with the heat of ajwain and red chilli.
Fresh basil blackens and crisps on the fish surface while the tandoor roars behind it. Pull a piece apart and fragrant white steam rises, the flesh falling in clean, herb-scented flakes.
Fish steaks sealed inside a clay pot with tamarind, coconut, and a cascade of curry leaves cook in trapped steam until the flesh turns silky and pulls apart in clean, fragrant sheets. The sauce is thin but intensely sour, each spoonful bright with raw green chilli and the tang of dried kokum.
Turmeric-yellow gram flour batter crisps to a crackly shell around firm white fish in the tandoor. Snap through the crust and the flesh inside is steaming, flaky, stained deep red at the edges.
Tandoor-charred fish tikka drops into a turmeric-yellow curry and the pot sizzles, gravy bubbling around each flaky piece. The fish holds its shape just barely, edges dissolving into the warm, onion-thick sauce.
Prawns coated in a fiery red masala of Guntur chillies, garlic, and curry leaves are flash-fried until the shells blister and crackle with each bite. The meat inside stays juicy and sweet, a sharp counterpoint to the smoky, scorching crust.
Prawns marinated in green chilli and lime are layered with saffron-stained basmati and sealed under a flour-dough lid, the pot steaming in silence until the seal is cracked. Fragrant steam rushes out carrying the scent of kewra and briny shellfish, the rice beneath each prawn stained gold and green.
Prawns curl pink and plump in a pale cashew-yogurt gravy barely trembling over the lowest flame, the sauce so smooth it coats each prawn like liquid satin. Green cardamom and a whisper of mace rise from the pot in slow, perfumed waves.
Fish steaks braise in a double-onion gravy where half the onions melt into the sauce and half arrive crisp-fried on top, shattering into sweet, caramelized shards at the touch of a spoon. The gravy is thick, warm, and fragrant with coriander seed and a slow-building ginger heat.
Minced fish mixed with ginger, green chilli, and fresh coriander is shaped into flat discs and shallow-fried in ghee until the surface turns a deep, crackly gold. The inside is pillowy soft and steaming, falling apart at the slightest pressure into flakes of delicate, herb-bright fish.
Thick cream chars to golden-brown spots across fish fillets pulled from the tandoor, edges still bubbling. The flesh underneath is snow-white and steaming, barely holding together, rich with mild spice.
Prawns swim in a pale, coconut-cream gravy sweetened with a thread of jaggery, the sauce barely simmering as it reduces to a silky, clinging coat. Each prawn curls tight and pink, the flesh tender and sweet against the mild, cardamom-scented richness of the sauce.
Bold red chilli paste blisters across fish fillets in the tandoor, carom seeds crackling and popping in the heat. Old Delhi style - the crust is fiery crimson, the flaky white flesh underneath is all smoke and sting.
Whole fish dipped in a fennel-laced gram flour batter hits smoking-hot mustard oil and crackles into a shattering golden shell within seconds. The flesh inside stays snow-white and steaming, the crust salty, crisp, and dusted with carom seeds.
Biryani and Pulao 34 dishes
Raw marinated mutton is layered with parboiled rice and sealed under a heavy dough lid, the pot set on dying coals that coax out a muffled, rhythmic simmer from within. When the seal breaks, a tidal wave of saffron-and-kewra steam erupts, revealing rice stained in stripes of gold and white over meat so tender it shreds at a glance.
Spiced minced lamb crumbles through layers of basmati sealed under dum, the keema melting into the rice until every forkful carries meat and grain in equal measure. Fried onions shatter on top like bronze glass, their caramelized sweetness threading through the biryani's heat.
The sealed handi is cracked open with a theatrical snap, releasing a towering column of saffron-and-kewra-scented steam that fills the room like a perfumed cloud. Each grain of rice, long and separate and gilded with gold, sits atop fall-apart mutton that has been dum-cooked in its own juices until impossibly tender.
The clay handi is brought to the table still sealed with dough, and the crack of the lid sends a tower of fragrant steam skyward, scented with saffron, star anise, and kewra. Beneath, the rice is ghostly pale with veins of gold, each grain impossibly long and separate, resting on mutton so tender it collapses under its own weight.
Basmati rice, each grain soaked and parboiled to precise tenderness, is layered with fried onions, saffron milk, and a shower of cashews and raisins that sizzle as they hit the ghee. The dum-sealed pot opens with a fragrant exhale of rose, mace, and toasted nuts, the rice glistening like a field of golden pearls.
Saffron-stained rice glistens with ghee as sugar syrup threads through every grain, studding the golden mound with raisins, cashews, and slivers of candied peel. Each sweet, perfumed forkful dissolves in a cloud of cardamom and rose.
Basmati rice tempered with whole spices — cinnamon, cloves, cardamom, and bay leaf — sizzle in ghee until they release a warm, toasted fragrance that saturates every grain. The rice arrives glistening and aromatic, each grain separate and infused with the quiet, elegant perfume of whole spice and clarified butter.
Saffron milk bleeds gold through white basmati as the sealed pot opens, fried onions glistening on top. Paneer and mixed vegetables sit below, steamed tender in their own juices under the rice blanket.
In this cooked-meat style, mutton is first braised to tender perfection in a rich masala, then layered with parboiled rice and sealed for a final dum that fuses every flavor. The seal cracks with a pop, unleashing saffron-and-mint-scented steam over rice stained amber and meat that melts on the tongue.
Marinated chicken drumsticks, arranged in a heavy-bottomed pot and buried under fragrant rice, cook sealed over the gentlest heat until the juices from the meat perfume every grain. The dramatic opening sends up a column of ghee-and-saffron steam, revealing layers of amber rice over chicken so tender the bone slides clean.
Rice cooked in sweetened, saffron-infused milk rather than water, producing grains that are creamy, fragrant, and glistening with a delicate golden hue. Dried fruits and nuts, fried until they crackle in ghee, are folded through the rice, each spoonful a sweet, milky, cardamom-scented celebration.
Whole boiled eggs buried in layers of saffron-stained basmati and caramelized onions, sealed under dough and cooked on dum until the rice grains stand separate. Crack an egg open and the yolk runs gold into the spiced rice below.
Firm fish fillets, marinated in a tangy green masala, are layered with fragrant rice and sealed for gentle dum, the fish steaming in its own juices until it flakes at a touch. The pot opens to a rush of lime-and-coriander-scented steam, the rice below the fish stained a deep green from the marinade.
Boneless mutton cubes, tenderized in a yogurt-papaya marinade, are layered with saffron-kissed rice and slow-cooked until the meat yields at the mere suggestion of a fork. The dum seal breaks to reveal alternating strata of golden and ivory rice, each grain perfumed with ghee, fried onion, and the heady sweetness of whole mace.
Cubes of paneer, fried to a golden crackle, are layered with saffron-stained rice, fried onions, and a drizzle of kewra water before being sealed for slow dum cooking. The opened pot exhales a perfumed cloud of ghee and rose, the paneer having absorbed the biryani masala until each piece is a tender, spice-saturated jewel.
Tandoor-smoked paneer tikka pieces, their edges still crackling with charred marinade, are layered with saffron rice and sealed for dum, fusing smoky char with the delicate perfume of kewra. The lid lifts to reveal a mosaic of charred paneer and golden rice, the smokiness having infused every grain with the essence of the tandoor.
Jumbo prawns, flash-cooked in a fiery green masala, are layered with fragrant rice and sealed for the briefest dum, just long enough for the seafood juices to perfume every grain. The pot opens to a briny, kewra-scented rush of steam, the prawns curled pink and plump atop rice stained gold and green.
Green chilli-yoghurt paste clings to every vegetable as steam escapes the cracked dough seal. Kacchi style heat rises through the rice in waves, the bottom layer caramelized and crisp against the handi.
Seasonal vegetables — carrots, beans, potatoes — are layered with fragrant basmati and sealed under a dough lid that traps every wisp of saffron and whole-spice aroma. The rice emerges in golden and white stripes, each grain separate and perfumed, the vegetables tender but holding their shape in a warm, ghee-kissed embrace.
Saffron-tinted rice glows amber with dried cherries, golden raisins, and coconut slivers scattered like jewels. Each spoonful is warm and faintly sweet, whole spices releasing their perfume between your teeth.
Coarsely ground mutton keema, studded with whole spices and peas, is layered with long-grained rice and dum-cooked until the minced meat infuses every grain with its savory, aromatic depth. The rice emerges fluffy and fragrant, each forkful delivering crumbles of spiced keema alongside saffron-kissed grains and the crunch of fried onion.
Kewra water perfume drifts from rice layered over vegetables in a light korma gravy, each grain standing tall. The Awadhi way - vegetables braised first, then steamed under basmati until the flavours climb upward.
Cumin seeds crackle in hot ghee before bright green peas tumble in with a sizzle, basmati absorbing every drop. Simple and steaming - whole spices, sweet peas, and buttery rice is all you need.
Sliced mushrooms have turned golden-brown and earthy in the ghee, folded into steaming basmati with bay leaf and cracked pepper. Each grain glistens, the mushrooms soft and savoury between bites of fluffy rice.
Nine gems of colour dot the saffron rice - green peas, golden raisins, red cherries, pale cashews, white paneer cubes. Mildly sweet and warmly spiced, each forkful brings a different texture and colour combination.
Golden-fried paneer cubes sit crisp-edged among cumin-tempered basmati, their surfaces crackly while the centres stay soft. Steam rises off the rice, carrying ghee and whole spice warmth with every scoop.
Ghee-tempered cloves and cinnamon bark perfume the simplest pulao - just bright peas and long white basmati. The pot steams clean and sweet, each grain separate, each pea bursting with a tiny pop of sweetness.
A dome of golden puff pastry conceals the biryani beneath like a royal veil, and when you crack through the crisp, buttery shell, a rush of kewra-and-saffron steam erupts in a fragrant cloud. Beneath, layers of tender mutton and long-grained rice glisten with ghee, each grain carrying the memory of slow, patient dum.
Fresh spinach melts into the spiced rice, staining it deep green while soya chunks soak up every drop of flavour. Green chilli heat builds slow through the earthy, iron-rich warmth of the greens.
Rose water escapes the sealed handi in one perfumed rush, saffron-streaked basmati tumbling over seasonal vegetables. Each layer has dum-cooked in trapped steam, the bottom rice caramelized and crackling against the clay.
Cooked rice hits the smoking flat tawa and sizzles, pav bhaji masala staining every grain turmeric-orange. Vegetables crackle in the high heat, the rice picking up crisp, caramelized edges from the hot iron surface.
Whole garam masala sizzles in ghee - cardamom, clove, cinnamon - before seasonal vegetables and basmati join the pot. The rice steams fragrant and simple, each grain coated in spiced butter, vegetables tender throughout.
Pure saffron basmati glows orange-gold in the serving bowl, each grain stained by threads that cost more than silver. Ghee glistens on the surface, whole spices nestle between the grains, the fragrance warm and honeyed.
Saffron-stained rice glistens like scattered jewels, each grain separate and perfumed with rose water, studded with fried cashews, raisins, and slivers of coconut that crunch softly between the teeth. The sweetness is restrained and elegant, a gentle hum of sugar and cardamom wrapped in the warm, buttery exhale of ghee.
Korma and Gravies 37 dishes
Small, glossy eggplants are slit crosswise and simmered in a sauce of roasted peanut, sesame, and coconut, the tempering of mustard seeds and curry leaves exploding in the hot oil with a sharp, staccato crackle. The tamarind-spiked gravy clings to each eggplant in a thick, mahogany embrace, each bite a complex tapestry of sour, nutty, and deeply savory.
Black lentils and kidney beans, simmered through the night, surrender into a creamy, obsidian-dark stew that bubbles with the slow, meditative rhythm of a heartbeat. A generous swirl of butter melts across the surface in a golden slick, releasing the deep, smoky perfume of charcoal-finished tomato and cream.
Baby potatoes, pricked and deep-fried to a crackly golden shell, are sealed in a pot with a yogurt-cashew gravy and slow-cooked until the sauce penetrates to their very core. The lid lifts to release a cloud of cardamom and bay leaf, and the potatoes yield with a soft, creamy sigh.
Paneer cubes simmer in a pale, cashew-and-melon-seed gravy so smooth it coats each piece like liquid satin, the pot barely whispering as it cooks over the gentlest flame. The aroma is a quiet procession of white pepper, green cardamom, and the faintest suggestion of kewra — elegance distilled.
Chicken pieces drift in a pale ivory lake of crushed almonds and slow-fried onion paste, the gravy so thick it barely ripples when the serving spoon breaks the surface. A faint sizzle escapes as saffron-steeped cream is drizzled over the top, releasing plumes of warm, nutty perfume.
Baby eggplants, slit and stuffed with a paste of roasted peanuts, sesame, and coconut, sizzle in a pool of tempered oil where mustard seeds crackle and curry leaves pop in rapid-fire succession. The tamarind-spiked gravy clings to the glossy purple skin in a thick, mahogany coat, each bite a collision of tangy, nutty, and smoky.
Thick, whipped yogurt is swirled with green chilli, fresh mint, and a tempering of mustard seeds that crackle and pop like tiny fireworks in the hot oil. The result is cool, tangy, and explosively fresh, each spoonful a sharp counterpoint to the rich gravies and biryanis it accompanies.
Chana dal cooked with mutton until the lentils dissolve into the gravy, creating a thick, golden stew that pops and sputters with tamarind-spiked intensity. Curry leaves and dried red chillies crackle in the tempering oil before being poured over the surface in a sizzling, aromatic cascade.
Minced lamb sizzles in a hot kadai until it crumbles dry and golden, then folds into a spiced tomato gravy dotted with bright green peas that pop between your teeth. The rich, aromatic keema clings to each naan tear like warm, meaty velvet.
Baby aubergines slit and stuffed with a paste of peanuts, sesame, and coconut, then simmered in tamarind gravy until the skin wrinkles and the flesh collapses into sweet-sour softness. The peanut crunch hits last.
Baby potatoes, fried whole to a crackly golden shell, are tossed in a tempering of mustard seeds, curry leaves, and dried red chillies that pop and sizzle in a symphony of sound. The tamarind-peanut gravy clings to each potato in a thick, tangy glaze, the crisp skin yielding to a fluffy, spice-soaked interior.
Okra, fried until its edges crackle into crisp, golden spears, is bathed in a tangy peanut-tamarind salan that clings to each pod in a thick, glossy coat. The salan bubbles with slow, meditative pops as the fried okra softens just slightly, maintaining a gentle crunch against the smooth, nutty gravy.
Chana dal slow-cooked with bottle gourd and tamarind until the lentils dissolve into a thick, tangy gravy that clings to biryani rice. The sourness cuts through the richness of the meal like a reset button.
Whole baby potatoes, pricked and deep-fried to a crackly, wrinkled skin, simmer in a thick, peanut-coconut gravy spiked with tamarind that bubbles with slow, sticky pops. The potatoes, sealed in the pot for dum, absorb the tangy, nutty sauce to their very core, each bite collapsing into a warm, spice-saturated mash.
Fish fillets sealed in a clay pot with a tangy, green-chilli-and-mint masala cook in their own steam, the sealed lid trapping every wisp of briny, herbal aroma. The fish emerges flaky and tender, each piece infused with the sharp, vibrant flavors of the marinade, the sauce barely there — just a thin, intensely flavored jus.
Hard-boiled eggs, fried until their surfaces crackle into a golden, blistered skin, simmer in a tangy, tomato-onion gravy darkened with roasted Deccani spices. The curry sputters gently as curry leaves are dropped in, each egg having absorbed the rust-red masala until the yolk itself carries the warmth of chilli and tamarind.
Whole cashews, fried until golden, simmer in a creamy tomato-onion gravy that turns a gorgeous burnt orange as the nuts release their oils into the sauce. The cashews soften just enough to yield with a gentle bite while maintaining their buttery crunch, each one coated in a silky, mildly spiced embrace.
Raw jackfruit pieces simmer in the classic Hyderabadi salan of roasted peanut and sesame, the thick, tawny gravy bubbling with lazy pops as the tamarind sharpens the nutty base. The jackfruit absorbs the tangy-sweet sauce until it mimics the texture of braised meat, each piece tender, fibrous, and deeply savory.
Eggs scramble rough and fast in a sputtering masala of green chillies, onions, and tomatoes, the curds staying large and silky in the spiced oil. Each forkful collapses soft and warm, the egg just barely set around pockets of tangy, sharp gravy.
Toor dal simmered with tamarind until it turns a gorgeous, tangy gold, then hit with a tempering of sizzling curry leaves, mustard seeds, and dried red chillies that crackle and pop in a fragrant explosion. The dal is thin, sour, and deeply comforting, each spoonful a bright, warm wave of tamarind and toasted garlic.
Mutton pieces braised in a rich, poppy-seed-and-coconut gravy, the pot simmering with quiet authority as the sauce reduces to a thick, clinging coat of ivory-gold. Whole spices — clove, green cardamom, cinnamon — stud the surface, releasing their fragrance in warm, intermittent waves as the ladle disturbs them.
Paneer cubes bob in the iconic peanut-sesame-tamarind salan, the thick, tawny gravy simmering with quiet, measured pops that send up wisps of tangy, nutty steam. The paneer has absorbed the sweet-sour-nutty sauce until each bite is a concentrated burst of Deccani flavor against a backdrop of cool, creamy cheese.
Mixed seasonal vegetables simmer in the classic peanut-sesame-tamarind salan, each piece absorbing the thick, nutty-tangy gravy until they glow with a deep, tawny lustre. The tempering crackles — mustard seeds, curry leaves, and dried chillies popping in rapid succession — before being poured over in a sizzling, aromatic finale.
Young jackfruit shreds pull apart like slow-cooked meat under the dum-sealed rice, biryani spices clinging to every fibre. The sealed pot hisses when opened, trapped steam carrying a rich, meaty aroma from fruit alone.
Individual clay pots arrive still radiating oven heat, the earthen walls giving the rice a mineral, smoky depth. Crack the kullad and steam pours out, the biryani inside touched by clay in a way no metal pot can replicate.
Mutton braised in a pale, fragrant sauce of yogurt, fried onions, and melon seeds, the gravy so silky it sheets off the spoon in a slow, glistening cascade. The pot breathes out the genteel perfume of white cardamom and vetiver, each bubble a quiet exhalation of Nawabi refinement.
Slit green chillies bob in a thick, tart peanut-sesame gravy that bubbles slow and brown. Tamarind tang hits first, then the nutty depth, then the chilli heat creeps in - the perfect biryani sidekick.
Overnight-simmered black urad dal has turned velvet-dark and thick, butter pooling in golden rivers on the surface. Charcoal tadka smoke still clings to the bowl, cream swirling white through the deep brown lentils.
Kashmiri red chilli oil floats on a deep crimson gravy, button mushrooms stained dark and glistening. Fennel seeds have bloomed in the sauce, the mushrooms spongy and soaked through with slow-cooked spice warmth.
Hard-boiled eggs wrapped in a spiced lamb mince shell are deep-fried until the coating crackles with a satisfying snap, revealing concentric rings of golden meat and pale egg within. They float in a rich, cashew-cream gravy that simmers with the quiet intensity of cinnamon, clove, and a breath of nutmeg.
Cashew-cream gravy simmers pale and saffron-streaked, nine vegetables and dried fruits floating in the mild, sweet sauce. Every spoonful is a different texture - crunchy cashew, soft paneer, burst cherry, tender carrot.
Saffron-cream gravy coats each paneer cube in a glossy, pale gold sauce that barely moves when tilted. Rich, mild, slow-spiced warmth - the kind of dish that makes you close your eyes on the first bite.
Charred peppers and onion wedges sizzle alongside blistered paneer cubes fresh off the tandoor skewer. Spiced yoghurt marinade has crackled to a dark crust, the paneer inside steaming white and squeaky-soft.
Tandoori paneer drops into a bubbling tomato-onion gravy, cream swirling in and kasuri methi crumbling on top. The charred edges of each cube soften in the sauce, soaking up spice while keeping their smoky crust.
Tomato-cashew gravy turns deep orange as cream ribbons through it, dried fenugreek leaves releasing a bitter-sweet perfume. Paneer cubes float soft and warm in the thick sauce, absorbing richness from every direction.
Light korma gravy clings to vegetables layered under saffron basmati, rose water steaming off the top. The rice has absorbed the cream sauce from below, each grain heavier and richer than plain biryani, slick with spiced butter.
Flaky Malabar paratha shatters into a dozen crisp layers when you tear it, ready to scoop warm cashew-poppy korma. The gravy is thick enough to hold on the bread, mild and creamy, vegetables melting into the sauce.
Breads 18 dishes
The paratha puffs on the tawa with a dramatic whoosh, its keema-stuffed belly ballooning into a golden, flaky dome that crackles under the faintest pressure. Slice it open and a wisp of steam escapes, carrying the scent of minced meat, green chillies, and egg laced with the warmth of shallow-fried ghee.
Hot naan peels off the tandoor wall with a soft tear, butter melting instantly across the blistered, pillowy surface. The charred spots crackle while the centre stays stretchy, warm dough smell filling the air.
Fermented dough puffs and chars in the tandoor's blast, the yeast giving each bread a soft, pillowy chew with a faintly sour tang. Steam escapes as you tear it open, the warm, airy crumb perfect for soaking up thick, creamy gravies.
Minced garlic sizzles and turns golden on the naan surface inside the roaring tandoor, coriander leaves crisping at the edges. Tear a piece and the bread stretches, steam escaping, garlic oil glistening on your fingers.
A thin roti, folded around a filling of spiced egg and keema, sizzles on the tawa as the egg sets and the pastry crisps into a golden, flaky packet that crackles at the edges. The interior is a warm, savory mosaic of set egg, minced meat, and green chilli, releasing the comforting aroma of toasted wheat and turmeric.
Layers of flaky paratha dough, rolled around spiced lamb keema, sizzle on a ghee-slicked tawa until the surface blisters into golden, crackling patches. Tear it open and the keema spills out in a fragrant tumble of cumin, green chilli, and fresh coriander, the meat juices soaking into the buttery layers.
A thick roti stuffed with spiced lamb keema sizzles on the tawa, its surface blistering into charred spots that crackle and pop while the minced filling steams inside. Tear it open and a rush of cumin-scented vapor escapes, the meat glistening with ghee against the soft, wheaty interior.
A thick, pillowy naan, charred in the tandoor with dramatic blisters that crackle like burnt sugar, arrives still smoking and glistening with a brush of butter. The bread is engineered to be torn and dunked, its soft, stretchy interior soaking up rich curries while the charred crust provides a satisfying, carbon-tinged crunch.
The dough is stretched paper-thin and draped over an inverted wok, cooking in seconds to a translucent, supple sheet that rustles like fine cloth when folded. It arrives warm and whisper-soft, the perfect vessel for scooping thick Hyderabadi gravies, its wheaty sweetness a quiet counterpoint to bold spice.
The naan slaps against the scorching tandoor wall with a satisfying thwack, its keema-stuffed belly slowly blistering into charred bubbles that pop with tiny sighs of steam. Rip it open and spiced lamb mince tumbles out in a fragrant avalanche, glistening with ghee and studded with crisp fried onion.
Fermented dough puffs soft in the tandoor, yeast and warm milk giving it a faintly sweet, pillowy rise. Old Delhi bread - tear it open and the inside is airy, slightly sour, steaming with each pull.
Stuffed kulcha blisters in the tandoor, the refined flour crust puffing while spiced potato or paneer melts inside. Press the top and it crackles, the filling oozing warm and soft through every crack in the golden shell.
The kulcha emerges from the tandoor with a blistered, golden crown, its soft interior pillowy enough to soak up every drop of the rich nihari broth it's destined to meet. Tear it and the crackle of the crust gives way to a cottony heart that exhales the gentle warmth of butter and nigella seeds.
Paper-thin dough spins through the air and lands on the inverted tawa, cooking in seconds to a translucent sheet. Fold after fold after fold - it arrives looking like a silk handkerchief, so thin light passes through.
Saffron-stained flatbread emerges from the clay oven glowing warm gold, its surface cracked and brushed with ghee. Tear into it and the milk-rich dough is soft, faintly sweet, saffron perfume rising from each piece.
Layered whole wheat dough crisps in the tandoor, ghee bubbling between each flaky sheet. Pull apart and the layers separate with a crunch, steam escaping from between golden, butter-soaked strata.
Thin wheat dough slaps onto the scorching tandoor wall and puffs, charring to dark spots in seconds. It peels off with a soft rip, the inside still steaming, edges lightly blackened and crackling.
Dozens of ghee-folded layers shatter when you press the paratha, flakes scattering across the plate like golden confetti. Each layer is crisp, paper-thin, and glistening with clarified butter - audibly crunchy with every bite.
Desserts 16 dishes
Chilled clay cups hold a trembling, set custard of ground rice, saffron, and slow-reduced milk. Scrape the surface and it gives way to a cool, creamy, cardamom-scented pudding with a faint clay earthiness underneath.
Crisp fried bread crackles under a thick blanket of warm rabdi, saffron strands glowing orange on the surface. Sliced pistachios crunch green against the creamy white, each bite a collision of crisp base and silky custard.
Deep-fried bread slices soak in warm saffron-cardamom milk until they turn soft and golden, syrup pooling at the edges. Squeeze one and warm, sweet, saffron-orange liquid oozes out, topped with crunchy toasted nuts.
Ground rice simmered in slow-reduced milk sets into a trembling, porcelain-white custard in shallow clay cups, its surface adorned with slivers of pistachio and a dusting of saffron that glows like tiny embers. Each spoonful is cool, silky, and barely sweet, finishing with the earthy whisper of the terracotta it was set in.
Dark brown khoya balls bob in warm rose-cardamom syrup, their fried surfaces glistening and cracked. Bite into one and hot sugar syrup gushes from the spongy centre, rose water flooding your mouth.
Ground rice dissolves into slow-simmered milk until it sets into a trembling, cool custard in shallow clay bowls, their rims dusted with crushed pistachios. Each cold spoonful melts on the tongue with the gentle sweetness of cardamom and the earthy chill of terracotta.
Bottle gourd, grated and simmered in milk until the vegetable dissolves into a pale, trembling custard, is set in earthen bowls with a sprinkle of crushed pistachio and edible silver leaf. Each cool spoonful is silky, faintly vegetal, and sweetly perfumed with cardamom and rose — a dessert so subtle it whispers rather than shouts.
Vermicelli noodles are roasted in ghee until they crackle and turn a deep, caramel gold, then simmered in sweetened milk until they soften into silky, slurpable strands. Cardamom, saffron, and toasted cashews float through the warm, milky broth, each spoonful a delicate tangle of sweet, nutty, and floral.
Sweet saffron rice glistens in jewel tones of yellow and orange, each grain separate and coated in sugar syrup, studded with fried cashews, raisins, and candied cherries that crunch softly. The cardamom and rose water perfume rises in gentle waves, each spoonful a sweet, buttery celebration of Nizam-era festivity.
Spirals of fermented batter hit the hot oil with a violent sizzle, turning crisp and deep orange in seconds. Dunk one in thick, chilled rabdi and the crunch meets cold, sweet, cardamom-thickened milk.
Dense frozen kulfi melts slow over slippery vermicelli and swollen basil seeds, rose syrup bleeding pink through the glass. Scrape the kulfi with your spoon and it curls like cold butter, intensely milky and saffron-sweet.
Stone-ground rice simmered in slow-reduced milk until it thickens into a trembling, ivory custard, set in shallow earthen bowls that lend a faint, mineral earthiness to each cool spoonful. Saffron threads bloom across the surface like tiny golden rivers, and the first bite carries the quiet sweetness of cardamom and rose.
This iconic Hyderabadi cookie, barely sweet and richly buttery, shatters with an audible snap into a shower of sandy, crumbly fragments the moment you bite down. The flavor is pure, toasted ghee and a whisper of cardamom, each piece leaving a trail of golden crumbs and a warm, lingering butterscotch finish.
Stewed apricots collapse into a thick, amber compote, their syrup reduced to a sticky, tart-sweet glaze. Cold malai or vanilla ice cream melts on contact, pooling white against the warm, deep-orange fruit.
Milk, reduced to half its volume over hours of patient stirring, thickens into a creamy, ivory-gold pudding studded with plump raisins and slivered almonds that softly crunch. Each spoonful is cool and impossibly rich, laced with the delicate perfume of saffron strands that bleed their color in slow, golden rivulets.
Whole milk reduced for hours until thick and pale gold, saffron threads blooming crimson in the warm pudding. Charoli nuts and almond slivers float on the surface, each spoonful dense with slow-cooked, caramelized sweetness.
Shorba 14 dishes
Whisked egg hits the simmering mutton stock and blooms into golden ribbons, coriander leaves floating on the steaming surface. Each sip is bone-broth rich, the egg silky and warm, spice-heat building at the back of the throat.
Bone-in chicken poaches gently in a delicate, clear broth infused with whole mace, peppercorn, and a single stick of cinnamon, the surface trembling with a quiet, reflective calm. Sip the broth and it coats the palate in a warm, clean wave of pure chicken essence brightened by a squeeze of fresh lime.
Trotters simmer through the night until the broth turns thick and gelatinous, a slow collagen-rich pour that coats the bowl like liquid silk. The first sip is deep and meaty, laced with ginger and black cardamom, warming from throat to chest.
Mutton bones simmered overnight until the marrow melts into a broth so thick it wobbles in the bowl. Served scalding with fried onions and a torn mint leaf that wilts on contact. The first sip fills your chest with heat.
Bone marrow broth, strained to crystal clarity but rich with dissolved collagen, is served steaming in small bowls that fog with aromatic vapor the moment the lid lifts. Each sip clings to the palate in a warm, gelatinous embrace, the pepper and whole spice building a gentle fire that warms from the inside out.
Tamarind pulp thinned with tomato water and tempered with mustard seeds, curry leaves, and whole dried red chillies that float on the surface like warning flags. The sourness hits first, the heat creeps in three seconds later.
A tangy tomato broth thickened with roasted peanuts and tamarind, simmering with a gentle rhythm of soft pops as curry leaves and dried chillies sizzle in the tempering oil. Each sip is thin, sour, and deeply warming, the peanut lending a subtle creaminess that rounds out the tomato's bright acidity.
Blanched almonds ground to milk, simmered with whole cardamom and a whisper of saffron until the broth turns ivory. Each spoonful coats your tongue with quiet richness, the aftertaste blooming warm and nutty ten seconds after you swallow.
Clear golden chicken broth steams in the bowl, whole peppercorns and ginger slices visible in the amber liquid. Squeeze lime and the surface ripples, citrus cutting through the deep, slow-simmered poultry warmth.
Overnight-simmered goat trotters have given up their collagen, turning the broth thick, sticky, and deep amber. Sip it and it coats your lips like warm gelatin, whole spice heat simmering underneath the rich, bony depth.
A refined, brothier cousin of korma, where mutton simmers with whole spices in a thin, clarified gravy that shimmers like pale topaz under lamplight. The fragrance is architectural — layers of bay leaf, cinnamon, and stone flower building quietly with each gentle bubble.
Trotters slow-cooked until the collagen melts into a trembling, golden broth that coats the back of a spoon like liquid silk. Each sip arrives with the hushed warmth of ginger, the murmur of cracked pepper, and a finish so gelatinous it clings to your lips in a whisper.
Tomato-red broth simmers with mutton stock and red chilli, served scalding hot with a crisp papad shard on top. The papad cracks when you push it under the surface, the fiery soup bubbling up around the fragments.
Pale, clear bone broth steams with fennel and black cardamom, the lightest way to start an Awadhi feast. Dry ginger warms the broth from within, each sip clean and aromatic, the mutton flavour gentle and deep.
Beverages 26 dishes
Crushed phalsa berries turn the water a deep purple-black, tart and earthy and impossible to mistake for anything else. A Jama Masjid summer staple that stains your lips and leaves a berry-sharp tang on the tongue.
Desi gulab petals slow-cooked with sugar dissolve into a rose-pink syrup that perfumes the glass before you pour. Each sip floods the palate with a clean, floral sweetness that fades into a cooling finish.
Green tea leaves aerated with milk and a pinch of baking soda turn the cup a startling rose-pink. The first sip is salty-sweet and buttery, a Deccani inheritance from Kashmiri migrants that tastes like no other chai in India.
Whole saffron strands, crushed almonds, cinnamon bark, and cardamom steep in green tea until the cup glows amber-gold. No milk, no sugar, just the clean, warm complexity of a Mughal court nightcap.
Screwpine flower water meets sugar syrup in a glass that smells like a Lucknowi wedding hall in full bloom. The first sip is perfumed and almost savory, the finish clean and cooling.
Dried apricots soaked overnight, cooked to a pulp, and strained into a tart amber syrup that catches the light. Each sip balances the fruit's natural sourness against a restrained sweetness, finishing with a stone-fruit depth.
Rose-scented milk pools around vermicelli strands and swollen basil seeds while a slab of dense kulfi melts slowly into the glass. You drink and eat in the same sip, the falooda slipping cold and slick against the creamy, saffron-streaked kulfi.
Ground almonds, fennel, rose petals, saffron, and poppy seeds churn into cold milk until the glass turns a speckled ivory-gold. The first sip is nutty and floral, the cardamom and black pepper arriving on the finish like a slow afterburn.
Slow-reduced milk thinned back to a drinkable consistency, chilled, and laced with saffron and crushed pistachios. The texture is halfway between cream and milk, each sip leaving a thin, sweet film on the lips.
The imperial-kitchen version loads cold milk with saffron, melon seed paste, ground almonds, fennel, and poppy seeds until the glass is almost a meal. Each sip is dense, spiced, and golden, the black pepper arriving late like a palace guard.
Raw mango pulp roasted and blended with cumin, mint, and black salt into a sharp, green drink that puckers the mouth and then cools it. The Old Delhi version hits harder with roasted cumin than the standard recipe.
Blanched almonds ground to a paste simmer in milk with saffron until the liquid turns the colour of old gold. Each mouthful is thick, nutty, and fragrant, the cardamom cracking through the cream like a quiet announcement.
Salted buttermilk churned with roasted cumin and dried mint until it froths thin and sharp. Served alongside biryani and kebabs as a digestive, each sip cutting through the richness like a cold, sour blade.
Thick curd churned with green cardamom until it froths, then crowned with crushed charoli nuts that pop between your teeth. Creamier and denser than most Indian lassis, the cardamom perfume rising from the glass before you lift it.
Green tea leaves steep with saffron, cinnamon, and cardamom until the cup turns a pale gold. Lighter than its Kashmiri parent, this Deccani version works as a digestif after a heavy biryani, the spices cutting through the richness.
Tamarind concentrate meets jaggery, roasted cumin, and black salt in a glass that swings between sour, sweet, and mineral in a single mouthful. The Deccani version leans harder into the tartness than any North Indian counterpart.
Cumin, mint, ginger, black pepper, and asafoetida dissolve into cold water that tastes like the first bite of a chaat compressed into liquid form. Served before the kebabs arrive, it wakes the palate and clears the way.
Barley grains boiled, strained, and sweetened with lemon and sugar into a cloudy, pale drink that Unani healers prescribed for centuries. Light-bodied and faintly grainy, it cools from the inside out.
Black carrots and mustard seeds ferment in salted water for days until the liquid turns a deep maroon and smells sharp and alive. Each sip is pungent, sour, and probiotic, the mustard bite arriving after the carrot sweetness fades.
Hot milk steeped with saffron strands and a pinch of black pepper until the surface turns gold and the kitchen smells like a spice market at dusk. Simpler than badam milk, the saffron doing all the talking.
Vetiver root extract stains the water a deep emerald green and fills each mouthful with an earthy, rain-soaked coolness. The sweetness stays low, letting the khus fragrance linger on the tongue like wet clay after the first monsoon shower.
Thin-bodied curd churned with sugar and a whisper of kewra water pours out pale and frothy. The Awadhi version is lighter than its Punjabi cousin, the floral note replacing the heavy cream.
Lemon juice, black salt, roasted cumin, and chaat masala crash together in cold water that fizzes with spice on the tongue. The Delhi version leans harder into the roasted cumin than any other, the smokiness cutting the citrus.
Cold milk blushes pink as Rooh Afza syrup swirls through it, the rose and khus flavours merging with the cream into a drink that tastes like a Ramadan iftar table smells. Simple, sweet, and deeply nostalgic.
Basil seeds swell into translucent pearls that slide through lemon-sweetened water like tiny, gel-coated bubbles. The texture is half the point, the seeds popping soft against the teeth while the citrus does the cooling.
Chandan paste dissolves into sweetened water, turning the glass a pale, milky white with a woody fragrance that climbs through the nose. Each sip leaves a sandalwood calm on the palate, cool and dry.
The dum biryani purdah
Sheffy performs the full purdah ceremony at your event. Raw marinated meat and par-cooked rice steam together inside a dough-sealed handi for 45 minutes until the layers fuse on their own. The handi arrives sealed, the team cracks it open in front of guests, and saffron steam hits the table. That is what dum biryani means: a sealed cooking method, not a reheated tray.
Seal the Handi
Raw marinated meat is layered with par-cooked saffron rice, fried onions, and whole spices inside a copper handi. The rim is sealed with fresh wheat dough so no steam escapes. This locks in the aromatic oils that define real dum biryani.
Slow Dum (45 min)
The sealed handi sits on low coal heat for 45 minutes. The meat cooks in its own juices, the rice absorbs the rising steam, and the layers fuse without stirring. Sheffy times the dum to break within 5 minutes of service.
Break the Seal at Table
The handi arrives at the buffet or guest table still sealed. The serving team cracks the dough crust in front of guests, releasing a visible plume of saffron-scented steam. This moment is why Mughlai catering exists.
Guests with dietary needs? Tell Sheffy during booking.
Sheffy applies dietary restrictions at the kitchen level from scratch, whether your guest list includes low-spice preferences or needs halal certification confirmed. It is not a last-minute substitution on the day of the event.
Low Spice
Heat dialled down by 60% without losing aromatic complexity. Sheffy reduces chilli but keeps cardamom, mace, and saffron at full strength.
Halal
All non-veg Mughlai kitchens in Sheffy's network use halal-certified meat by default. Certificate available on request before the event.
You share the event date, guest count, and cuisine preferences. Here is everything Sheffy manages after that
Sheffy runs a structured protocol from booking to breakdown instead.
Site recce
Sheffy visits the venue, assesses the kitchen setup and layout, and confirms logistics for your guest count and event format.
Event timeline
Sheffy builds a detailed event timeline covering arrival, setup, service windows, live station slots, and breakdown, with every minute planned in advance.
Coordinator assigned
A dedicated event coordinator is your single point of contact. They manage kitchen, servers, and timeline from setup to breakdown.
On-site managed
Sheffy’s team arrives, sets up buffet stations and live counters, cooks fresh on-site, serves guests, and manages the entire service. Polished chafing dishes at every station, napkins folded at each setting, back-of-house hidden from guests.
Kitchen scored
After every event, the kitchen is rated across 5 dimensions. Your feedback directly determines their next booking.
Scored after every event: Sheffy replaces kitchens that slip
You rate the kitchen on taste, freshness, portions, punctuality, and cleanup after your event. High scorers earn more bookings, and kitchens that fall below the threshold are removed from the roster. That score determines whether the kitchen keeps its spot or gets replaced. The scoring system handles quality tracking, so you do not chase up on standards across vendors. Every kitchen is FSSAI-certified, a full serving team is included with every booking, and every order includes a built-in food buffer so your last guest eats the same portions as your first.
Mughlai catering across all of Noida
Sheffy serves mughlai catering across all of Noida. Neighbourhoods, sectors, and localities across Noida. Sheffy's kitchen team arrives at your venue with all ingredients, cooks fresh on-site, serves your guests, and handles complete cleanup.
The areas listed are examples of where Sheffy has served mughlai catering. Sheffy operates across all of Noida, from established sectors to newly developed areas. Whether your venue is in Cyber City or newer sectors, Sheffy’s team arrives with everything needed.
Mughlai Catering in Noida questions
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Mughlai is one specific tradition within the broad North Indian label, which covers Punjabi, Rajasthani, Lucknowi, Kashmiri, Delhi, and UP cooking styles. Mughlai focuses on slow-cooked meats, sealed dum cooking, hand-ground spice pastes, and Persian-influenced desserts. When WedMeGood or a caterer lists 'North Indian / Mughlai' as one category, they are conflating six styles into one. Sheffy separates them because the techniques and pantries are different.
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Each handi serves 20 to 30 plates and is sealed individually with fresh dough. Multiple handis are used, not one giant pot. The kitchen team staggers the dum timing so handis crack open fresh throughout the event rather than all at once. The last guest gets the same sealed-handi biryani as the first, not reheated rice from a holding tray.
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With 65 specialist kitchens in Sheffy's network, you get a Mughlai kitchen and a separate kitchen for any other cuisine at the same event. Both teams cook in parallel, coordinated by Sheffy: one handles kebabs, biryani, and korma while the other handles your second cuisine. You see one buffet with separate counters, and Sheffy manages the timing and service across both teams.
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Awadhi (Lucknowi) Mughlai is built on white gravies, subtle aromatics, and slow-braised meats with a base of yoghurt, cashew, and khus khus. Delhi Mughlai layers charcoal smoke, tandoor char, and heavier cream-butter gravies over a tomato-and-onion base. Both are authentic Mughlai, but they taste nothing alike. Sheffy routes your order to the correct school based on your menu selection.
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Veg Mughlai starts at Rs 220 per plate for 20 or more guests. Non-veg starts at Rs 280. A full biryani spread with dum ceremony starts at Rs 350. Add-ons like a live kebab counter cost Rs 4,500 per counter and a dum biryani counter costs Rs 5,000. Pricing includes food, kitchen team, transport within 15 km of Noida, and cleanup. No hidden service charges or hourly staff fees.
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Dedicated Hyderabadi kitchens in Sheffy's network cook kacchi biryani (raw meat layered with rice and cooked on dum), haleem, mirchi ka salan, and Hyderabadi desserts. A distinct rice variety, a separate masala blend, and longer dum timing set the Hyderabadi kitchen apart rather than borrowing from Awadhi or Delhi methods. If you want Hyderabadi biryani specifically, Sheffy routes to that kitchen rather than asking a North Indian cook to attempt it.
