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  2. Sajji - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sajji

    Sajji (Balochi and Urdu: سجی) is a Pakistani dish originating from the Balochistan province of Pakistan. [1] [2] Traditional and authentic sajji consists of lamb, marinated only in salt with a few spices. Sajji is considered done when it is at the 'rare' stage.

  3. Pasanda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pasanda

    Pasanda (Urdu: پسندہ, Hindi: पसन्दा), also called Parche (Urdu: پارچے, Hindi: पारचे), is a popular dish from the Indian subcontinent, notably North India, Rampur, Hyderabadi and Pakistani, derived from a meal served in the court of the Mughal emperors.

  4. Rogan josh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogan_josh

    Rogan josh consists of pieces of lamb or mutton braised with a gravy flavoured with garlic, ginger and aromatic spices (clove, bay leaves, cardamom, and cinnamon), and in some versions incorporating onions or yoghurt. [8] After initial braising, the dish may be finished using the dampokhtak slow-cooking technique. [9]

  5. Gosht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gosht

    The word stems from the Persian word gosht گوشت, meaning "meat" or "flesh", especially that of goat. [1] In India, most gosht dishes include goat or mutton. In India, the term mutton is more likely to refer to the meat of a goat rather than that of an adult sheep, as it does elsewhere in the English-speaking world.

  6. Nihari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nihari

    Nihari (Hindi: निहारी; Bengali: নিহারী; Urdu: نہاری) is a stew originating in Lucknow, the capital of 18th-century Awadh under the Mughal Empire in the Indian subcontinent. It consists of slow-cooked meat, mainly a shank cut of beef, lamb and mutton, or goat meat, as well as chicken and bone marrow.

  7. Kokoretsi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kokoretsi

    A dish identical to modern kokoretsi is first attested in the cuisine of the Byzantines. [1] [2] They called it πλεκτήν (plektín), κοιλιόχορδα (koilióchorda), or χορδόκοιλα (chordókoila); the latter two are preserved with the meaning of wrapped intestines in the Greek idioms of Corfu as τσοιλίχουρδα (tsoilíchourda), of Plovdiv as χορδόκοιλα ...

  8. Yahni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahni

    lamb meat or mutton meat Media: Yakhni Yakhni ( Persian : یخنی , [ 1 ] Arabic : يخني , Urdu : یخنی , Hindi : यख़नी , Greek : γιαχνί [ 2 ] ), yahni ( Turkish [ 3 ] ), or yahniya ( Bulgarian : яхния , Serbian , Macedonian : јанија ), jahni ( Albanian [ 4 ] ) is a class of dishes traditionally prepared in a ...

  9. Pashtun cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pashtun_cuisine

    Chopan Kabab (lamb chops, skewered and grilled on charcoal) Dodai (a flat bread made in vertical clay ovens called Tanoor in Pashto, Tandoor in Urdu/Hindi) Shomleh/Shlombeh, also known as "Triwai" in Kabul (a drink made by mixing yogurt with water and shaking it extensively before adding optional dried mint leaves and a small amount of salt)