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Pakistani cuisine (Urdu: پاکستانی پکوان, romanized: pākistānī pakwān) can be characterized as a blend of regional cooking styles and flavours from across South, Central and Western Asia. Pakistani cuisine is influenced by Persian, Indian, and Arab cuisine. The cuisine of Pakistan also maintains certain Mughal influences within ...
Pulao. Basmati rice with mutton, beef, or chicken. Zeera rice. Steamed rice, Zeera (cumin), Zeera powder, ginger-garlic paste, salt, oil, chana dal and red chillies. Zarda. Sugar, candied fruit. Sweet dish of rice cooked in vegetable oil or butter, chopped candied fruit and/or dried fruit, nuts, and spices.
Dal makhani. Abgooshth – lamb and lentil soup [2] Chakna – tripe stew with chunks of liver and kidneys. Shorva – Chorba (called shorba in Pakistan) [3] is one of various kinds of soup or stew found in national cuisines across the Balkans, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and the Middle East. Haleem – prepared with wheat, barley, chicken ...
Chapli kebab or chapli kabab (Pashto: چپلي کباب) [α] is a Pashtun -style minced kebab, usually made from ground beef, mutton or chicken with various spices in the shape of a patty. The chapli kabab originates from Peshawar in Pakistan. [1][6][3] The Peshawari chapli kabab is made with beef and is a popular street food throughout South ...
Mustard is widely grown in the region for the plant's leaves, seeds and seed oil. It is harvested in winter and spring, making sarson ka saag a popular warming dish in the cooler months. [13] [14] [15] There are many recipes for the dish, usually cooking the leaves in oil or clarified butter [16] with spices such as garlic, ginger and chilli ...
Kata-kat (Urdu: کٹاکٹ) or taka-tak (Urdu: ٹکاٹک) is a meat dish [1][2] popular throughout Pakistan. It is a dish originating from Karachi, Pakistan made from offal (i.e., a mixture of various meat organs), including testicles, brain, kidney, heart, liver, lungs and lamb chops in butter. The dish's name is an onomatopoeia from the ...
Sajji (Balochi and Urdu: سجی) is a Balochi 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. It is served with rice that is cooked inside the animal, which is baked in an oven ...
Most Pashtun dishes are traditionally non-spicy. Pashtun cuisine (Pashto: پښتنۍ خواړه) refers to the cuisine of the Pashtun people and is covered under both Afghan and Pakistani cuisines. It is largely based on meat dishes including mutton, beef, chicken, and fish as well as rice and some other vegetables. [1]