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Hyderabadi biryani (also known as Hyderabadi dum biryani) is a style of biryani originating from Hyderabad, India made with basmati rice and meat (mostly goat meat). Originating in the kitchens of the Nizam of Hyderabad , it combines elements of Hyderabadi and Mughlai cuisines.
Beef biryani. Kalyani biryani is a beef biryani from the former state of Hyderabad Deccan. [55] Also known as the "poor man's" Hyderabadi biryani, Kalyani biryani is made from small cubes of buffalo meat or cow meat. [56] [57] The meat is flavoured with ginger, garlic, turmeric, red chili, cumin, coriander powder, and lots of onion and tomato.
Nawabi chicken dum biryani Biryani is widely popular in Awadhi cuisine. When cooking it, pulao is first made by cooking basmati rice in ghee with warm, aromatic spices and then layered with a type of meat curry or marinade (depending on the type of biryani), sealed, and cooked over low heat until done.
It is made with basmati rice, spices and goat meat. Popular variations use chicken instead of goat meat. One form Hyderabadi biryani is the kachay gosht ki biryani or the dum biryani, where the goat meat is marinated and cooked along with the rice. It is left on a slow fire or dum for a fragrant and aromatic flavour. [23]
The Kalyani biryani is made with small cubes of beef, regular spices, onions and many tomatoes. It has a distinct tomato, jeera (cumin), dhania (coriander) flavour. [21] Tahari, made by the Hyderabadi Muslims is a rice and meat dish. Unlike biryani in which rice is precooked and then layered with meat, rice in tahari is cooked in meat.
It is a symbol of the cultural amalgamation of Mughal and Malabari cuisines. The Mughals brought the cuisine of biryani from Samarkand, and later variations of biryani developed in different parts of India. Thalassery biryani may have come to the region because of the influence of the Muslim rulers of Mysore and Arkot. [30]
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The popular Indian subcontinental dish of Biryani as well as the Afghan dish of Biryan use Gosht as a primary ingredient. [2] Some dishes include: Bhuna gosht, a curry with a thick, reduced sauce; Karahi or Kadhai gosht, cooked in a traditional round-sided pot; Raan gosht, roasted leg of mutton; Dal gosht, with lentils or peas; Nihari gosht, a ...