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Name Image Description Vegetarian/ Non-Vegetarian Machher Jhol: Fish with potol, tomato, chillies, ginger and garlic from Assam: Non-Vegetarian [1]: Pork jarpaa jurpie
Naan Qalia is a dish that originates from Aurangabad, in India. It is a concoction of mutton and a variety of spices. Naan is a bread made in a tandoor (hot furnace), while khaliya is a mixture of mutton or beef and various spices.
Saag also spelled sag or saga, is an Indian cuisine leafy vegetable dish eaten with bread, such as roti or naan, [1] [2] or in some regions with rice.Saag can be made from mustard greens, collard greens, basella or finely chopped broccoli along with added spices and sometimes other ingredients, such as chhena.
Nihari is a traditional dish among the Indian Muslim communities of Lucknow, Delhi, and Bhopal. Following the partition of India in 1947, many Urdu-speaking Muslims from northern India migrated to Karachi in West Pakistan and Dhaka in East Pakistan, and established a number of restaurants serving the
Papri chaat served with boiled potato, coriander chutney, tamarind chutney, yogurt and topped with sev Papri chaat (right) with dal and empanadas. Papri chaat is traditionally prepared using crisp fried dough wafers known as papri, along with boiled chickpeas, boiled potatoes, dahi (yogurt) and tamarind chutney [1] [6] and topped with chat masala and sev.
The earliest mention of naan in the region comes from the memoirs of Indo-Persian Sufi poet Amir Khusrau living in India during the 1300s AD. Khusrau mentions two kinds of naan eaten by Muslim nobles; Naan-e-Tunuk and Naan-e-Tanuri. Naan-e-Tunuk was a light or thin bread, while Naan-e-Tanuri was a heavy bread and was baked in the tandoor. [9]
Bhatura (also known as batoora, bhatoora, batura, or pathora) (Hindi: भटूरा, Punjabi: ਭਟੂਰਾ) is a fluffy deep-fried leavened sourdough bread originating from the Indian subcontinent. [1] It is commonly served as a midday meal or a breakfast dish in northern and eastern India. [1]
Kulcha is made from maida flour, water, a pinch of salt and a leavening agent (yeast, sourdough or old kulcha dough), mixed together by hand to make a soft dough. This dough is covered with a wet cloth and left to rest for an hour or so in a warm place. The result is a slight leavening of the dough but not much.