Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (2024)

From remote tribal villages to frenzied capital cities, in India, food is life's organizing principle. For our August/September 2014 special India issue, we traversed the massive subcontinent, dipping into restaurants, markets, and homes to discover dishes both classic and new. From chutneys to flatbreads to regional specialties like Goa's pork vindaloo and Hyderabad's unique biryani, here are all the recipes from issue #167.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (1)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (2)

Sweet Yogurt with Saffron and Pistachios (Shrikhand)

Pistachios, cardamom seeds, and saffron are mixed into yogurt to make this cool and creamy dessert.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (3)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (4)

Gulab Jamun (Cardamom Syrup-Soaked Donuts)

Khoya, a rich curd made by reducing milk for several hours, forms the base for these syrup-soaked confections.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (5)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (6)

This sweet riff on the Indian yogurt drinks known as lassis comes from Lingaraj Lassi, a popular refreshment stand in Bhubaneshwar in the east Indian state of Odisha. Its honeyed taste and caramel hue come from the sugars in the milk, which caramelize as the milk reduces, deepening and intensifying it in color and flavor.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (7)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (8)

Odisha Shrimp Curry

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (9)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (10)

Lentil Stew with Coconut (Dalma)

In the east Indian state of Odisha, this lentil stew, fragrant with coconut and enriched with silky, thinly sliced onions and long-simmered sweet potatoes, is an everyday staple.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (11)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (12)

Garam Masala

There are thousands of variations on garam masala, but Keralan versions tend to emphasize star anise and cardamom.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (13)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (14)

Bengali-Style Fish Stew (Maacher Jhol)

No Bengali meal is complete without maacher jhol, fish simmered in a tomato-based curry scented with mustard oil and the region’s distinctive mix of five spices: toasted fenugreek, nigella, cumin, black mustard, and fennel seeds.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (15)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (16)

Spicy Lemon Pickle

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (17)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (18)

Sevaya Kheer (Vermicelli Milk Pudding)

Home cook Yamini Joshi gave us the recipe for this Punjabi dessert of cardamom-spiced milk bolstered by toasted vermicelli noodles, dried fruit, and nuts.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (19)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (20)

Spicy Cabbage-and-Potato Curry (Bund Gobhi Aur Aloo Ki Subzi)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (21)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (22)

Spicy Pineapple Yogurt (Kaitha Chaka Pachadi)

This zippy raita gets its punch from green Thai chiles and its sweetness from pineapple. A piquant mixture of black mustard seeds, dried red chiles, and curry leaves lends the sauce an earthy spice. Get the recipe for Spicy Pineapple Yogurt (Kaitha Chaka Pachadi) »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (23)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (24)

Coconut-Cilantro Chutney (Hara Dhaniya Ki Chutney)

This Indian chutney uses an array of ingredients, blending yellow split peas with coconut, cilantro, ginger, and chile.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (25)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (26)

Curry Leaf Chutney (Karipatta Chutney)

This fragrant sauce is great with dosas, the fermented lentil and rice crêpes common in south India. It’s dead simple to make, using just a few vibrant ingredients to deliver big flavor: Fresh curry leaves form the base, with sweetness from jaggery (an unrefined sugar), spice from ginger, and sourness from tamarind.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (27)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (28)

Cucumber-Tomato Yogurt

This basic raita is a cooling counterpoint to fiery foods, thanks to its foundation of full-fat yogurt, cucumber, and mint. Plum tomatoes add a hint of acid, Thai chiles heat, and cumin a slight earthiness.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (29)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (30)

Steamed Banana-Wrapped Fish (Patra ni Muchchi)

Descended from Persian Zoroastrians—followers of the prophet Zoroaster who began emigrating to India around the eighth century—Parsis in India have their own distinct food. This Parsi fish dish, commonly featured at weddings, is adapted from a recipe in Raghavan Iyer’s 660 Curries (Workman, 2008). White-fleshed fish is bathed in a spiced coconut-tamarind sauce and steamed until tender in fragrant banana leaves.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (31)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (32)

Goanese Pork Vindaloo

Goan Pork Vindaloo Curry »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (35)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (36)

Spiced Mango Drink

In early spring, the first of the season’s unripe mangoes are eagerly anticipated in India. Green, unripe mangoes, with their tart flavor and rich pectins, are used to add tang to all sorts of dishes, from dals to desserts. Here, they are boiled until tender and blended with sweet jaggery, pungent black salt, asafoetida, and other spices in a thirst-quenching north Indian drink.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (37)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (38)

Hyderabadi-Style Lentil Stew (Khatti Dal)

Hyderabadi-Style Lentil Stew (Khatti Dal)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (39)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (40)

Dosas (South Indian Fermented Lentil and Rice Crêpes)

Dosas (South Indian Fermented Lentil and Rice Crêpes)

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (41)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (42)

Red Lentils with Green Mango (Malika Masoor Dal)

In early spring, green, unripe mangoes are a featured ingredient in the daily menu at Raja Sulaiman Khan’s home in Lucknow, India. Here, amchoor—dried green mango—adds sour pungency to creamy lentils.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (43)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (44)

Chettinad Pepper Chicken (Koli Milagu Masala)

This richly spiced chicken dish is adapted from a recipe in Madhur Jaffrey’s classic Flavors of India (West 175 Publishing, 1995). According to Jaffrey, “What gives this a very special southern flavor is the use of fennel seeds, curry leaves, and, of course, the pulse (legume) urad dal. This is definitely a dish you will want to make very frequently.” We couldn’t agree more. Get the recipe for Chettinad Pepper Chicken »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (45)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (46)

Tamil-Style Sweet Rice Pudding

Sakkarai Pongal, Tamil-Style Rice Pudding »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (47)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (48)

Telangana-Style Curried Chicken Stew

Carved out of ten former districts of Andhra Pradesh, Telangan officially became India’s 29th state in June 2014. For this eponymous dish from Telangana home cook Padma Reddy, the skin is removed from the chicken to allow the flavors of the marinade—coconut, lime, garlic, ginger, cardamom, mace and more—to penetrate. Get the recipe for Telangana-Style Curried Chicken Stew »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (49)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (50)

Throughout India, creamy, chilled lassis are the go-to beverage for cooling off during the warmer months. To make them, milk or water-thinned yogurt is blended with ingredients such as strawberries or ripe mangoes. In the South India city of Hyderabad, the most popular lassi is made with Rooh Afza, a rose-scented syrup made with botanicals and sugar.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (51)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (52)

Writer VK Sreelesh’s in-laws live in the south Indian state of Kerala, along the Malabar Coast, where people’s diets are heavily influenced by the area’s abundant supply of seafood. One of his favorite dishes is this fried bullseye fish, seasoned with turmeric and chile powder and fried in coconut oil. While small bullseye fish or sardines are traditionally used, salmon, shrimp, or snapper, as we’ve used here, also work.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (53)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (54)

Mango Lassi

Throughout India, creamy, chilled lassis are the go-to beverage for cooling off during the warmer months. To make them, milk or water-thinned yogurt is blended with ingredients such as Rooh Afza, a scarlet-colored syrup tasting of rose petals and pine, or—for this recipe—ripe mangoes, resulting in a refreshing drink that’s as thick as a milkshake.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (55)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (56)

Mint and Green Mango Chutney

Green mango and aromatic mint combine to delicious effect for this tart, refreshing Indian purée. Green Thai chiles lend a spicy note, while cumin and the garlic-like powder asafoetida give an earthy backbone to the condiment.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (57)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (58)

Naan (Indian Leavened Flatbread)

Unlike some other staple Indian breads, which are unleavened and crafted from durum wheat flour, or atta, fluffy naan is made with all-purpose flour and yeast. Traditionally, the dough is slapped against the chimney wall of a clay tandoor oven and baked over wood fires, but many home cooks make it on the stovetop.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (59)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (60)

North Indian Spiced Limeade (Nimbu ka Sharbat)

In Lucknow, India, the hakims—local practitioners of Yunani medicine, derived from ancient Greece and focused on balancing the humors in the body—concoct cooling drinks to beat the heat. Called by the Persian name sharbat, the iced drinks often contain sweet and tart fruits and pungent and fiery spices. This refreshing cooler gets a carbonated lift from seltzer and a pleasantly saline tang from black salt and dried mango powder.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (61)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (62)

Indian Layered Flatbread (Paratha)

The foundation for this common Indian flatbread is the same dough that is used for chapatiatta, or durum wheat flour, mixed with water. The key difference, which creates the paratha’s signature layers, is rolling and folding the dough in a triangle. The chewy flatbread is then dry-cooked in a skillet until puffy and golden.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (63)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (64)

Deep-Fried Indian Bread (Puri)

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Kashmiri Chile-Braised Lamb (Rogan Josh)

Smoky red Kashmiri chile powder and rich ghee are the foundations of the sauce for tender lamb shanks in this classic dish served as part of the Kashmiri feast called wazwaan. Cooked for weddings and other auspicious occasions, the wazwaan is comprised of 36 dishes, the majority of them lamb. The wazas, or cooks, who prepare the meal come from long lines of chefs schooled in the art. Get the recipe for Kashmiri Chile-Braised Lamb (Rogan Josh) »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (67)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (68)

South Indian Vegetable Stew (Sambar)

Cookbook author Madhur Jaffrey describes sambar as “a split-pea stew which is varied daily with the addition of, say, caramelized shallots or tomatoes or okra or aubergine (eggplant) poached in tamarind juice.” What we discovered in our test kitchen is that any combination of vegetables, such as yams, zucchini, or eggplant, can be added to this aromatic south Indian stew, which is often served with dosas.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (69)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (70)

Bengali Milk Sweets (Sandesh)

For these simple bite-size confections from Bengal, milk is turned into homemade paneer cheese and then combined with sugar and cardamom to yield a dense, fudge-like treat. Get the recipe for Bengali Milk Sweets (Sandesh) »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (71)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (72)

Strawberry Lassi

Throughout India, creamy, chilled lassis are the go-to beverage for cooling off during the warmer months. To make them, milk or water-thinned yogurt is blended with ingredients such as ripe mangoes or, as in this recipe, rose water and strawberries. Get the recipe for Strawberry Lassi »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (73)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (74)

Eggplant in Tomato Sauce

This simple but flavorful dish of fried eggplant and onions is served with a vinegar-spiked tomato sauce. Get the recipe for Eggplant in Tomato Sauce »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (75)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (76)

Thalassery-Style Fish Curry (Thalassert Meen Curry)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (77)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (78)

Fried Chickpea-Battered Potatoes (Bhajiya)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (79)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (80)

Aloo Masala (South Indian Potatoes)

These flavorful mashed potatoes are spiced with mustard seeds, fresh curry leaves, turmeric, and ginger, and mixed with peas. Get the recipe for Aloo Masala (South Indian Potatoes) »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (81)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (82)

Punjabi-Style Carrot Pudding (Gajar ka Halwa)

Studded with chopped nuts and flavored with aromatic cardamom and rose water, this sweet Indian pudding is made from a blend of nutty ghee, milk, cream, sugar, and grated carrot. It’s equally good served either hot or cold. Get the recipe for Punjabi-Style Carrot Pudding (Gajar ka Halwa) »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (83)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (84)

In the Indian city of Hyderabad, this dish is traditionally made using goat, but lamb makes an excellent substitute; including the bones adds an unmatched depth of flavor. While peeled muskmelon and watermelon seeds are usually used to thicken the dish, we’ve substituted pumpkin seeds in our version.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (85)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (86)

Chickpea Fritters in Curry (Besan Curry)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (87)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (88)

Cabbage Vepadu (Cabbage Fritters)

Cookbook author Madhur Jaffery describes these spidery-looking cabbage-and-peanut fritters as looking like little Medusa heads, “with the strands of shredded cabbage providing a crunchy, unruly halo.” A popular item in the mess halls of the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, they can be served as part of a meal or as a crunchy snack.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (89)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (90)

Smita Chandra's Daikon Curry

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (91)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (92)

Masala Martini

Cumin and salt add pungent flavor to this twist on a gin gimlet from chef Manish Mehrotra of New Delhi restaurant Indian Accent, located in The Manor boutique hotel in New Delhi’s tony Friends Colony neighborhood.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (93)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (94)

Indian Curd Rice

This creamy spiced rice is a staple dish of the Pongal harvest festival in Southern India. Get the recipe for Indian Curd Rice »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (95)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (96)

Creamy Fenugreek and Spinach with Cheese (Methi Malai Paneer)

This creamy dish from Toronto-based Indian cookbook author Smita Chandra makes a phenomenal spread, with oven-baked naan bread on the side. It’s made with the fresh Indian cheese called paneer, peas, and whole peeled tomatoes, along with plenty of tangy fresh fenugreek greens, and it’s spiced lavishly with turmeric, coriander, garam masala, and more. If you can’t find fenugreek greens, kale, Swiss chard, or another green can be substituted.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (97)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (98)

Indian Lime Rice

Indian Lime Rice

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (99)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (100)

Kashmiri Lamb in Chile Sauce (Mirchi Qorma)

Tender lamb simmers in a fiery sauce in this recipe from Adhoo’s in Srinagar, Kashmir. Get the recipe for Kashmiri Lamb »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (101)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (102)

Mumbatini

This bracing vodka drink gets its resinous, pungent aroma from a good dose of curry leaves, which are both muddled in the drink and floated on top as a garnish.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (103)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (104)

Indian Tomato Rice

Flavored with sweet plum tomatoes and aromatic spices, this rice dish is perfect alongside roast chicken. Get the recipe for Indian Tomato Rice »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (105)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (106)

Hyderabadi-Style Steamed Chicken and Rice (Kachi Yakhni Biryani)

Get the recipe for Hyderabadi Chicken Biryani »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (107)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (108)

Lotus Root in Yogurt Sauce (Nadru Yakhni)

Porous lotus root sops up spiced yogurt gravy in this Kashmiri specialty.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (109)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (110)

Shahi Tukra (Royal Toast)

This syrup-soaked toast is slathered in a sweetened reduction of milk flavored with saffron.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (111)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (112)

Muslim Indian Beef Stew (Nihari)

Beef shanks or brisket may be substituted for short ribs in this version of a long-cooked Muslim Indian beef stew, a luscious dish traditionally cooked with trotters, which thicken the sauce. The recipe is adapted from Charmaine O’Brien’s Recipes from an Urban Village: A Cookbook from Hazrat Nizamuddin Basti (The Hope Project, 2003), a book highlighting the cooking of an ancient Delhi enclave.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (113)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (114)

Spiced Ground Beef Patties (Shami Kebabs)

The recipe for these kebabs, which can also be made with lamb, is adapted from Charmaine O’Brien’s Recipes from an Urban Village (The Hope Project, 2003).

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (115)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (116)

Fried Hard-Boiled Eggs with Oven-Dried Tomatoes (Zoomru Tool and Ruwangan Hach)

Hard-cooked eggs get a golden sheen from frying in bright mustard oil and are served in a rich, spicy sauce made from oven-dried tomatoes.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (117)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (118)

Smita Chandra's Malabar Mussels

Dishes from the south Indian state of Kerala, along the Malabar Coast, are heavily influenced by the area’s abundant supply of seafood. In this Anglo-Indian recipe from cookbook author and cooking instructor Smita Chandra, mussels gathered from local waters are cooked with tomatoes in a richly spiced coconut broth.

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (119)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (120)

Steamed Milk with Pistachios and Almonds (Masala Paal)

A staple in restaurants throughout southern India, masala paal is a milk-based beverage that is sweetened with sugar and garnished with almonds and pistachios. We learned how to whip up a homemade version when cookbook author Raghavan Iyer stopped by our test kitchen and taught us this recipe. Get the recipe for Steamed Milk with Pistachios and Almonds (Masala Paal) »

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (121)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (122)

Pigeon Pea Fritters with Yogurt-Tomato Sauce (Vadai Pachadi)

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (123)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (124)

Hot Mix (Indian Spiced Snack Mix)

There are countless varieties of this ubiquitous Indian snack mix, made with varying combinations of nuts, fruit, spices, and other ingredients. Cookbook author Smita Chandra’s version of the addictive nibble is the best we’ve had, with four kinds of nuts (cashew, peanut, almond, pistachio), plus sweet raisins, nutty coconut, and poha, dried flattened rice flakes.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (125)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (126)

Yogurt with Banana and Grated Coconut (Kela ka Raita)

At the Indian table, a variety of yogurt-based raitas mollify the tongue-searing effect of chiles. This version, made fruity and sweet with the addition of coconut and banana, is adapted from Foods of the World: The Cooking of India (Time Life, 1969). Get the recipe for Yogurt with Banana and Grated Coconut »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (127)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (128)

Cilantro Yogurt Chutney

This creamy yogurt-based chutney is made with cilantro, lime, and fresh green chiles. Get the recipe for Cilantro Yogurt Chutney »

Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (129)Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (130)

Rajasthani White Chicken Curry (Safed Maans)

A seasoned coconut chicken curry is tempered with yogurt.

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Recipes from Issue #167: The India Issue (2024)

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