Chelo ba tahdig (Steamed Rice with Golden Crust)
A basmati rice cooked in two stages: first boiled and drained, then steamed over low heat so the grains stay separate and a golden crust forms at the bottom. The tahdig is flipped like a cake and broken into crispy shards that are shared.
A basmati rice cooked in two stages: first boiled and drained, then steamed over low heat so the grains stay separate and a golden crust forms at the bottom. The tahdig is flipped like a cake and broken into crispy shards that are shared.
Look closely at the bottom of the pot: everything happens there, in what you cannot see during cooking. At home in Tehran, my mother wrapped the lid with a cloth to trap the steam, and we had to wait, without lifting, without giving in to impatience — like waiting for the right light before pressing the shutter. When we finally flipped the rice onto the platter and the golden crust appeared intact, it was a small childhood joy. The best part of the meal is often what lies hidden underneath.
- •Long-grain rice — one large bowl per person (base)
- •Salt — a handful for the water (seasoning)
- •Clarified butter (roghan) — as much as you like (browning and crust)
- •Infused saffron — a few threads (color and fragrance)
Chelo ba tahdig (Steamed Rice with Golden Crust)
A basmati rice cooked in two stages: first boiled and drained, then steamed over low heat so the grains stay separate and a golden crust forms at the bottom. The tahdig is flipped like a cake and broken into crispy shards that are shared.
Why this dish? Kiarostami's known diet explicitly mentions rice and "golden crispy tahdig". It is the most ordinary and essential dish of the Iranian table — exactly the kind of patient, everyday gesture that his cinema, attentive to the ordinary, knew how to magnify.
Look closely at the bottom of the pot: everything happens there, in what you cannot see during cooking. At home in Tehran, my mother wrapped the lid with a cloth to trap the steam, and we had to wait, without lifting, without giving in to impatience — like waiting for the right light before pressing the shutter. When we finally flipped the rice onto the platter and the golden crust appeared intact, it was a small childhood joy. The best part of the meal is often what lies hidden underneath.
Ingredients (period version)
- Long-grain rice — one large bowl per person (base)
- Salt — a handful for the water (seasoning)
- Clarified butter (roghan) — as much as you like (browning and crust)
- Infused saffron — a few threads (color and fragrance)
Ingredients
- Basmati rice — 300 g (base)
- Coarse salt — 2 tbsp (for the water) (seasoning)
- Butter — 40 g (golden crust)
- Neutral oil — 2 tbsp (non-stick)
- Saffron — a pinch infused in 3 tbsp hot water (color and fragrance)
- Plain yogurt — 2 tbsp (optional for a more golden crust) (tahdig binder)
Method
- Rinse the rice in cold water until it runs clear, then soak for 30 min to 1 hour in salted water.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil, add the rice and cook for 6-8 minutes: the grains should be tender on the outside, still firm at the center. Drain.
- In the same pot, heat the oil, butter, and a little saffron. For a crispier tahdig, mix a few spoonfuls of rice with yogurt and press this layer into the bottom.
- Add the remaining rice in a dome shape, poke 3-4 holes with the handle of a spoon to let steam escape.
- Cover with a cloth then the lid, cook on medium heat for 10 minutes, then on very low heat for 30-40 minutes.
- Drizzle the infused saffron over the top. Unmold by inverting the pot onto a platter: the golden crust is revealed. Break and share.
How it was made : The two-stage method for chelo rice (abkesh) has been documented in Persian cuisine for centuries. The cloth under the lid absorbs condensation for perfectly dry, separate grains; tahdig originally formed simply from prolonged contact of the rice with the hot bottom of the tinned copper pot.
The contemporary twist : Some Iranian chefs in Tehran achieve tahdig in a transparent non-stick pan to "film" the crust as it browns — a playful nod for a filmmaker.
Sources : Najmieh Batmanglij, Food of Life: Ancient Persian and Modern Iranian Cooking
Abbas Kiarostami · Charactorium