Wedding biryani (layered fragrant rice)
Basmati rice and yogurt-marinated meat, cooked together 'dum' style (sealed and steamed) in fragrant layers of saffron, cardamom, and fried onions.
Basmati rice and yogurt-marinated meat, cooked together 'dum' style (sealed and steamed) in fragrant layers of saffron, cardamom, and fried onions.
Ah, an Indian wedding… you can't imagine until you see the dishes parade! And at the center, always, biryani: you seal the pot with dough, let the rice and meat embrace in steam, and when you lift the lid, the saffron vapor hits your face — wah! Everyone gets their portion with a golden onion on top, and trust me, that fragrance you remember for a lifetime, like a great day.
- •Long-grain basmati rice — for the whole table (fragrant base)
- •Meat (lamb or chicken) — marinated in yogurt (heart of the dish)
- •Yogurt, ginger, garlic — generous (tenderizing marinade)
- •Saffron, cardamom, cinnamon, clove — a good pinch (noble perfume)
- •Fried onions (birista) — plentiful (sweetness and garnish)
- •Ghee — as needed (richness, binder)
Wedding biryani (layered fragrant rice)
Basmati rice and yogurt-marinated meat, cooked together 'dum' style (sealed and steamed) in fragrant layers of saffron, cardamom, and fried onions.
Why this dish? In 2007, Abhishek Bachchan's wedding to Aishwarya Rai was one of India's most publicized. No grand Indian wedding is complete without biryani, the festive rice par excellence, layered and cooked for a banquet.
Ah, an Indian wedding… you can't imagine until you see the dishes parade! And at the center, always, biryani: you seal the pot with dough, let the rice and meat embrace in steam, and when you lift the lid, the saffron vapor hits your face — wah! Everyone gets their portion with a golden onion on top, and trust me, that fragrance you remember for a lifetime, like a great day.
Ingredients (period version)
- Long-grain basmati rice — for the whole table (fragrant base)
- Meat (lamb or chicken) — marinated in yogurt (heart of the dish)
- Yogurt, ginger, garlic — generous (tenderizing marinade)
- Saffron, cardamom, cinnamon, clove — a good pinch (noble perfume)
- Fried onions (birista) — plentiful (sweetness and garnish)
- Ghee — as needed (richness, binder)
Ingredients
- Basmati rice — 500 g (base)
- Chicken (or lamb) — 800 g (heart of the dish)
- Plain yogurt — 200 g (marinade)
- Ginger-garlic paste — 2 tbsp (aromatic)
- Garam masala — 2 tsp (spiced signature)
- Saffron — 1 pinch, steeped in warm milk (perfume and color)
- Green cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, bay leaves — a few (whole spices)
- Onions — 3 large, sliced and fried (birista, sweetness)
- Ghee — 3 tbsp (binder)
- Mint + coriander — 1 bunch (freshness)
Method
- Marinate the meat with yogurt, ginger-garlic paste, garam masala, and half the fried onions, at least 1 hour.
- Cook the rice until 3/4 done in salted boiling water perfumed with whole spices; drain.
- In a ghee-buttered pot, layer the marinated meat, then the rice; drizzle with saffron milk, mint, coriander, and remaining fried onions.
- Cover tightly (heavy lid or sealed with cloth) and cook 'dum' over very low heat for 25-30 min.
- Let rest, then gently lift layers without crushing the rice. Serve with raita (yogurt-cucumber dip).
How it was made : Biryani descends from Mughal and Persian cuisines, refined in the courts of Awadh (Lucknow) and Hyderabad. The 'dum pukht' slow-steaming method, with the pot sealed with dough, dates from these royal kitchens and remains the hallmark of prestige biryanis served on grand occasions.
The contemporary twist : Grand-day service: the sealed pot is brought to the table and opened in front of guests, releasing saffron steam.
Abhishek Bachchan · Charactorium