
Lamb Achari
BIR lamb achari is the restaurant take on the Punjabi achari tradition, a curry seasoned with the spices that go into…
Tap a chip to add another filter, or use Clear all below.
Tap any item to find recipes that use it.

BIR lamb achari is the restaurant take on the Punjabi achari tradition, a curry seasoned with the spices that go into…

BIR lamb bhuna is the restaurant-style version of the slow-cooked Bengali bhuna, dry and intensely flavoured, with the…

Cooked in a karahi (two-handled wok-like pan) over high heat: lamb chunks simmer with tomatoes, fresh ginger matchsticks…

BIR lamb madras is the British restaurant adaptation of the South Indian Madras curry tradition, a sweet-and-sour curry…

Hot, sharp curry inspired by the cooking of southern India

BIR lamb naga phaal is the British-Indian restaurant's hottest curry, named for the ferocious Naga (ghost pepper) chilli…

BIR lamb rogan josh is the British-Indian-Restaurant take on the classic Kashmiri lamb stew, a deep red curry that uses…

BIR lamb saag is the restaurant version of the classic Punjabi saag gosht, a bright green spinach-based curry that pairs…

BIR lamb vindaloo is the fiery British-Indian-Restaurant adaptation of the Goan-Portuguese vindaloo, lamb in place of…

"Adrak" is Hindi for ginger, and this curry treats the root not just as a base aromatic (where it normally sits in…

A Ceylon curry on a British restaurant menu doesn't claim to reproduce authentic Sri Lankan cooking, it's a BIR…

The jalfrezi is one of the defining BIR curries, found on every restaurant menu in the country and arguably the most…

Dhansak is a Parsi dish at heart, traditionally a slow-cooked stew of meat, lentils, and vegetables eaten on Sundays

The name dopiaza literally means "two onions" (do = two, piaza = onion), and that's the whole concept of the dish

Karahi takes its name from the deep, wok-shaped pan it's traditionally cooked in, a thick metal bowl that heats hard and…

"Achari" means "of pickle", the dish is built around Indian-style pickles (achaar) as a flavouring agent rather than a condiment