
Chicken Pathia
BIR chicken pathia is the British-Indian-Restaurant sweet-and-sour curry, lemon and mango chutney pulling against sugar…
Tap a chip to add another filter, or use Clear all below.
Tap any item to find recipes that use it.

BIR chicken pathia is the British-Indian-Restaurant sweet-and-sour curry, lemon and mango chutney pulling against sugar…

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

The Mughal-Pakistani slow-cooked lamb shank stew: meat braised for hours in a spice-thick gravy of ginger, garlic…

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

"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…

Chicken chilli masala is a relatively modern entry on the British restaurant menu, sitting somewhere between a jalfrezi…

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

Garlic chilli chicken sits in the medium-hot end of the BIR menu, distinguished by two things: heavily browned sliced…

"Laal" is Hindi for red, and the dish lives up to the name

Lavastorm belongs to the rarefied corner of the BIR menu shared with phaal, naga, and the various house-named "hottest…

A Madras lives or dies by balance

Moghul (sometimes spelled Mughal or Mughlai) curries trace back to the imperial kitchens of the Mughal Empire, where…

Pathia traces back to Parsi home cooking, where the sweet-sour-spicy triad, usually balanced with jaggery, vinegar or…

Phaal is the restaurant category-killer for heat, traditionally claimed (though disputed) as a British invention from…

BIR special balti is the customisable British restaurant chef's signature, mixing pre-cooked meats, seafood and…