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Biryani

Biryani

Biryani represents the height of Indian culinary technique: multiple components prepared separately with precision, then assembled in layers where flavors permeate through steam cooking. This isn't a one-step rice dish; rather, it's an architectural construction where yogurt-marinated lamb develops tenderization and flavor, then cooks slowly with warm spices and tomato, while basmati rice is independently flavored with saffron infusion and whole spices. Upon assembly, the two elements marry through steam, creating a unified dish where lamb and rice are inseparable in flavor. Traditionally cooked during festivals and royal celebrations, biryani requires patience and multiple steps but rewards with sophistication.

Indian 6 hours 45 minutes Serves4
Jasha Maru

Jasha Maru

The Bhutanese weeknight chicken stew, the dish a Thimphu cook turns to after a long day. You joint a whole bone-in chicken and stew it with onion, tomato, plenty of fresh garlic and ginger, three or four green chillies, and butter or vegetable oil with a splash of water. The cook is fast: a brief sear to colour the meat, a simmer with the tomato until the chicken is cooked through and falling off the bone, and a finish with chopped coriander and spring onion just before serving. What you get back is a brothy, fresh, gently spicy chicken dish that sits somewhere between Indian and East Asian cookery, which is exactly where Bhutan sits geographically. Eaten with red rice, perhaps a small bowl of ema datshi on the side for whoever wants to push the heat further.

Bhutanese 50 minutes Serves4
Jollof Rice with Chicken

Jollof Rice with Chicken

Chicken pieces simmer with onion, thyme, curry powder, salt and bay until tender; the cooking stock becomes the rice's liquid. A blender purées tomatoes, red peppers, scotch bonnets, onion, and ginger to a smooth red sauce. Vegetable oil cooks tomato paste until it darkens; the blended sauce reduces in for 15-20 minutes; bay leaves and curry powder bloom; the rice goes in with chicken stock, simmers covered until tender. The chicken roasts crispy under a hot grill, then perches on top.*

Nigerian 1 hour 40 minutes Serves6
Kabsa

Kabsa

Saudi Arabia's national dish, the one platter you'll meet at almost every gathering from family lunch through wedding banquet. You brown chicken pieces or lamb shoulder hard in a heavy pot, then build a base of onion, garlic and ginger softened in the same fat, with tomato and a spoonful of baharat (or a dedicated kabsa spice mix) blooming until the kitchen fills with cardamom and cinnamon. The protein simmers in tomato and stock until it's tender and pulling away from the bone, then long-grain rice goes in to cook absorption-style in the same liquid, drinking up every layer of flavour the broth carries. You finish with almonds toasted in butter, raisins plumped briefly, and a fresh salsa of tomato, onion, chilli and parsley spooned on the side to cut the richness. Eaten communally from the centre platter, with hands or a long spoon.

Arabian 1 hour 35 minutes Serves6
Khoresh Bademjan

Khoresh Bademjan

Aubergines are peeled in stripes, sliced into 1 ½ cm-thick rounds (or 2 cm-thick long pieces), salted heavily on both sides and rested for 30 minutes to weep bitter juice. Patted dry and shallow-fried gold in sunflower oil. The base: onion fries in oil until deep gold; lamb cubes brown in; turmeric, cinnamon, salt and pepper toast briefly; tomato paste cooks for 2 minutes; water and yellow split peas join; everything simmers for 1 hour. Verjuice (or lemon juice), saffron-water and the fried aubergines go in for the last 30 minutes. Served over chelo rice.

Persian 2 hours 45 minutes Serves4
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