Ayesha Noor

Ayesha runs a highly successful test kitchen in Islamabad, focusing on authentic curries and comfort food. Her recipes draw on both urban Lahori traditions and the robust spice profiles of Multan.

Curries Comfort Food Punjabi Classics

Recipes by Ayesha Noor 57

Lahori Chicken Karahi

Lahori Chicken Karahi

Punjab

The quintessential Lahori karahi — chicken pounded with tomatoes, ginger, and green chillies in a wok over roaring heat. No onions, no yoghurt, no shortcuts.

Punjabi Haleem

Punjabi Haleem

Punjab

The Ramadan staple — shredded beef slow-cooked with wheat, barley, and lentils into a thick, silky stew, crowned with fried onions, ginger, lemon, and a drizzle of hot oil.

Lahori Seekh Kebab

Lahori Seekh Kebab

Punjab

Juicy, spiced minced meat kebabs grilled on skewers over live charcoal — the smell alone will bring your entire neighbourhood to the gate. Lahori seekh kebab is richer and spicier than its Peshawari cousin, packed with herbs and fried onion for moisture and depth.

Qeema Matar (Minced Meat with Peas)

Qeema Matar (Minced Meat with Peas)

Punjab

Qeema Matar is Pakistan's ultimate weeknight dinner — spiced minced beef with sweet green peas, ready in 30 minutes, pairs with everything, and tastes even better as leftovers the next day.

Yakhni Pulao

Yakhni Pulao

Punjab

Yakhni Pulao is fragrant, one-pot rice cooked in a slow-simmered meat broth (yakhni) with whole spices. Lighter and more delicate than biryani, this is the dish that proves understated can be unforgettable.

Doodh Chawal Kheer — Pakistani Rice Pudding

Doodh Chawal Kheer — Pakistani Rice Pudding

Punjab

Kheer is the quintessential Pakistani celebration dessert — rice slow-cooked in full-fat milk until creamy and thick, perfumed with cardamom and saffron, and crowned with pistachios and silver leaf. It appears at every eid, wedding, and birth celebration across the country.

Gulab Jamun — Soft Milk Dumplings in Rose Syrup

Gulab Jamun — Soft Milk Dumplings in Rose Syrup

Punjab

Gulab jamun are soft, spongy milk dumplings deep-fried to a deep golden-brown and soaked in a fragrant sugar syrup perfumed with rose water and cardamom. Pakistan's most popular mithai (sweet), found at every wedding, celebration, and chai break.

Creamy Chicken Handi

Creamy Chicken Handi

Punjab

Chicken Handi is Pakistan's creamiest, richest curry — tender chicken simmered with malai (cream), makhan (butter), and aromatic spices in a traditional handi (clay pot). This mildly spiced dish is the go-to for anyone who wants restaurant-style flavour at home without setting their mouth on fire.

Charcoal Beef Boti

Charcoal Beef Boti

Punjab

Beef Boti is the cornerstone of Pakistani BBQ — spiced cubes of beef threaded onto seekhs (skewers) and grilled over live charcoal until smoky, charred, and deeply flavoured. This is street-food BBQ at its most honest: bold spices, high heat, and that irreplaceable smell of meat over coal.

Lahori Dahi Bhalla

Lahori Dahi Bhalla

Punjab

Dahi Bhalla is the crown jewel of Pakistani street snacks — soft, spongy lentil dumplings soaked in tangy dahi (yoghurt), crowned with imli (tamarind) chutney, fresh mint chutney, and a generous sprinkle of chaat masala. Sweet, sour, spicy, creamy, and pillowy all at once.

Traditional Rabri

Traditional Rabri

Punjab

Traditional Rabri is slowly reduced sweetened milk layered with thick cream, perfumed with saffron and cardamom — Pakistan's most regal milk dessert. Each spoonful is dense, intensely flavoured, and unapologetically rich.

Shahi Zarda

Shahi Zarda

Punjab

Shahi Zarda is the jewelled sweet rice of Pakistani celebrations — fragrant basmati tinted gold with saffron, studded with dry fruits, nuts, and cardamom. A Mughal-era dish that still anchors every walima and mehndi spread.

Sarson Ka Saag

Sarson Ka Saag

Punjab

Sarson Ka Saag is Punjab's winter soul food — slow-cooked mustard greens with spinach and spices, finished with ghee-fried garlic and served with makki ki roti (cornbread). A dish so tied to Punjabi identity that it's practically a passport.

Safed Karahi — The Creamy White Karahi

Safed Karahi — The Creamy White Karahi

Punjab

A pale, ivory karahi with zero red chilli and zero tomatoes — chicken slow-cooked in cream, yoghurt, white pepper, and cashew paste. Don't let the colour fool you: this is one of the most complex karahis in Pakistani cooking.

Multani Sohan Halwa

Multani Sohan Halwa

South Punjab (Multan)

Multan's legendary brittle confection — a hard, snapping slab of caramelised sugar, wheat starch, ghee, and whole nuts. Nothing like soft halwa. This one shatters. And it is magnificent.

Daal Chana (Chanay Ki Daal)

Daal Chana (Chanay Ki Daal)

Punjab

Hearty, nutty split yellow chickpea daal — slow-cooked until thick, with optional lauki (bottle gourd) and a rich ghee tarka. Pakistan's most substantial everyday daal.

Daal Moong (Moong Ki Daal)

Daal Moong (Moong Ki Daal)

Punjab

Light, mild, and deeply comforting split mung bean daal — the gentlest daal in the Pakistani kitchen, ready in 25 minutes with a simple cumin-garlic tarka. Perfect for children, the unwell, and anyone craving something uncomplicated.

Chana Pulao

Chana Pulao

Punjab

Fragrant basmati rice cooked with whole boiled chickpeas — no meat, loads of flavour. An economical, filling pulao made for large gatherings and beloved across Punjab.

Lahori Chargha

Lahori Chargha

Punjab

Lahori Chargha is the crispy, mahogany, deeply spiced whole chicken that rules Lahore's food street scene — and its secret is a two-stage cooking process: first steaming with citric acid (tatri) and spices until completely cooked through, then deep frying until the skin is shatteringly crispy and bronzed. Skip either step and it's just chicken. Do both and it's a celebration.

Nankhatai

Nankhatai

Punjab

Pakistan's beloved shortbread cookie — crumbly, ghee-rich, and subtly fragrant with cardamom — made from a mix of besan (gram flour), maida (all-purpose flour), and suji (semolina) that produces a melt-in-the-mouth texture no ordinary butter biscuit can match. They look pale and delicate coming out of the oven, then harden to perfection as they cool.

Dahi Baray Chaat

Dahi Baray Chaat

Punjab

Soft, pillowy urad dal fritters dunked in cold, creamy yoghurt and showered with tangy chutneys and crunchy toppings — this is Pakistan's most-loved street snack. Every layer adds something: cool against spicy, soft against crunchy, sweet against tart. Once you make these at home, the street vendor version will never quite be enough.

Anday Wala Paratha

Anday Wala Paratha

Punjab

Anday Wala Paratha — egg-stuffed paratha — is Lahore's most iconic street breakfast: a plain paratha that is half-cooked, slit open at one end, filled with beaten spiced egg, sealed, and cooked until the egg sets inside the bread itself. The egg becomes part of the paratha structure, creating layers of soft eggy bread within a golden, ghee-crisp shell. It is the kind of breakfast that you eat standing at a dhaba at 7 AM while holding a cup of chai and feeling completely at peace.

Methi Paratha

Methi Paratha

Punjab

Methi Paratha is a Punjabi winter flatbread where fresh fenugreek leaves are kneaded directly into the whole-wheat dough itself — no separate filling, no stuffing step. The dough turns a beautiful speckled green, and when cooked, the bitter methi mellows into something faintly herbal and deeply aromatic, enhanced by ajwain and red chilli. It is simpler to make than stuffed parathas and arguably more flavourful, available only when fresh methi is in season.

Missi Roti

Missi Roti

Punjab

Missi Roti is a rustic, spiced flatbread made from a blend of besan (gram flour) and whole wheat atta that's been a Punjabi staple for centuries. It's earthy, slightly nutty, and packed with the fragrance of ajwain and fresh coriander. One bite and you'll understand why dhabas across Punjab sell out by noon.

Mutton Nihari Slow Cooked

Mutton Nihari Slow Cooked

Punjab

Lahori-style slow-cooked mutton nihari with a deeply spiced, velvety gravy — the kind that makes your whole house smell like a wedding. Rich, tender, and absolutely worth the wait.

Bone Marrow Nihari

Bone Marrow Nihari

South Punjab

South Punjab's legendary bone marrow nihari — intensely rich, deeply spiced, and built around nalli (marrow bones) that melt into the gravy. This is nihari at its most indulgent and most authentic.

Beef Haleem Lahori

Beef Haleem Lahori

Punjab

Lahori beef haleem — the Punjab version features a spicier, more assertive masala profile with a distinctly thick, hearty consistency. Classic winter comfort food at its finest.

Simple Chicken Korma

Simple Chicken Korma

Punjab

A beginner-friendly Punjabi chicken korma with a creamy yogurt-based gravy, warming whole spices, and that signature korma golden colour. Rich enough for a dinner party, simple enough for a Tuesday.

Beef Korma Dawat

Beef Korma Dawat

South Punjab

South Punjab's grand dawat (banquet) beef korma — deeply spiced, richly finished with nut paste, and bearing the generous character of Multani hospitality. This is the curry you make when you want to impress.

Aloo Qeema

Aloo Qeema

Punjab

The quintessential Pakistani weeknight dinner — spiced minced beef cooked with potatoes in a dry, flavourful masala. Quick, affordable, and universally loved across all of Pakistan.

Desi Dhaba Handi

Desi Dhaba Handi

Punjab

The no-frills, maximum-flavour dhaba-style chicken handi — cooked the way roadside restaurants do it across Punjab. Robust, unpretentious, and reliably delicious.

Dum Achar Gosht

Dum Achar Gosht

Punjab

Achar gosht cooked dum-style — sealed with dough and slow-cooked so the pickle spices fully permeate the meat. The sealed pot creates a flavour depth that open-pot cooking simply cannot match.

Simple Home-Style Chicken Biryani

Simple Home-Style Chicken Biryani

Punjab

This Simple Home-Style Chicken Biryani is the recipe every beginner needs — all the fragrant, layered goodness of a proper biryani without the intimidation. Perfect for weeknights, this version cuts down on steps without cutting down on flavour.

Home-Style Chicken Pulao

Home-Style Chicken Pulao

Punjab

Home-Style Chicken Pulao is the everyday hero of Pakistani rice cooking — simpler than biryani, quicker to make, and delivering all the comfort of a one-pot meal. Chicken cooks right in the rice, infusing every grain with flavour.

Matar Pulao

Matar Pulao

Punjab

Matar Pulao is a simple, fragrant pea rice that transforms a handful of ingredients into something that outshines many more complicated dishes. Green peas cooked with basmati in cumin-scented water creates a go-to side dish that works with almost anything.

Degi Mutton Pulao

Degi Mutton Pulao

Punjab

Degi Mutton Pulao is the grand-scale celebration pulao of Punjab — slow-cooked in a large deg, scaled for dozens, and carrying the unmistakable flavour of a dish that's been made the right way since the Mughal era. Brought down to family size without losing any of its soul.

Lahori Egg Fried Rice

Lahori Egg Fried Rice

Punjab

Lahori Egg Fried Rice is the Punjabi take on the beloved fried rice — bigger on the garlic, bolder on the spice, and served with that characteristically Lahori sense of occasion even for a quick weeknight meal.

Dhaba Chicken Karahi

Dhaba Chicken Karahi

Punjab

Dhaba Chicken Karahi replicates the smoky, robust flavours of Pakistan's legendary roadside dhabas — cooked fast on massive flames, loaded with butter, and served piping hot in the same karahi it was cooked in. This is highway food at its finest.

Simple Home-Style Chicken Karahi

Simple Home-Style Chicken Karahi

Punjab

This simple home-style Chicken Karahi is every Pakistani family's weeknight hero — quick, reliable, and deeply comforting. With pantry staples and 45 minutes, you'll have a karahi that tastes like it came from a family recipe passed down for generations.

Beef Tikka Boti

Beef Tikka Boti

Punjab

Beef Tikka Boti is Punjab's rugged BBQ heavyweight — cubes of marinated beef char-grilled to a caramelised crust with a juicy, flavourful centre. For those who believe everything is better with beef, this is the definitive answer.

Lahori Tawa Chicken

Lahori Tawa Chicken

Punjab

Lahori Tawa Chicken is the sizzling, intensely spiced dish cooked on a concave iron tawa (griddle) — whole chicken pieces stir-fried with tomatoes, green chillies, and generous amounts of butter right at your table in the best restaurants.

Simple Masoor Dal

Simple Masoor Dal

Punjab

Simple Masoor Dal is the ultimate quick-cook comfort food — red lentils that dissolve into a silky, golden dal in just 20 minutes. A beginner's best friend and a busy cook's lifesaver.

Bathua Saag

Bathua Saag

Punjab

Bathua Saag is a rustic, seasonal Punjabi green made from lamb's quarters — a wild leafy green with an earthy, slightly tangy flavour that makes it one of winter's most beloved vegetables.

Sarson Saag South Punjab

Sarson Saag South Punjab

South Punjab

South Punjab's Sarson Saag is the more rustic, more robust cousin of the famous Lahori version — cooked longer, spiced more assertively, and always finished with a cloud of white butter. This is the real deal.

Chicken Saag

Chicken Saag

Punjab

Chicken Saag combines succulent chicken pieces with a vibrant spinach curry base, creating a lighter but equally satisfying alternative to the traditional mutton version. Perfect for weeknight indulgence.

Punjabi Kadhi Pakora

Punjabi Kadhi Pakora

Punjab

Punjabi Kadhi Pakora is a tangy, yoghurt-based gram flour curry with crispy fried onion fritters floating within — a beloved weekend dish that fills Punjabi homes with the most incredible aroma.

Dal Saag Combined

Dal Saag Combined

Punjab

Dal Saag is the clever Punjabi one-pot that marries lentils and leafy greens into a nutritious, filling curry — doubling the protein and iron in one comforting, weeknight-friendly bowl.

Sewaiyan Kheer (Vermicelli Pudding) for Eid

Sewaiyan Kheer (Vermicelli Pudding) for Eid

Punjab

Silky sewaiyan kheer made with roasted vermicelli slow-cooked in full-fat milk, sweetened with sugar and fragrant with cardamom and rose water. A beloved Eid staple that fills every Pakistani home with warmth and celebration. Ready in under an hour and guaranteed to impress.

Zarda — Pakistani Wedding-Style Sweet Rice

Zarda — Pakistani Wedding-Style Sweet Rice

Punjab

Vibrant Punjabi wedding-style zarda made with fragrant basmati rice cooked in sugar syrup with saffron, fried in ghee and loaded with nuts, raisins and khoya for an indulgent celebration rice dessert. The showstopper at every Pakistani walima and mehndi.

Bread Shahi Tukda — Easy Punjabi Home Style

Bread Shahi Tukda — Easy Punjabi Home Style

Punjab

Simple Punjabi home-style shahi tukda made with pan-toasted bread instead of deep-frying, dipped in cardamom-rose syrup and topped with a luscious quick rabri. All the royal flavour without deep-frying guilt — ready in 30 minutes for weeknight sweet cravings.

Gajar Ka Halwa — Quick Stovetop Version

Gajar Ka Halwa — Quick Stovetop Version

Punjab

Quick stovetop gajar ka halwa made with juicy red carrots grated and cooked with whole milk, sugar and ghee until thick and fudgy, finished with cardamom and nuts. Ready in 45 minutes instead of hours — all the halwai flavour, fraction of the time.

Suji Ka Halwa — Classic Breakfast Halwa

Suji Ka Halwa — Classic Breakfast Halwa

Punjab

Golden suji ka halwa made by roasting semolina in ghee until fragrant and nutty, then simmering in sugar syrup until thick and glossy. The quintessential Pakistani breakfast halwa served with puri on special mornings — simple, fast, and deeply satisfying.

Creamy Rabri — Lahori Style

Creamy Rabri — Lahori Style

Punjab

Lahori-style rabri made by slow-simmering full-fat milk for over an hour, constantly collecting the creamy skin layers to create a thick, textured, intensely flavourful condensed milk dessert. The base of countless Pakistani sweets and perfect eaten straight with a spoon.

Multani Sohan Halwa — Gift Box Style

Multani Sohan Halwa — Gift Box Style

South Punjab

Authentic Multani sohan halwa — the legendary South Punjab confection made by reducing wheat starch with sugar and ghee into a glossy, firm disc studded with pistachios and almonds. The GI-protected sweet of Multan, traditionally gifted in ornate tins. Challenging but deeply rewarding to make.

Instant Jalebi — Crispy Homemade in 30 Minutes

Instant Jalebi — Crispy Homemade in 30 Minutes

Punjab

Crispy, bright orange instant jalebi made with a quick yeast-free batter that's ready in 15 minutes, piped into hot oil in concentric circles and soaked in saffron-cardamom sugar syrup. Breakfast, snack, or dessert — jalebi never asks for permission.

Keema Samosa — Lahori Street Style

Keema Samosa — Lahori Street Style

Punjab

Crispy Lahori keema samosa filled with spiced beef mince cooked with peas, green chilli and fresh coriander, wrapped in a flaky homemade pastry and deep-fried to golden perfection. The ultimate Ramadan iftaar snack and Pakistani party food that disappears in minutes.

Palak Pakora — Spinach Fritters

Palak Pakora — Spinach Fritters

Punjab

Lacy, crispy palak pakoras made with whole fresh spinach leaves dipped in a spiced besan (gram flour) batter and fried until golden and crunchy. The lightest and most elegant of all Pakistani pakoras — ready in 20 minutes and absolutely impossible to eat just one.