Zulekha Bugti

Zulekha is a master of Balochi dampukht and slow-cooking techniques, preserving desert culinary heritage. Her signature method uses sealed clay pots buried in embers overnight.

Dampukht Clay Pot Cooking Balochi Lamb

Recipes by Zulekha Bugti 8

Khaddi Kabab

Khaddi Kabab

Balochistan

Balochistan's most spectacular dish — a whole lamb heavily marinated in a yoghurt-spice paste, then slow-roasted in a sealed earthen pit with hot coals. The animal is suspended ABOVE the coals on a spit, the pit is covered, and 4-6 hours of indirect heat bastes the meat. The belly stuffing of rice, dried fruits, and nuts is authentic tradition, not an embellishment.

Kaak

Kaak

Balochistan

Kaak is the ancient hard bread of Balochistan's shepherds — thick wheat discs baked until iron-hard, deliberately designed to survive weeks in a saddle bag without spoiling. Dip it in tea, soak it in broth, or break off a piece and eat it with Rosh. Once you try it, you'll understand why it has been feeding mountain communities for centuries.

Balochi Namkeen Gosht

Balochi Namkeen Gosht

Balochistan

The original namkeen gosht — Balochistan's ancient tradition of meat cooked with only salt and fire. Purist, powerful, and proof that great cooking doesn't need a spice cupboard.

Shinwari Karahi Balochi Style

Shinwari Karahi Balochi Style

Balochistan

Shinwari Karahi, made Balochi style, blends the minimalist spicing of Balochistan with the signature fat-forward cooking technique of the Shinwari tribe — the result is a deeply satisfying, robustly flavoured karahi with extraordinary depth from minimal ingredients.

Balochi Saag Gosht

Balochi Saag Gosht

Balochistan

Balochi Saag Gosht is a bold, rustic combination of mutton and greens cooked in the direct, unfussy Balochi style — minimal water, maximum flavour, with the distinctive smoky char that comes from high-heat cooking.

Sajji with Yogurt Chutney Sauce

Sajji with Yogurt Chutney Sauce

Balochistan

Traditional Balochi lamb sajji served with the classic tangy yogurt-herb sauce that Quetta restaurants keep as their closely guarded secret. The sauce transforms sajji from great to legendary.

Balochi Rosh — Simple Roadside Version

Balochi Rosh — Simple Roadside Version

Balochistan

Balochi Rosh is a humble, honest lamb curry — minimally spiced, cooked low and slow until the meat is fall-apart tender. The roadside dhabas (food stalls) of the RCD Highway serve this daily, and it is one of Pakistan's most underrated meat dishes.

Landhi — Balochi Wind-Dried Mutton

Landhi — Balochi Wind-Dried Mutton

Balochistan

Balochistan's ancient preserved meat tradition — whole cuts of mutton salted and hung to air-dry in winter mountain air for weeks, then cooked in simple curries or eaten as a preserved protein through summer. Pakistan's answer to prosciutto.