10 recipes in this collection

Bun Kebab Karachi Style

Bun Kebab Karachi Style

Sindh

Karachi's original street burger — a spiced lentil patty tucked in a bun with sweet-tangy chutney, egg wash, and raw onions. The 50-rupee meal that punches above its weight.

Authentic Karachi Biryani

Authentic Karachi Biryani

Sindh

The iconic Karachi-style biryani — fiery, tangy, loaded with potatoes and prunes. Born in the streets of Karachi, perfected by generations of Muhajir cooks.

Karachi Falooda

Karachi Falooda

Sindh

Karachi Falooda is Pakistan's most theatrical dessert drink — layered with rose syrup, chewy falooda vermicelli, plump basil seeds, cold rabri, and topped with a scoop of ice cream. Every sip is a different texture. Every glass is a full event.

Karachi Chana Chaat

Karachi Chana Chaat

Sindh

Karachi Chana Chaat is the city's most beloved street snack — spiced boiled chickpeas tossed with crunchy onions, tangy tomatoes, tart imli (tamarind) chutney, cool dahi (yoghurt), and a snowfall of masalas. Every bite is simultaneously sweet, sour, spicy, and salty — a flavour explosion that Karachi has made its own.

Bombay Biryani (Pakistani Style)

Bombay Biryani (Pakistani Style)

Sindh

The Muhajir community's answer to Karachi biryani — more fragrant, more Nawabi, with fried potatoes, aloo bukhara (dried plums), kewra water, and a sweeter, more layered aromatic profile. Born in Bombay, perfected in Karachi.

Sindhi Biryani

Sindhi Biryani

Sindh

Sindh's distinct, masala-forward biryani — a looser, spicier curry base with prominent aloo bukhara (dried plums), large half-potatoes, and natural colour from spices rather than food dye. Distinct from Karachi biryani; the version from Hyderabad and Sukkur's interior.

Aloo Tuk (Sindhi Double-Fried Spiced Potatoes)

Aloo Tuk (Sindhi Double-Fried Spiced Potatoes)

Sindh

Thick potato slices that go through two rounds of frying — first to cook through, then pressed flat and fried again until shattery and golden — then immediately tossed in a fierce spice mix of amchoor, red chilli, and chaat masala while still blazing hot. The result is a snack that is simultaneously crispy, soft inside, sour, spicy, and completely addictive. You will eat them faster than you can fry them.

Karachi Khausa — The Memon Coconut Noodle Bowl

Karachi Khausa — The Memon Coconut Noodle Bowl

Sindh

A Burmese coconut noodle soup adapted by Pakistani Memons who fled Burma at Partition — a fragrant coconut chicken curry poured over noodles and finished at the table with a customisable array of toppings.

Bihari Boti — Karachi's Partition Kebab

Bihari Boti — Karachi's Partition Kebab

Sindh

Paper-thin strips of beef tenderloin, pounded flat, marinated overnight in mustard oil and poppy seeds, skewered flat and grilled. A Karachi classic born from the Bihari community's journey at Partition.

Pakistani Chowmein (Desi Chinese Hakka Noodles)

Pakistani Chowmein (Desi Chinese Hakka Noodles)

Sindh

Spicier, oilier, and more aggressively seasoned than any Chinese noodle dish — Pakistani chowmein is its own glorious thing, born in Karachi's wok-fired kitchens and perfected on high heat.

More Collections