Special Occasion Pakistani Cooking — Worth Every Minute
Some dishes are not for Tuesday nights. These are the recipes pulled out for weddings, dawats, and milestones — the ones that require patience, technique, and a full day in the kitchen. The effort is the point, and the result is the kind of food people talk about for years.
10 recipes in this collection
Lahori Biryani
The Punjabi biryani — more aromatic, less fiery, more balanced than its Karachi cousin. Built on overnight-marinated meat, a bouquet of whole aromatic spices, and a dum layer fragrant with saffron, kewra, and rose water. Lahori confidence in every grain.
Punjabi Haleem
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.
Kashmiri Gushtaba
The grand finale of the Kashmiri Wazwan — hand-pounded mutton meatballs (with fat pounded in) in a pale cream yoghurt-fennel gravy. No onion. No tomato. No red chilli. The ivory colour is the mark of authenticity — orange or red means it has been modified.
Hareesa — KP Slow-Cooked Wheat and Mutton Porridge
Hareesa is haleem's ancient ancestor — whole wheat berries and mutton slow-cooked together for 4-6 hours until they completely dissolve into a thick, silky, porridge-like dish that is simultaneously humble and extraordinary. Finished with a sizzling ghee tarka poured dramatically over the top, this is the dish that sustained armies, fed pilgrims, and defines winter mornings in KP.
Lahori Dahi Bhalla
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.
Multani Sohan Halwa
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.
Karachi Halwa (Cornflour Halwa / Bombay Halwa)
A jewel-bright, translucent, gloriously chewy halwa made from cornflour, sugar, and an extravagant amount of ghee — cooked in one pot with relentless stirring until it transforms into a bouncy, glistening confection the colour of liquid amber or emerald. Set in a greased tray, cut into diamonds, and decorated with pistachios, it looks like something from a confectionery museum. It is also utterly, devastatingly delicious.
Rumali Roti
Rumali Roti is a paper-thin, silky flatbread folded like a handkerchief — 'rumal' literally means handkerchief in Urdu. It's the bread of grand restaurants, wedding banquets, and show-offs, because watching a skilled cook stretch it paper-thin and slap it onto an inverted karahi is genuinely theatrical. At home, it's more achievable than it looks and absolutely worth the effort.
Lahori Paya — Slow-Cooked Trotters
Lahori Paya is a slow-cooked dish of goat or beef trotters simmered for 6-8 hours until the collagen melts into a rich, gelatinous, deeply spiced gravy. It is traditionally eaten for breakfast (yes, breakfast) in Lahore's old city, served with naan from the tandoor, and considered the ultimate cold-weather restorative.
Karachi Parsi Dhansak
Karachi's Parsi dish of slow-cooked lamb with 3-4 lentils, pumpkin, fenugreek, and brinjal in a sweet-sour-spicy broth. Traditionally served with caramelised Parsi brown rice and kachumber salad. Cultural note: Dhansak is Parsi mourning food — served on the fourth day after a death. It is not made at weddings or celebrations.