20 recipes

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.

Gol Gappay

Gol Gappay

Punjab

Crispy hollow puris filled with spiced chickpeas and tangy tamarind water — Pakistan's most addictive street snack. Once you start, you physically cannot stop at one.

Aloo Samosa (Crispy Potato-Filled Pastry)

Aloo Samosa (Crispy Potato-Filled Pastry)

Punjab

Aloo Samosa is Pakistan's most iconic street snack — a perfectly crispy, triangular pastry filled with spiced mashed potatoes and peas, deep-fried to a golden crunch. Sold on every corner from Karachi to Peshawar.

Pyaz Pakora (Onion Fritters)

Pyaz Pakora (Onion Fritters)

Punjab

Pyaz Pakora — crispy, lacy, golden onion fritters dipped in a spiced chickpea batter and deep-fried — is the first thing every Pakistani makes when it rains. The scent alone is enough to start a conversation.

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.

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.

Hunza Chapshuro

Hunza Chapshuro

Gilgit-Baltistan (Hunza Valley)

Hunza Valley's iconic meat-filled whole wheat flatbread — simple whole wheat dough stuffed with spiced minced beef, coriander, and onion, cooked on a tawa until golden. Called the 'Hunza pizza' by travellers worldwide.

Pakistani Spring Rolls

Pakistani Spring Rolls

Sindh

Crispy golden rolls with a halal chicken and vegetable filling — a Pakistani Chinese staple that shows up at every family dawat, school canteen, and street-side Chinese stall from Karachi to Lahore.

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.

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.

Masala Aloo Tuk

Masala Aloo Tuk

Sindh

Masala Aloo Tuk takes the classic Sindhi twice-fried potato and loads it with a vibrant street-food style topping of yoghurt, chutneys, and chaat masala — a festival of textures and flavours in one plate.

Bun Kebab Lahori Style

Bun Kebab Lahori Style

Punjab

Lahori bun kebab featuring a spiced shami-style patty and an egg omelette tucked into a toasted bun with tamarind chutney, green chutney, pickled onions and chaat masala. Punjab's answer to the burger — messier, spicier, and infinitely more satisfying.

Egg Bun Kebab — Karachi Street Style

Egg Bun Kebab — Karachi Street Style

Sindh

Karachi's beloved egg bun kebab — a spiced scrambled egg filling with fried potato, onions and chillies piled into a toasted bun with both chutneys. The vegetarian soul of Karachi street food that satisfies any hunger in under 15 minutes.

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.

Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style

Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style

Sindh

Sindhi-style aloo samosa with a spiced potato and onion filling flavoured with amchur (dried mango powder), cumin and coriander seeds, wrapped in a thin crispy pastry. Slightly tangier and more cumin-forward than Punjabi versions — the Sindhi approach to a pan-Pakistani classic.

Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters

Daal Pakora — Crispy Split Pea Fritters

Punjab

Crunchy daal pakoras made from soaked and coarsely ground chana dal (split chickpeas) mixed with onion, green chilli and spices, then deep-fried until shatteringly crispy. Punjab's rain-day snack of choice — denser and crunchier than besan pakoras with a satisfying lentil depth.

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.

Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala

Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala

Sindh

Karachi's beloved chana chaat — boiled chickpeas tossed with chopped tomatoes, onions, fresh coriander, green chilli, tamarind chutney and a generous dose of chaat masala. Quick, tangy, spicy and completely addictive — the street food that built Karachi's snack culture.

Lahori Dahi Bhalla — Classic White Style

Lahori Dahi Bhalla — Classic White Style

Punjab

Authentic Lahori dahi bhalla — fluffy urad dal dumplings soaked in water, pressed and nestled in thick sweet yoghurt, crowned with tamarind chutney, green chutney, roasted cumin and a dusting of red chilli. The iconic white yoghurt-based chaat that Lahori dawats are incomplete without.

Karachi Gol Gappay with Imli Paani

Karachi Gol Gappay with Imli Paani

Sindh

Karachi-style gol gappay (pani puri) — hollow crispy semolina shells filled with spiced potato-chickpea mash and drowned in a tangy, spicy tamarind-mint water (imli paani). Making the shells from scratch is a labour of love that produces results no shop can beat.

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