Punjab cuisine
Desi Dhaba Handi
Desi Dhaba Handi is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. The no-frills, maximum-flavour dhaba-style chicken handi — cooked the way roadside restaurants do it across Punjab. Robust, unpretentious, and reliably delicious.
Dhaba cooking is its own cuisine — it exists between home cooking and restaurant cooking, developing its own techniques over decades of feeding truckers, travellers, and anyone who stops along Pakistan's highways and city backstreets.
The GT Road, originally built by the Mauryan Empire and rebuilt by Sher Shah Suri in the 16th century, has been fed by roadside cooks for over 2,000 years. Dhaba handi is the working version of the more refined restaurant handis: bigger portions, simpler technique, bolder flavours. The dhaba cook doesn't measure anything — they work by eye, feel, and the kind of intuition that comes from cooking the same dish 50 times a day. This recipe translates that intuition into precise instructions for a home cook. The technique is rated easy because it's genuinely straightforward — there's no delicate yogurt management, no cream that can split. Just oil, onions, masala, chicken, and time. Fun fact: Pakistani dhaba culture employs millions of people and is considered an informal social institution — the same dhaba where a labourer eats his lunch might also serve a politician's family on a road trip. The food is always the great equaliser.
Ingredients
Instructions
- DHABA SPEED ONIONS: Heat oil in a wide pot or handi. Fry chopped pyaaz on high-medium heat — dhabas don't fry slowly, they fry fast and hot. 10 minutes to golden-brown at high heat.
- MASALA: Add adrak-lehsan paste, all dry spices. Bhuno 3 minutes. Add tamatar and cook down 8 minutes. The masala should be very well done.
- CHICKEN: Add chicken and salt. Bhuno on high for 8 minutes. Add 3/4 cup water.
- COVER AND COOK: Cover tightly and cook on medium heat 25-30 minutes until chicken is cooked and very tender.
- DHABA FINISH: Uncover. Add hari mirch and garam masala. Increase heat and cook uncovered 5-8 minutes until oil rises to surface — this 'oil on top' is the dhaba signal that the dish is done correctly.
- SERVE GENEROUSLY: Top with hara dhania. Serve in a large handi with naan — dhaba portions are generous. Don't be stingy.
Chef's Secrets
- Oil rising to the surface at the end is the traditional test that the masala is properly cooked — don't skim it off.
- Dhaba handi is always served in the vessel it's cooked in — no serving dishes needed.
- The generous oil level is part of the dhaba character — this is not a low-fat dish.
- Bone-in chicken is mandatory for dhaba style — boneless changes the whole dish.
Common Questions
How long does Desi Dhaba Handi take to make?
Total time is 1h 5m — 15m prep and 50m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Desi Dhaba Handi from?
Desi Dhaba Handi is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Desi Dhaba Handi?
Serve with rugged tawa roti or plain naan. Sliced raw onion, green chillies, and lemon wedges on the side — dhaba style. A cold bottle of Coca-Cola or a glass of sweet lassi is the classic dhaba accompaniment.
Goes Well With
Creamy Chicken Handi
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.
Creamy White Chicken Handi
Punjab's beloved restaurant-style white chicken handi — tender chicken in a creamy, mildly spiced gravy that's become one of Pakistan's most ordered dishes. Silky, indulgent, and surprisingly achievable at home.
Karachi Chicken Handi
Karachi's bold, tomato-forward chicken handi — red-orange in colour, spicier than the Punjab white version, and finished with fresh herbs and green chillies. Urban street food confidence in a clay pot.
What Cooks Are Saying
Absolutely delicious! The flavours are spot on — tastes just like what I grew up eating.
Made this last weekend and the whole family loved it. Will definitely make again.
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