Dhaba Chicken Karahi

Punjab cuisine

Dhaba Chicken Karahi

Prep: 10m Cook: 35m Total: 45m Serves: 4 medium Updated 2025-07-02

Dhaba Chicken Karahi is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. Dhaba Chicken Karahi replicates the smoky, robust flavours of Pakistan's legendary roadside dhabas — cooked fast on massive flames, loaded with butter, and served piping hot in the same karahi it was cooked in. This is highway food at its finest.

There's something magical about eating at a dhaba at 2am after a long drive on the GT Road.

Commercial dhaba karahis are seasoned over years of use, and the accumulated layers of carbonised fat and spice create a complexity of flavour that is part of the dish's identity. The cook barely looks at the pot, the flames are enormous, and yet the karahi that arrives is somehow perfect every single time. The dhaba secret? Confidence, butter, and zero hesitation. These roadside cooks have made the same dish ten thousand times, and it shows. Dhaba karahi typically uses more fat than home cooking (yes, more), gets a generous lump of makhan (butter) thrown in at the end, and is cooked with a ferocity that home stoves struggle to match. But we can get close! Fun fact: the word 'dhaba' likely comes from a Punjabi word for a flat area where travellers would rest — humble origins for some of Pakistan's best food. Get ready to channel your inner highway dhaba cook.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. MAXIMUM HEAT: Get your karahi smoking hot on highest flame. Add oil and wait until it's shimmering and almost smoking. Dhabas cook on gas burners the size of your torso — we compensate with patience and maximum heat.
  2. GINGER GARLIC BLAST: Add ginger garlic paste directly to hot oil and fry aggressively for 2-3 minutes, scraping constantly. It should turn golden and fragrant — this is the flavour foundation of every dhaba dish.
  3. TOMATO TAKEOVER: Add tomatoes with all dry spices. Cook on high flame for 12-15 minutes, smashing tomatoes with a wooden spoon as they soften. The masala should look dark red and thick by the end.
  4. CHICKEN IN: Add chicken pieces and stir vigorously to coat in the masala. Cook on high for 5 minutes without touching — let the chicken sear. Then stir and repeat.
  5. THE DHABA BHUNO: Cook on medium-high for 20-25 minutes, stirring every 3-4 minutes. Add green chillies. The masala should reduce, the oil should separate, and the whole thing should smell incredible. HINT: If masala sticks, splash a tiny bit of water and scrape those flavourful bits off the bottom.
  6. BUTTER FINISH: In the final 2 minutes, add butter and garam masala. Toss to incorporate. The butter creates that glossy, restaurant-quality finish dhabas are known for.
  7. GARNISH AND SERVE: Top with ginger juliennes, fresh coriander, and a drizzle of lemon juice. Serve immediately in the karahi for full dhaba experience.

Chef's Secrets

  • The butter at the end is non-negotiable for that dhaba gloss — don't skip it
  • Dhabas often add kasuri methi (dried fenugreek leaves) for aroma — try 1 tsp crushed
  • If your flame is weak, finish the karahi under the broiler for 3 minutes to get that charred edge
  • Dhabas season by eye — taste and adjust aggressively before serving

Common Questions

How long does Dhaba Chicken Karahi take to make?

Total time is 45m — 10m prep and 35m cooking.

How many servings does this recipe make?

This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.

Which region of Pakistan is Dhaba Chicken Karahi from?

Dhaba Chicken Karahi is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.

What do you serve with Dhaba Chicken Karahi?

Must be served in the karahi itself — it's not dhaba otherwise. Pair with tandoori roti, sliced pyaz (onion), hari mirch (green chillies), and lemon wedges. A chilled Pakola (Pakistani soda) on the side is peak dhaba experience.

Nutrition Facts

Per serving

Calories435
Protein33g
Fat30g
Carbs9g
Fiber2g
Sodium890mg

Serving Suggestions

Must be served in the karahi itself — it's not dhaba otherwise. Pair with tandoori roti, sliced pyaz (onion), hari mirch (green chillies), and lemon wedges. A chilled Pakola (Pakistani soda) on the side is peak dhaba experience.

Goes Well With

Recipe by Hina Jatoi

Hina is a food historian with a deep passion for preserving ancient Sindhi culinary traditions.

What Cooks Are Saying

5 2 reviews
Gulnaz K. 2025-11-14

I've tried many recipes for this dish but this one is the best by far.

Kamran B. 2024-12-06

I was nervous to try this but the instructions made it so easy. Turned out amazing.

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