Sindh cuisine
Karachi Chicken Fried Rice
Karachi Chicken Fried Rice is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi Chicken Fried Rice is the city's beloved restaurant staple made at home — tender pieces of chicken wok-fried with cold rice, vegetables, soya sauce, and eggs in a dish that hits every flavour note with characteristic Karachi confidence.
In Karachi, chicken fried rice holds a special place in the food ecosystem — it's the dish you order from the Chinese restaurant on your street, the one that arrives in a foil container in 20 minutes, and somehow disappears before you've made it halfway through.
The resulting 'Pakistani Chinese' cuisine is now a distinct genre with dishes that exist nowhere else. Making it at home properly — with real wok heat, good chicken, and the right technique — is a revelation. You'll never order out again. This is Karachi-style: bold, well-seasoned, slightly smoky, and with more garlic and chilli than a Chinese restaurant would ever dare. Fun fact: Karachi's Chinese food scene was established in the 1940s and 50s by immigrants from Hubei province, whose cooking gradually evolved to satisfy Pakistani palates. Today, Pakistani-Chinese food is a genuinely distinct cuisine with its own conventions — and chicken fried rice is one of its greatest achievements.
Ingredients
Instructions
- MARINATE AND PRE-COOK CHICKEN: Toss chicken cubes with 1 tsp soya sauce, a pinch of kali mirch, and salt. Let sit 10 minutes. Heat 2 tbsp oil in the wok on high heat and stir-fry chicken cubes 3-4 minutes until just cooked through and slightly golden. Remove and set aside. HINT: Pre-cooking the chicken separately ensures it's cooked properly before the rice goes in — fried rice moves too fast to cook raw chicken and rice simultaneously.
- GET THE WOK HOT AGAIN: Add remaining oil to the wok. Let it heat on maximum for 2 minutes. The oil should shimmer and almost smoke. HINT: You're essentially resetting the wok after cooking the chicken. The same high-heat principle applies throughout.
- FRY AROMATICS AND VEGETABLES: Add garlic, ginger, and spring onion whites. Stir 30 seconds. Add carrot and peas. Stir-fry 2 minutes on high heat. HINT: The carrot should be slightly tender but still have some bite — it'll continue cooking when the rice goes in.
- SCRAMBLE EGGS: Push vegetables to side. Add beaten eggs. Let them set slightly, then scramble into large chunks. Don't fully mix with vegetables yet.
- ADD RICE, CHICKEN, AND SAUCES: Add cold rice to the wok. Add pre-cooked chicken. Break up rice clumps with a flat spatula. Drizzle soya sauce around the edges, add chilli sauce and kali mirch. Toss everything together on high heat for 3 minutes. HINT: Keep the heat on maximum and keep everything moving — this final toss is where the wok hei develops.
- GARNISH AND SERVE FAST: Taste and adjust salt, kali mirch, and soya sauce. Scatter spring onion greens. Serve immediately — fried rice waits for no one.
Chef's Secrets
- Pre-cooking the chicken separately is the technique that ensures it's properly cooked without overcooking the rice
- Chicken thigh is better than breast for fried rice — it stays juicy at high heat where breast can dry out
- Six tablespoons of oil seems like a lot — it isn't. It's what creates the slight richness of restaurant fried rice
- Cold rice straight from the fridge is the ideal starting texture — grains should be separate and slightly dry
- For the full Karachi experience, serve with Rooster chilli sauce and eat while watching someone argue on the street below
Common Questions
How long does Karachi Chicken Fried Rice take to make?
Total time is 40m — 20m prep and 20m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 3 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Karachi Chicken Fried Rice from?
Karachi Chicken Fried Rice is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Karachi Chicken Fried Rice?
Serve with chilli sauce, green chutney, raita, and sliced cucumber. In Karachi, this is often served with a side of chicken manchurian — two dishes, one legendary meal.
Goes Well With
Pakistani Egg Fried Rice
The essential companion to Chicken Manchurian — Pakistani egg fried rice made with basmati, not jasmine, giving it a unique fluffy texture and aromatic character that sets it apart from every other version in the world.
Pakistani Street-Style Egg Fried Rice
Pakistani Street-Style Egg Fried Rice is the Karachi roadside classic — bold, smoky from the high-heat wok, loaded with eggs and vegetables, and deeply satisfying at any hour. This is the rice dish that fuels night markets, late-night students, and everyone in between.
Lahori Egg Fried Rice
Lahori Egg Fried Rice is the Punjabi take on the beloved fried rice — bigger on the garlic, bolder on the spice, and served with that characteristically Lahori sense of occasion even for a quick weeknight meal.
What Cooks Are Saying
Good recipe, clear instructions. The end result was delicious.
Solid recipe. Added a bit more ginger than suggested and it was excellent.
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