Sindh cuisine
Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup
Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi's iconic falooda layered with rose syrup, chilled milk, basil seeds, vermicelli, and a crown of vanilla ice cream — the ultimate street food dessert drink. This layered glass of joy is what Karachi summers are made of, and now you can make it at home.
If Karachi had a signature drink, it would be falooda.
When it reached the Mughal court it was transformed into the elaborate layered drink-dessert known today, with basil seeds (sabza), milk, and ice cream added over time. Stacked in tall glasses at every Burns Road chowk stall and ice cream parlour, this is the dessert that drinks — or the drink that's also a dessert. Nobody's sure. The layers are non-negotiable: rose syrup at the base for colour and sweetness, chilled milk for creaminess, basil seeds (tukmaria) that expand into these amazing gel-encased pearls, boiled falooda sev (thin vermicelli), and a scoop of vanilla ice cream perched on top like a crown. Fun fact: falooda has Persian roots — it was originally a frozen noodle dessert called 'faloodeh' from Shiraz. It traveled to the subcontinent via Mughal kitchens and evolved into the over-the-top dessert drink Pakistan made it. Nobody does it better than Karachi. But you can try at home.
Ingredients
Instructions
- PREP THE TUKMARIA: Add basil seeds to 1 cup cold water. Stir and leave for 30 minutes — they expand dramatically into jelly-like pearls. Drain and refrigerate. HINT: Don't use warm water — the seeds swell unevenly and can get slimy.
- COOK THE FALOODA SEV: Boil water in a small saucepan. Add falooda sev and cook for 2-3 minutes until softened but still slightly firm (al dente — it will soften further in the milk). Drain, rinse under cold water immediately, and refrigerate in a small amount of cold water.
- CHILL EVERYTHING: Every element must be cold before assembling. Make sure your glasses are chilled too — put them in the freezer for 10 minutes. Cold falooda that warms up quickly is a crime.
- LAYER THE FALOODA: In a tall glass, add 1 tbsp rose syrup. Add 2 tbsp soaked tukmaria seeds. Add 2-3 tbsp falooda sev. Pour in 150ml cold milk. Add another tbsp rose syrup if you like it sweeter. The layers should be visible — don't stir.
- ADD THE CROWN: Place a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top of the milk. Drizzle a little more rose syrup over the ice cream. Scatter sliced pistachios and rose petals. Serve immediately with a long spoon and a thick straw — you need both to navigate the layers.
- SERVE IMMEDIATELY: Falooda waits for no one. The ice cream melts into the rose milk below, creating the most gorgeous pink-white gradient as you eat. Stir lightly as you go to mix the layers — that first spoonful of everything together is peak Karachi.
Chef's Secrets
- Proper Rooh Afza (the Hamdard brand) is worth seeking out — cheaper rose syrups lack the complexity of real Rooh Afza.
- For extra creaminess, add 2 tbsp rabri between the sev and the ice cream layer.
- Tukmaria (tukh malanga) and sabja seeds are the same thing — sweet basil seeds, not chia seeds. They swell differently.
- Make individual components ahead and refrigerate separately. Assemble just before serving — assembled falooda cannot be stored.
Common Questions
How long does Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup take to make?
Total time is 40m — 30m prep and 10m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup from?
Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup?
Serve in tall glasses with a long dessert spoon and a wide straw. Set out the glass on a small plate to catch any drips from the rose syrup. Perfect for summer parties — set up a 'falooda bar' with components and let guests assemble their own.
Goes Well With
Karachi Falooda
Karachi Falooda is Pakistan's most theatrical dessert drink — layered with rose syrup, chewy falooda vermicelli, plump basil seeds, cold rabri, and topped with a scoop of ice cream. Every sip is a different texture. Every glass is a full event.
Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink
Meethi lassi is Punjab's legendary sweet yoghurt drink — thick churned dahi (yoghurt) blended with sugar, cardamom, and sometimes rose water, topped with a thick layer of malai (cream). It is Pakistan's most refreshing summer drink and the original desi smoothie.
Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea
Doodh pati chai is Pakistan's national drink — tea brewed entirely in full-fat milk with no water, producing an intensely creamy, deeply rich cup that bears little resemblance to the tea served anywhere else on earth. Strong, sweet, and non-negotiable.
What Cooks Are Saying
This is now my go-to recipe. Made it three times already.
Great flavours, took a little longer than the stated time but worth every minute.
Good recipe, clear instructions. The end result was delicious.
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