Beef Karahi Karachi Style

Sindh cuisine

Beef Karahi Karachi Style

Prep: 20m Cook: 1h 15m Total: 1h 35m Serves: 4 medium Updated 2025-07-06

Beef Karahi Karachi Style is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi-style Beef Karahi is a bold, deeply flavoured dish that showcases the city's love for beef — slow-cooked gosht (meat) in a spiced tomato masala that's been bhunoed (stir-fried) to perfection. This is Karachi's beef obsession in one karahi.

Karachi runs on beef.

The city's beef culture reflects the large Muhajir population (migrants from India) who brought diverse meat-cooking traditions from different parts of the subcontinent. While much of South Asia avoids it, Karachi embraces beef with an almost civic pride — beef biryani, beef nihari, beef bun kabab, and of course, beef karahi. The city's large beef-eating population has developed some of the most sophisticated beef dishes in the subcontinent. Karachi-style beef karahi differs from its chicken counterpart in that the meat needs longer cooking and the masala must be built with more patience — beef rewards you for taking your time. The collagen from slow-cooked beef bones enriches the masala in a way that chicken simply can't match. Fun fact: Karachi's Burns Road area, nicknamed the 'food street of Karachi,' has been serving beef karahi since before Partition. Some of these family businesses have been at the same spot for 70+ years. History never tasted so good.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. BROWN THE ONIONS: Heat oil in a large, heavy karahi on medium-high. Fry onions for 10-12 minutes until deep golden brown. Patience here builds the foundation of flavour that beef needs.
  2. AROMATICS: Add ginger garlic paste and fry aggressively for 3 minutes until golden. Add turmeric and stir for 30 seconds. The colour should shift to a rich golden-orange.
  3. SPICED MASALA: Add chopped tomatoes with all dry spices. Cook on high heat for 15 minutes until tomatoes completely dissolve and oil separates clearly. Mash with a spoon as they cook.
  4. SEAR THE BEEF: Increase to highest heat. Add beef and stir-fry for 8-10 minutes to brown the meat. This searing step builds the fond (caramelised layer) that makes Karachi karahi different from a regular curry.
  5. SLOW BUILD: Reduce to medium, add 1/2 cup water, and cover. Cook for 30-40 minutes until beef is tender, checking every 10 minutes. Beef on the bone will take 40 minutes; boneless takes 30. HINT: The meat should be fork-tender but not falling apart.
  6. BHUNO HARD: Remove lid, add green chillies, and increase heat to high. Bhuno (stir-fry) for 10-12 minutes, stirring constantly, until masala dries and coats the meat. This is the most important step.
  7. FINAL TOUCH: Crush kasuri methi between your palms and sprinkle in. Stir for 1 minute. Garnish with ginger juliennes and coriander. Serve immediately.

Chef's Secrets

  • Bone-in beef makes a dramatically richer karahi — the marrow adds body to the masala
  • If the beef isn't tender after 40 minutes, add a little more water and keep going — don't rush it
  • Kasuri methi at the end is the Karachi signature move that elevates this dish
  • This karahi actually improves with 30 minutes of rest before serving if you have the patience

Common Questions

How long does Beef Karahi Karachi Style take to make?

Total time is 1h 35m — 20m prep and 1h 15m cooking.

How many servings does this recipe make?

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

Which region of Pakistan is Beef Karahi Karachi Style from?

Beef Karahi Karachi Style is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.

What do you serve with Beef Karahi Karachi Style?

Serve with naan or thick Karachi-style roti. The richer masala pairs beautifully with simple plain rice as well. Sliced raw onions, green chillies, and lemon wedges are essential accompaniments.

Nutrition Facts

Per serving

Calories460
Protein38g
Fat28g
Carbs10g
Fiber2g
Sodium940mg

Serving Suggestions

Serve with naan or thick Karachi-style roti. The richer masala pairs beautifully with simple plain rice as well. Sliced raw onions, green chillies, and lemon wedges are essential accompaniments.

Goes Well With

Recipe by Gulab Bibi

Growing up in the valleys of Swat, Gulab shares generations-old Pathan family recipes.

What Cooks Are Saying

4.5 2 reviews
Nasrullah K. 2025-07-12

Came out beautifully. Would have given 5 stars but I found the sauce a bit thin — easy fix though.

Sana M. 2025-05-09

The instructions are so clear and easy to follow. Came out perfectly first try.

Leave a Review

Tried this recipe? Share your experience — your review helps other cooks.