Sindhi Safed Karahi

Sindh cuisine

Sindhi Safed Karahi

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

Sindhi Safed Karahi is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Sindhi Safed Karahi brings the white karahi concept southward, adding Sindh's characteristic touch of whole spice complexity and a slightly more generous use of cream. Elegant, aromatic, and deeply comforting.

When Sindhi cooking gets refined, it gets very refined.

This 'white cooking' tradition descended from the Mughal court's preference for pale-coloured dishes, which were associated with refinement and the use of more expensive ingredients. The Sindhi safed karahi takes the white karahi concept — no red chillies, no tomatoes — and adds distinctly Sindhi elements: a touch more whole spice complexity, sometimes a whisper of dried coconut, and the generous cream pour that's become a Hyderabadi and Sindhi signature. This dish is popular at Sindhi weddings and formal gatherings, served alongside biryani as a showpiece second dish. The cooking technique requires a gentler hand than standard karahi — you're building a delicate cream sauce, not a robust tomato base. Fun fact: Sindh was historically one of the most cosmopolitan regions of South Asia, with Arab, Persian, and Central Asian traders all passing through. The white karahi's Middle Eastern cooking influences — cream, whole spices, minimal colour — reflect that history deliciously.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. BUTTER BASE: Melt butter in a heavy-bottomed karahi on medium-low. Add whole spices and onions simultaneously and cook very gently for 8-10 minutes — soft and translucent, not browned. HINT: Low and slow is the mantra for safed karahi.
  2. AROMATICS SOFTLY: Add ginger garlic paste and cook on low for 3 minutes. Add nutmeg and mace now — just a whisper. These Sindhi signature spices add an exotic, almost floral note.
  3. SEAL THE MEAT: Add meat pieces and black pepper. Increase to medium heat. Cook for 6-8 minutes, turning to seal on all sides. The meat should be cooked through but not browned.
  4. YOGHURT LAYER: Reduce heat to lowest setting. Beat yoghurt well and add one tablespoon at a time, stirring constantly. Take 5-6 minutes for this step — patient yoghurt addition prevents splitting.
  5. STEAM COOK: Add green chillies and 1/2 cup water. Cover and cook on low for 35-45 minutes (chicken) or 55-65 minutes (mutton) until meat is completely tender.
  6. CREAM FINISH: Uncover, add cream in a slow pour, stirring gently. Cook on medium for 6-8 minutes until sauce is silky and coats the meat. Taste and adjust salt.
  7. SINDHI PRESENTATION: Garnish with sliced blanched almonds, a sprinkle of coriander, and ginger juliennes. The almond garnish is specifically Sindhi and adds wonderful texture.

Chef's Secrets

  • The nutmeg and mace are optional but transform this from good to exceptional
  • Blanched almonds for garnish are Sindhi identity — don't skip them
  • This dish should be saucier than the KP version — more cream is appropriate
  • Reheat very gently; high heat causes the cream sauce to break

Common Questions

How long does Sindhi Safed Karahi 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 Sindhi Safed Karahi from?

Sindhi Safed Karahi is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.

What do you serve with Sindhi Safed Karahi?

Serve with roghni naan or plain rice. This karahi pairs beautifully with pilau rice for a Sindhi-style feast. Sliced fresh fruit — particularly melon — makes a lovely ending.

Nutrition Facts

Per serving

Calories490
Protein38g
Fat34g
Carbs8g
Fiber1g
Sodium870mg

Serving Suggestions

Serve with roghni naan or plain rice. This karahi pairs beautifully with pilau rice for a Sindhi-style feast. Sliced fresh fruit — particularly melon — makes a lovely ending.

Goes Well With

Recipe by Tariq Abro

Based in Hyderabad, Tariq is renowned for his mastery of regional biryanis and seafood dishes.

What Cooks Are Saying

5 2 reviews
Gulnaz K. 2025-05-29

Made this last weekend and the whole family loved it. Will definitely make again.

Parveen K. 2024-10-02

Incredible depth of flavour. The spice balance is just right — not too hot, not too mild.

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