Sindh cuisine
Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style
Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Sindhi-style aloo samosa with a spiced potato and onion filling flavoured with amchur (dried mango powder), cumin and coriander seeds, wrapped in a thin crispy pastry. Slightly tangier and more cumin-forward than Punjabi versions — the Sindhi approach to a pan-Pakistani classic.
The aloo samosa is the universal language of Pakistan.
The vegetarian potato samosa is a relatively recent innovation in historical terms, despite now being the most ubiquitous version. No matter where you are in the country, a hot samosa with tamarind chutney is the answer to hunger. But Sindhi-style aloo samosa has a personality: it's tangier (thanks to generous amchur — dried mango powder), more cumin-forward, and the filling often includes finely chopped raw onion for crunch. In Hyderabad and Larkana, samosa shops fry enormous batches continuously through iftaar hour, and the tangy filling is a point of regional pride. Fun fact: the tanginess in Sindhi samosa filling comes from amchur (aam chur), which is simply sun-dried and powdered raw green mango. It's used throughout Sindhi cuisine as a souring agent the way Punjabis use lemon. Once you try amchur in samosas, you'll never go back to plain.
Ingredients
Instructions
- MAKE AND REST PASTRY DOUGH: Rub cold ghee into sifted flour and salt until resembling breadcrumbs. Add cold water gradually to form a firm dough. Knead for 3-4 minutes. Cover with a damp cloth and rest for 30 minutes minimum — resting relaxes the gluten for easier rolling.
- MAKE THE SINDHI FILLING: Heat 2 tbsp oil in a karahi. Add cumin seeds and crushed coriander seeds — let them sizzle for 30 seconds. Add half the onion (chopped finely) and cook until translucent. Add red chilli, salt and amchur powder. Stir for 1 minute.
- ADD POTATOES: Add roughly mashed potatoes. Mix well with the spiced oil. Cook for 3-4 minutes, mixing and mashing further as you go. Taste — the filling should be tangy from the amchur, warmly spiced, and well-salted. Cool completely.
- ADD RAW COMPONENTS: To the cooled filling, add the raw half of the onion (finely chopped), fresh coriander and green chilli. Mix well. These raw additions give freshness and crunch that cooked-only fillings lack.
- SHAPE: Roll dough thin and cut into semi-circles. Form cones, fill and seal thoroughly (see keema-samosa-lahori instructions for shaping technique). Check every seal carefully — amchur makes this filling slightly wetter, so secure sealing is critical.
- FRY: Deep fry in medium-temperature oil (160-170°C) for 8-10 minutes until crispy and golden. Don't crowd the pot. Serve immediately with both chutneys.
Chef's Secrets
- Amchur is the flavour differentiator here — don't substitute with lemon juice, which makes the filling wet.
- Adding raw onion to the cooled filling (not the hot filling) preserves its crunch inside the samosa.
- Boil potatoes until just cooked — over-boiled potatoes absorb more water and make for a wet filling.
- Freeze uncooked samosas on a flat tray, then bag and store for up to 2 months — fry from frozen.
Common Questions
How long does Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style take to make?
Total time is 1h 10m — 40m prep and 30m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 6 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style from?
Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Aloo Samosa — Sindhi Style?
Serve hot with sweet tamarind chutney and spicy green chutney. In Sindh, samosas are often served alongside dahi (yoghurt) as a dipping sauce — the cooling contrast against the tangy filling is excellent.
Goes Well With
Aloo Samosa (Crispy Potato-Filled Pastry)
Aloo Samosa is Pakistan's most iconic street snack — a perfectly crispy, triangular pastry filled with spiced mashed potatoes and peas, deep-fried to a golden crunch. Sold on every corner from Karachi to Peshawar.
Keema Samosa — Lahori Street Style
Crispy Lahori keema samosa filled with spiced beef mince cooked with peas, green chilli and fresh coriander, wrapped in a flaky homemade pastry and deep-fried to golden perfection. The ultimate Ramadan iftaar snack and Pakistani party food that disappears in minutes.
Bun Kebab Karachi Style
Karachi's original street burger — a spiced lentil patty tucked in a bun with sweet-tangy chutney, egg wash, and raw onions. The 50-rupee meal that punches above its weight.
What Cooks Are Saying
Incredible depth of flavour. The spice balance is just right — not too hot, not too mild.
Nice recipe. I substituted one ingredient and it still came out great.
Solid recipe. Added a bit more ginger than suggested and it was excellent.
Leave a Review
Tried this recipe? Share your experience — your review helps other cooks.