Sindh cuisine
Karachi Tawa Chicken
Karachi Tawa Chicken is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi Tawa Chicken brings Sindh's bold spicing and love of tomato to the tawa — cooked faster and more aggressively than Lahori style, with a saucier masala and distinctive Karachi additions that make it uniquely satisfying.
Karachi does tawa chicken with the same intensity it does everything else — fast, hot, and unapologetically flavourful.
The technique differs from Lahore's version — Karachi-style uses more tomato and a wetter masala that gets reduced on the hot flat surface into a sticky, almost caramelised coating. The Karachi version tends to have slightly more sauce than Lahori tawa chicken, reflecting the city's love of a generous, scoop-friendly masala. Karachi tawa shops also tend to add a little more tomato and use slightly different spice ratios — less kasuri methi, more kali mirch (black pepper), and often a squeeze of lemon right on the hot tawa before serving, which sizzles and caramelises instantly. That lemon-on-tawa technique is pure Karachi dramatics — and it tastes incredible. Fun fact: Karachi has over 15 million people, all of whom seem to have strong opinions about tawa chicken. Navigating these opinions is more challenging than the recipe itself, so we've just made the best version we know how.
Ingredients
Instructions
- HOT TAWA: Heat tawa or karahi on maximum heat with oil. Add chicken and sear aggressively for 5-6 minutes. Karachi cooking is done on higher heat than Lahori — crank it up.
- ONIONS AND PASTE: Push chicken to edges of tawa. In the centre, fry onions for 5-6 minutes until golden. Add ginger garlic paste and fry 2 minutes. Mix with chicken.
- SPICE IT UP: Add all dry spices to the tawa. Stir aggressively for 1 minute. The spices should bloom and coat the chicken directly, not just in a separate masala.
- TOMATOES IN: Add tomatoes and cook on high heat for 10-12 minutes. Karachi masala should be slightly more liquid than Lahori — don't reduce it completely.
- BHUNO AND ADD CHILLIES: Add green chillies and bhuno on high heat for 12-15 minutes until chicken is fully cooked and masala coats everything.
- THE KARACHI FINISH: Squeeze lemon juice directly onto the hot tawa — it will sizzle and caramelise immediately. Toss quickly to coat. Garnish with fresh coriander. Serve immediately, sizzling.
Chef's Secrets
- The lemon-on-hot-tawa finish is specifically Karachi — do it for the drama and the flavour
- Karachi tawa chicken is saucier than Lahori — don't reduce the tomato masala too much
- More black pepper than red chilli is also the Karachi tawa signature
- Speed and high heat — Karachi cooking is aggressive and confident
Common Questions
How long does Karachi Tawa Chicken take to make?
Total time is 50m — 15m prep and 35m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Karachi Tawa Chicken from?
Karachi Tawa Chicken is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Karachi Tawa Chicken?
Serve sizzling with naan or plain rice. Sliced onions, lemon wedges, and a cold drink. The saucier masala makes it particularly good with rice.
Goes Well With
Tawa Chicken — Lahori Street Style
Tawa Chicken is Lahore's most theatrical street food — bone-in chicken cooked furiously on a massive iron tawa over high heat with tomatoes, green chillies, ginger, and butter, all chopped and stirred with a wide metal spatula in a cloud of steam and sizzle. It's fast, loud, intensely flavoured, and absolutely addictive.
Lahori Tawa Chicken
Lahori Tawa Chicken is the sizzling, intensely spiced dish cooked on a concave iron tawa (griddle) — whole chicken pieces stir-fried with tomatoes, green chillies, and generous amounts of butter right at your table in the best restaurants.
Dry Tawa Chicken
Dry Tawa Chicken is the masala-reduced, bhuno-intensive version of tawa chicken — where the masala is cooked almost completely away to leave behind intensely flavoured, almost dry chicken pieces with a sticky, caramelised spice coating.
What Cooks Are Saying
I've tried many recipes for this dish but this one is the best by far.
The instructions are so clear and easy to follow. Came out perfectly first try.
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