Sindh cuisine
Karachi Tikka Boti
Karachi Tikka Boti is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi Tikka Boti is the city's beloved bite-sized BBQ — small cubes of marinated chicken threaded on skewers and grilled to perfection. Quick to cook and impossible to stop eating, this is Karachi's favourite party food.
Tikka boti occupies a special place in Karachi's food culture — it's the dish ordered when a large group needs feeding quickly without compromising on flavour.
The distinction between tikka (on-the-bone pieces) and boti (boneless cubes) is an important one in Pakistani kebab culture, reflecting different levels of marinating time and cooking temperature required. Smaller pieces than bone-in tikka, these bite-sized chunks cook faster and provide more surface area for the marinade, meaning more crust per bite. The Karachi street version is typically red-orange with Kashmiri chilli, served in newspaper-wrapped portions to go. The word 'boti' literally means a piece or chunk of meat — humble name, extraordinary food. Fun fact: Karachi's BBQ industry employs hundreds of thousands of people, from the grill masters of Burns Road to the delivery boys who bring tikka boti to apartment doors at midnight. This city's love for BBQ has created its own economy. You can now participate in this economy from your kitchen.
Ingredients
Instructions
- CUT EVENLY: Cut boneless chicken into uniform 1.5-inch cubes. Even size is critical for boti — uneven pieces mean some are overcooked while others are still raw. HINT: Partially freeze chicken for 20 minutes before cutting — much easier to cut evenly.
- QUICK MARINADE: Combine all marinade ingredients. Toss chicken cubes in marinade. Even 1-2 hours of marinating is enough for small boti pieces — the surface area to volume ratio means the marinade penetrates faster than with large pieces.
- THREAD SKEWERS: Thread 4-5 boti pieces on each skewer, leaving small gaps between pieces for even cooking. Don't pack them too tight.
- HIGH HEAT GRILL: Grill on highest heat available for 3-4 minutes per side. Boti is small — it cooks fast. Don't overcook or it dries out. The outside should char while the inside remains juicy.
- BASTE ONCE: In the last minute of grilling, baste with a little oil for gloss. Remove and check — cut into a piece; it should be white inside with no pink.
- SERVE IMMEDIATELY: Slide off skewers, squeeze lemon, sprinkle chaat masala, and serve immediately. Boti is best eaten the moment it comes off the grill.
Chef's Secrets
- Thigh meat over breast — always; boti from breast meat is disappointingly dry
- Even cube size is the difference between professional and amateur boti
- Don't marinate more than 4 hours; the acid in lemon starts to 'cook' the chicken and changes the texture
- High heat, fast cooking — boti punishes slow, low-heat cooking
Common Questions
How long does Karachi Tikka Boti take to make?
Total time is 35m — 20m prep and 15m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Karachi Tikka Boti from?
Karachi Tikka Boti is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Karachi Tikka Boti?
Serve in newspaper cones (for full Karachi street authenticity) or on a platter with naan, green chutney, and onion rings. A cold Pakola or Rooh Afza drink on the side.
Goes Well With
Lahori Tikka Boti
Lahori Tikka Boti is the smoky, spiced mutton centrepiece of Pakistani BBQ culture — bone-in chunks marinated in yoghurt, spices, and raw papaya, then grilled over coal until charred and juicy. The real one comes from the coal, not the oven.
Balochi Tikka
Balochi Tikka is a minimalist masterpiece — small pieces of marinated meat cooked on coal with just a handful of spices, letting the quality of the meat and the power of the charcoal fire create something remarkable.
Bihari Boti — Karachi's Partition Kebab
Paper-thin strips of beef tenderloin, pounded flat, marinated overnight in mustard oil and poppy seeds, skewered flat and grilled. A Karachi classic born from the Bihari community's journey at Partition.
What Cooks Are Saying
Incredible depth of flavour. The spice balance is just right — not too hot, not too mild.
I was nervous to try this but the instructions made it so easy. Turned out amazing.
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