Sindh cuisine
Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut
Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Sindhi-style zarda sets itself apart with the addition of fresh coconut and a heavier hand with rose water, creating a fragrant sweet rice dessert with a distinctly coastal character. Made for Sindhi celebrations and eid gatherings, this version is lighter on ghee but big on flavour.
Sindhi zarda tells a different story than its Punjabi cousin.
The use of saffron in Sindhi sweet dishes reflects Sindh's historical wealth — saffron was historically one of the most expensive spices in the world, priced higher than gold by weight. While the Punjab version is all about ghee and khoya, Sindhi zarda draws on the region's coastal influences — adding freshly grated nariyal (coconut) for a slightly chewy texture and tropical sweetness. In Hyderabad and Larkana, you'll find this at every eid dastarkhaan, often served in individual leaf plates (pattals) at outdoor gatherings. The rose water here is used with a generous hand — Sindhis believe in fragrant food. Fun fact: Sindh was historically on the spice trade route, and Sindhi cuisine reflects that through more complex, layered flavourings. This is a dessert you make with pride and serve with love. And the coconut? Once you try it you'll wonder why anyone ever leaves it out.
Ingredients
Instructions
- PARBOIL RICE: Boil a large pot of water. Add soaked, drained basmati and cook for 6 minutes until 70% done — grains should be tender on the outside with a visible white centre. Drain completely and spread on a tray to cool slightly.
- MAKE LIGHT SUGAR SYRUP: In a karahi, dissolve sugar in 150ml water over medium heat. Boil for 4 minutes to form a light syrup. It should not be sticky between fingers — just fluid and sweet. Add saffron water and stir.
- FRY SPICES AND COCONUT: In a separate large, wide karahi, heat ghee over medium heat. Add cardamom pods and fry 30 seconds. Add grated fresh coconut and fry for 2-3 minutes, stirring constantly, until it turns light golden. Add raisins and chironji and stir for another minute.
- LAYER THE RICE: Add the parboiled rice to the karahi with the coconut mixture. Pour the saffron syrup over everything. Gently fold to combine without breaking grains. Taste a grain — it should be sweetened all the way through.
- DUM COOK: Seal the karahi tightly with foil, then the lid. Cook on the lowest heat for 20 minutes. The steam inside will finish cooking the rice and let all the flavours meld together.
- FINISH WITH ROSE WATER AND NUTS: Open the dum, drizzle rose water, scatter almonds and pistachios. Fold gently one last time. Plate on a wide thaal and garnish with extra nuts and a sprinkle of reserved coconut.
Chef's Secrets
- Fresh coconut is non-negotiable — dessicated coconut gives a dry, chewy texture that doesn't suit this dish.
- For even more Sindhi flavour, add a pinch of javitri (mace) to the ghee along with the cardamom.
- Chironji (charoli) can be found at any good dry fruit shop or kiryana store — worth tracking down for authenticity.
- Sindhi zarda is best served at room temperature, not piping hot, to let the flavours settle.
Common Questions
How long does Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut take to make?
Total time is 1h 5m — 20m prep and 45m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 7 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut from?
Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Sindhi Zarda — Fragrant Sweet Rice with Coconut?
Serve in traditional leaf plates (pattals) for an authentic Sindhi touch at gatherings, or on a large communal platter. Garnish generously with nuts and coconut shreds.
Goes Well With
Shahi Zarda
Shahi Zarda is the jewelled sweet rice of Pakistani celebrations — fragrant basmati tinted gold with saffron, studded with dry fruits, nuts, and cardamom. A Mughal-era dish that still anchors every walima and mehndi spread.
Zarda — Pakistani Wedding-Style Sweet Rice
Vibrant Punjabi wedding-style zarda made with fragrant basmati rice cooked in sugar syrup with saffron, fried in ghee and loaded with nuts, raisins and khoya for an indulgent celebration rice dessert. The showstopper at every Pakistani walima and mehndi.
Karachi Falooda
Karachi Falooda is Pakistan's most theatrical dessert drink — layered with rose syrup, chewy falooda vermicelli, plump basil seeds, cold rabri, and topped with a scoop of ice cream. Every sip is a different texture. Every glass is a full event.
What Cooks Are Saying
Authentic taste, clear steps. Exactly what I was looking for.
The instructions are so clear and easy to follow. Came out perfectly first try.
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