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How to make the perfect Nargisi Kofta

How to make the perfect Nargisi Kofta

Named after a flower, nargisi kofta is a dish as tasty as the flower is pretty
Updated 01 Apr, 2018

The British insist that the desis of the world were inspired by their delicious food named Scotch egg and created the royal looking and delicious nargisi koftay.

However, in essence it’s the other way round; the British sailed from across oceans, loved the look of our Mughlai nargisi koftay and were inspired to create Scotch eggs, a traditional British dish of hard-boiled egg wrapped in meat, and coated in breadcrumb and deep fried until crisp.

The Guardian quotes, “A theory asserts that the dish evolved from northern India’s nargisi kofta, an egg covered in minced meat and served with curry, which returning soldiers and others introduced to England.”

How pretty looking are nargisi koftay? Almost as pretty as the actress Nargis, thought I.

And then I remembered what my nani had told me eons ago: “The name Nargis and the name of the food nargisi koftay come from the same source: the flower named narcissus.”

Ah, I thought, how interesting is our food history. And then nani elaborated, “The word nargisi comes from the word Nargis; a winter flower with a yellow centre with white petals around it just like a boiled egg. Nargisi koftay are hard-boiled eggs coated with minced meat and then cooked in gravy. When you cut the kofta it resembles the Nargis flower.”

Named after a flower, nargisi koftay is a dish as tasty as the flower is pretty.

According to The Oxford Companion to Food, nargisi kofta is a popular subcontinental dinner dish. Food historian Annie Gray says, “I think you can pin down the Scotch egg’s introduction to Britain of the late 17th or early 18th century, and I suspect it came from India. Its forebear may well have been the nargisi kofta or ‘narcissus kofta’ — named after the flower’s white-and-yellow petals — which came to India from Persia with the Mughal emperors. The Mughals influenced two major regions with their cuisine — Awadh and Hyderabad — the egg is generally wrapped inside meat mince and fried, then served in a brown, yoghurt-based gravy.”

Here is the recipe, from my kitchen to yours.

NARGISI KOFTA

Ingredients for the kofta

2 lbs ground beef

1 ½ small onions

½ tsp turmeric

1 tsp cumin

2 green chillis

1 egg

½ inch piece ginger

3 to 4 cloves garlic

1 tsp red chilli powder

1 tsp coriander powder

1 tsp garam masala

1 egg

1/2 cup whole wheat flour (atta)

½ tsp baking powder

Salt to taste

Put the above ingredients in a blender and set aside.

Ingredients for gravy

1 large onion

1 large tomato

2 tbsp yoghurt

2 green chillies

1 tsp red chilli powder

½ tsp turmeric

½ tsp to 1 tsp cumin seeds

½ tsp coriander powder

½ tsp to 1 tsp garam masala

1 tsp fresh ginger

1 tsp fresh garlic

Salt to taste

4 to 6 cloves

8 to 10 peppercorns

1 black cardamom

1 stick cinnamon

Method

Boil six eggs till hardboiled. Soak in cold water and peel. Set aside.

Kofta: Blend meat with all ingredients for kofta and mix well. Divide into six equal portions.

Wrap a portion of the meat mix around one egg and smooth with your hands to form an meat shell around the egg till it is fully covered. Repeat for all the remaining hardboiled eggs. Place all in a plate.

Sprinkle all coated eggs with a fine dusting of rice flour. Heat the oil for deep-frying in a deep pan. Whisk an egg in a bowl and dip each meat coated egg in whisked egg, gently shake off excess and deep fry till golden. When done, drain and place on paper towels.

In quarter to half cup oil brown onions, add tomatoes and yoghurt. Stir at high heat for a few minutes, process in the blender, pour back in pot, stir and cook on high heat adding all powder spices, and ginger-garlic. Cook for a few minutes, adding hot water (eyeballing amount of water). Let simmer, add koftay and whole garam masala. Let simmer until kofta is cooked and oil separates. Enjoy with a side of naan.


The writer is a freelance Journalist and author of Feast With A Taste Of Amir Khusro.

Originally published in Dawn, EOS, April 1st, 2018

Comments

Babu Apr 01, 2018 01:35pm
In traditional dish, Nargisi Kofta is a Lamb meat based dish and Eggs are not used at all. This may be some other dish but certainly not a Nargisi Kofta. May be it Egg Kofta.
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MM Apr 01, 2018 03:28pm
Whatever it is, my mouth is watering after reading the ingredients.
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Urooj S Apr 01, 2018 06:55pm
@Babu we have been having Nargisi kofta in this style for generations. It will not have nargisi features without the eggs.
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Pradeep Sagar Apr 01, 2018 07:01pm
We used to enjoy Nargisi Koftas in all the Sher e Punjab restaurants across India. But they used goat meat instead of beef, which gave them a special flavour and a lot better than minced beef. Sadly, we don't see this any more. Also, great tasting was a vegetarian version with koftas made from Spinach and Paneer.
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Bharat Jha Apr 01, 2018 07:02pm
Is it possible if we can remove beef from ingredients without impacting its taste.
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Sachin Apr 02, 2018 02:19am
In India we get same Nargisi Kofta. The best ones are served by authentic Punjabi dhabas.
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Syed ali Apr 02, 2018 03:24am
You cannot make lifts without Khash Khash; put it simply guy had no idea how to make Nargasi Koftas.
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Syed ali Apr 02, 2018 03:25am
@Urooj S Eggs are the epicenter of Nargasi Kofta.
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Tanvir Apr 02, 2018 07:09am
Missing one key ingredient in the Recipe! only those with Delhi Mughal heritage can point it out. Take it to a Nehari or Haleem shop cook in Karachi Mohajir area, they will identify the missing ingredient! until then let it be a mystery.
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Deepika Joshi Apr 02, 2018 08:37am
With Beef ? NO NO No.....
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Jawaid Islam Apr 04, 2018 12:49pm
Yes, my mouth waters too! Nargisi kofta without eggs! Never seen this one.
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