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Mutton karahi is delicious. Where did it come from?

Mutton karahi is delicious. Where did it come from?

How did the lamb karahi come to be? My research pointed me to Landi Kotal, a rustic, traditional Pukhtun town
23 Aug, 2018

Let the meat eating begin!

My first recollection of Bakra Eid celebrations (Eid-ul-Azha) is from an October of the 70s; I was five or six and sat fascinated as my father relayed the glorious religious history that marks the blessed event we celebrate today.

I vividly remember going with my father and buying a goat for Rs. 700, a beautiful tall muscular animal that was to be pampered until the morning of the qurbani (sacrifice), and then enjoyed as a delicious family lunch.

Karahi gosht is said to be a dish of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly known as NWFP). In the city of Peshawar, and its surrounding areas, meat rules supreme.

Historically speaking, lamb and goat meat (mutton) has always been favoured in South Asia, Middle East, Central Asia, and the Mediterranean. Perhaps it was it’s availability or size that made it the animal of choice to be hunted as a quick and easy dinner, or the fact that goat and lamb meat is deliciously tender and juicy.

Curry, A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors is a fabulous narrative of South Asian cuisine and the charming tales associated with its evolution:


######At a garden party at Khyber in the 1920’s, a British civil servant sampled the sort of [goat] kebabs Babar would have eaten in the early 16th century. The local Afridis, a warlike nomadic mountain people, had invited the British to watch a display of guns, fireworks, and an exhibition of how they attack in enemy’s position. An old Afridi came up and offered a lump of sheep’s flesh freshly roasted in [tomatoes]. These had to be pulled off and eaten with the fingers.

It is believed that the ruling Mughul’s hearty appetite for beef, lamb and goat clashed with the dietary habits of many of their subjects in the subcontinent. But the mountain people of Afghanistan and the Khyber were used to the hearty meat-based diet of the nomadic shepherds of the region.

The warrior nature of the Pukhtuns and some of the other Muslims in the mountainous region accentuated the consumption of the undomesticated animal, and vegetarianism was considered the diet of the people of the plains.

Lizzie Collingham, a historian opines;


######The consumption of meat was associated with strength and valor. It was considered that environmental essences contained in the soil were transferred from plants and then into herbivores, which in turn were eaten by carnivores. Each transference created a more powerful distillation of essences. Meat was thus the most intense of foods.

How did the traditional lamb karahi come to be? My research pointed me to Landi Kotal, a rustic and traditionally Pukhtun town, sitting close to Afghanistan atop the Khyber Pass.

The Shinwari and Afridi tribes hail from this region and it is also considered to be the historical home of the balti or karahi gosht.

The karahi gosht is named after the utensil it is cooked in. The balti and karahi (the cooking utensil balti is referred to as karahi in southern Pakistan) are a somewhat similar heavy-based, round, wok-like pot.

From Landi Kotal, the delicious balti gosht travelled to Punjab and then the rest of the world.

The mutton karahi essentially consists of small cubes of lamb or goat, which are cooked in tomatoes, green chillies, salt and preferably animal fat. The fresh meat is thought to provide the fat base for the cooking, and it is meant to be savoured directly from the karahi with a side of hot naan.

From the book titled, Street Food of the World

Chicken Karahi/Karahi gosht

A specialty of Lahore’s food street, this dish is made by stir-frying pieces of chicken with tomatoes, green chili, ginger, and garlic in a *karahi, the wok-like pan that gives the dish its name. The diner mops up the juice, pieces of naan. A variation of chicken karahi is karahi gosht and is made with mutton. This dish may have been the precursor of the popular British dish, Balti.*


Also see: Food Stories: Sheer Khurma


Balti or karahi, this lamb and goat delight is all about the palatability of meat. My two favourites every Eid-ul-Azha were namkeen gosht, for this was made just once a year with the fresh meat of the qurbani ka bakra (sacrificed animal), and the special karahi gosht made by my dearest father Javed Hussain Tirmizi.

My father travelled frequently on his job, and on one of his marketing ventures he travelled to Landi Kotal and got the recipe, right from its city of origin.

Here it is, celebrating Eid-ul-Azha from my kitchen to yours.

Ingredients


4 lbs goat leg, cut in small cubes
2 lbs tomatoes
7 to 10 green chillies, or to taste (chopped)
Salt to taste
Oil ½ cup, but with fresh qurbani meat the animal fat should suffice

Method


Braise the meat on a high heat, adding green chillies and salt, cook for a few minutes adding tomatoes.

Cook until the meat is tender and the tomato juice has all but evaporated.

The orange-red tender meat is ready to be served with hot delicious naan.

Eid Mubarak!


—Photos by Fawad Ahmed

This article was originally published on Dawn.com in 2014.

Comments

Raheel Aug 23, 2018 02:25pm
GREAT
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Imtiaz Ali Khan Aug 23, 2018 02:47pm
I'm a strict vegetarian, but I love Pakistani cuisine which has both Veg and Non Veg dishes and both serve the us Pakistanis with plenty of options. Daal and Roti I'm good but my friends say Chicken Karachi and Roti he is good. It's good to have it like this as this promote tolerance.
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Shah Aug 23, 2018 03:29pm
Pakistani food is in my opinion the best food in the entire world. Pakistan has a food culture going back centuries if not thousands of years and has benefitted greatly from the Muslim empiries of the old where people and food ideas moved freely between regions and continents. Pakistani food is even evolving today with people bringing home new ideas from Europe, America, Middle East, Africa and Far East which has become available in restaurants across the country.
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M. Emad Aug 23, 2018 03:52pm
South America native vegetable, tomato, introduced to India by the Portuguese. . . . . . delicious Mutton karahi come from Bengal region.
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M. Emad Aug 23, 2018 06:10pm
Asalamualaikum Pakistan, Pakistani food is a mixture of all the different regions of the east and west, perhaps that is why Pakistan is unique and indeed is a food heaven. Luv Pakistan from your twin brother Bangladesh.
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M. Saeed Aug 23, 2018 09:56pm
The writer is grossly ignorant of the origin of balti Gosht. The term Balti is from Baltistan and it is simple dish from Baltistan where it is a routine manner of cooking meat.
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Afshan Shahid Aug 23, 2018 10:08pm
Excellent article-just a minor correction. It is Balti from Baltistan(Northern Areas of Pakistan). In its making you never use Baalti. Balti Ghosht is from Baltistan, populalised by a restaurant in Birmingham in 1970s. Interestingly, word Baalti is from Portugese word Balde which was introduced by Vasco de Gama and his descedentds into Goa from where it spread to otyher parts of India and Pakistan. Just like Gumla, pipa, mistrey etc-all are portugese words)
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JA-Australia Aug 24, 2018 04:54am
I prefer curries and biryanis where the meat is deboned first. Hate biting into a piece of bone.
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Kaffir Aug 24, 2018 03:48pm
A common misconception in Pakistan or rather the land of the 75% converts is that Hindus are vegetarian and more vegetarian as one heads deeper into the country . Quite to the contrary . The South and East of India are 99 % meat eaters . But they also do eat vegetables . It is the Haryanvi and Rajasthani ,huge tall guys bordering Pakistan and in Gujrat who are 50 % vegetarian . With better nutrion the Indian populations height and build is seeing a steady upward movement . Fast .
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Socrates Aug 25, 2018 11:31am
When writing the recipe, please use kilos for weight, not pounds.
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Haroon Aug 26, 2018 07:53pm
@M. Emad We love Bangladesh too. I was in Dhaka last year. Chawkbazar in old Dhaka reminded me of Lakshmi Chowk Lahore or Karachi's famous Buns road all known for the food streets. Do come to Pakistan we have a lot of Bengalis living in Karachi. I would love to host you. Haroonyaqub@gmail.com
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