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41 Comments

  1. The pictures described the cooking extreme well. I cooked it following the recipe and it turned out very good. This is my first Awadhi cooking. I did not know anything about this cooking before. One change I made: I used kalonji whole spice as I thought Sachi Kira is that. I never used karaway seeds. Thanks for sharing it.5 stars

    1. thank you debu. glad to know. awadhi food takes usually longer time to cook, but the results are too good and worth the effort and time spend. awadhi cuisine comes from lucknow. caraway seeds are shahi jeera. but with kalonji also the recipe will taste good.

  2. Hi, xlnt, for a Tamil person, name is very different but dish was amazing. Felt it would be very nice for a Kathi roll too. Thanks a lot. Love and prayerful wishes. DK5 stars

  3. Caraway is often called Black Cumin, as is Kalonji, but they are different from another Black Cumin (Kala Jeera) – and although caraway is similar they are quite distinct.

  4. tried out this yesterday… superb 🙂 my son said mom it tasted like restaurant .. thanks.. one addition i added a bit of kasuri methi and little cream too5 stars

    1. lenny, garam masala is a spice blend of many spices which are warming in nature. you should get it in a good super store selling indian food stuff and spices.

  5. Tried it today……..it turned out awesome…..I thought dingri dolma is mushrooms and peas…..anyways it tasted good…..5 stars

  6. Hi

    I tried it today and liked it.
    Did not take much time and needs very little preparation….. Although I had to use regular jira but it did taste good. Next time will try it with shaha jira…
    Thanks a lot for sharing it….,,

    -shri4 stars

  7. I tried this recipe today for my hubby as he was coming home from a long tour….n wanted to cook something special….
    He loved it!!!!…..5 stars

    1. dear viv, this is not a sanjeev kapoor recipe. i have already mentioned the source of this recipe in the post. the recipe has been adapted from jigg’s kalra’s book – prashad: cooking with the indian masters. weird and strange it may sound, but till date on my blog, i have never adapted any sanjeev kapoor’s recipe.

  8. This is one of my favourite dishes, although I prefer large cubes of paneer rather than grated. Having more liquid in it also makes it go fantastically with steamed white rice.