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Sindhi cuisine





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Sindhi cuisine (Sindhi: سنڌي کاڌا) refers to the distinct native cuisine of the Sindhi people from Sindh, Pakistan. Sindhi cuisine has been influenced by Central Asian, Iranian, Mughal food traditions.[1] It is mostly a non-vegetarian cuisine,[2] with even Sindhi Hindus widely accepting of meat consumption.[3] The daily food in most Sindhi households consists of wheat-based flat-bread (Mani) or rice accompanied by two dishes, one gravy and one dry with curd, papad or pickle. Freshwater fish and a wide variety of vegetables are usually used in Sindhi cuisine.[4] Restaurants specializing in Sindhi cuisine are rare, although it is found at truck stops in rural areas of Sindh province, and in a few restaurants in urban Sindh.[5]

Historical influences

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The arrival of Islam within the Indian Subcontinent influenced the local cuisine to a great degree. As Muslims are forbidden to eat pork or consume alcohol and the Halal dietary guidelines are strictly observed, Muslim Sindhis focus on ingredients such as beef, lamb, chicken, fish, vegetables and traditional fruit and dairy. Hindu Sindhi cuisine is almost identical with the difference that beef is omitted. The influence of Central Asian, South Asian and Middle Eastern cuisine in Sindhi food is ubiquitous. Sindhi cuisine was also found in India, where many Sindhi Hindus migrated following the Partition of India in 1947. Before Independence, the State of Sindh was under Bombay Presidency.

 
The Sindhi "Sai bhaji" is a famous curry
 
Sindhi biryani, the Sindhi variant of the biryani rice dish
 
Lola (Lolo in singular) prepared on Thadri festival in Tharparkar

Food for special occasions

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Certain dishes are served on special occasions such as Diwali. A Bahji (vegetable dish) called Chiti-Kuni is made with seven vegetables. Special dishes are also served on recovery from serious illness for example when someone makes a full recovery from Chicken Pox, it is common to make an offering and make "mitho lolo", a sweet griddle-roasted flatbread: the dough is wheat flour mixed with oil (orghee) and sugar syrup flavored with ground cardamom.[6]

 
Sindhi Kadhi

Main dishes

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Sindhi Fish Curry
 
Famous Thari Singhrian ji Bhaaji
 
Most popular Kadhi dish Singhrian jo Raabro(Khaatiyo) from Tharparkar
 
Sindhi Beeh Ji Bhaji

Meat

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most of Sindhis are Muslims, they consume different animals, birds and fish meat which are Halal. Common meat like chicken, beef, mutton is quite famous among Sindhis, in addition camel, rabbit, many birds like Aari (Fulica atra), Kunj (Demoiselle crane), Titar (Grey francolin), Jhirkri (Sparrow), Duck meat is also consumed.[10] many seafood like fishes, prawns etc are also eaten. The fish Sajji of Sanghar is quite famous in all over Pakistan.[11]

Drinks

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Thadal.

Desserts

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Other Sindhi desserts and sweets like Sero, Paihu, Rabri, Atay ju Saiyun, Bondi Singhar, Daro, Kariyio tikio etc.[22][23][24]

Snacks

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Translations

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This section provides the translations between Urdu/Hindi, Sindhi and English (British and American) cooking terms of common Sindhi food.

There are occasional differences in Sindhi dialects for instance Hyderabadi Sindhi will refer to an egg as 'bedo' however Sindhis from other parts will refer to it as 'aano'.

Herbs

Urdu/Hindi Sindhi English
Sokha Dhan-ia Sukka Dhaanna (سڪاڌاڻا) Coriander Seed
Hara Dhan-ia Sawa Dhaanna Coriander Leaves
Podeena Phodno Mint leaves
Methi Hurbo Fenugreek
Taez paat Kamaal Pat Bay leaf
Kadhi pata Kari patto Curry Leaves

Spices

Urdu/Hindi Sindhi English
Amchoor Amba-choor dry mango powder
Elaichi Photo (ڦوٽا) Cardamon Pods
Badi elaichi Wado photo Black Cardamon
Namak Loonn/Noonn (لوڻ) Salt
Kali mirch Kaara Mirch Black Pepper
Lah-sun Thoom (ٿوم) Garlic
Adrak Adrak (ادرڪ) Ginger
Zeera Jiro (جيرو) Cummin Seeds
Haldi Haidda (هيڊ) Turmeric Powder
Heeng Hing/Vagaranee Asafoetida
Zafran Zafran/Kaisar(ڪيسر) Saffron
Gur Gud (ڳڙ) Jaggery
Mirch Mirch (مرچ) chillies
Imli Gida-mi-ri (گدامڙي) Tamarind
Khaskhas (کسکس) Khashkhash poppy seeds
Pulao Jeeri Caraway
Raee Rai mustard seeds
Long Lua-nga (لونگ) Clove
Til Tirr Sesame Seed
Garam Masala Garam masalo .
Dalchini Mithi Kathi/Darchini Cinnamon
Sauf Sonf Aniseed
Methi dana Hurbo Fenugreek seeds
Lal mirch Gharo mirch Red Chilli

Fruit, Vegetable and Pulses

Urdu/Hindi Sindhi English
Baingan Vaangann واڱڻ Aubergine (UK) or Eggplant (US).
Band Gobi Band/Pata Gobi Cabbage
Gaajar Gajjar (گجر) Carrot
Daal Daal Lentil
Sag Saagg Mustard Greens (Vegetable)
Khajoor Qatal or Khaarak (کارڪ يا ڪتل) Dates

Nuts

Urdu/Hindi Sindhi English
Moongphali Behi-munga or Munghera (مڱيرا) Kha-ja Peanuts
Kaju Khaaja Cashewnuts
Badaam Badaamyoon (باداميون) Almond
Pista Pista/Dodiyun Pistachio
Akhrot Akhrot Walnut

Other

Urdu /Hindi Sindhi English
Ghee Gheehu/Ghay Clarified Butter
Chapati/

Roti

Maani/Phulko/Daggri/

Daggar (ڦلڪو)

Thin wrap
Cheeni or Shakkar Khand(کنڊ), Khandre Sugar
Bheja or Maghaz Maghz (مغز), Mejalo Brain
Papar Pa-pper(پاپڙ) Poppodum
Double-roti Dab-roti/Dhabbal Bread
Aata Atto(اٽو) Wholewheat flour (Chappati flour)
Anda Bedo (Hyderbadi Sindhi) or Ando, Ano(آنو) Egg
Murghi Kukkar (ڪڪڙ) Chicken
Paplate Paplet پاپليٽ Pomfret fish
Chhota Gosht Nandho Gosht Mutton
Barra Gosht Wado Gosht Beef
Palla machhli Pallo(پلو) shad/Hilsa (fish)

Vegetarian cuisine

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Certain sects of the Sindhi community are vegetarians. The Thathai, Halai and Kutchi Bhatias are followers of Vallabh Acharya, who put forward a way to worship Sri Krishna called Pushtimarg. They are strict vegetarians who do not eat even onions and garlic and are devoted to Srinathji, the child form of Sri Krishna.[32]

Sindhi Pickles

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Sindhi achar is made of different vegetables and fruits like: Carrot pickle, Mango pickle, Mix fruit pickle, turnip pickle, Green chilli pickle etc,[25] Shikarpur is famous for Sindhi achar.[33][34]

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Sindhi Biryani.
 
Sindhi Pulao.
 
Sindhi Dal Pakwan.
 
Sindhi Gosht Batalu (meat curry)
 
Sindhi Seyal Murgh (Chicken) dish
 
River fish layered with ground mustard leaves.
 
Bhugo Memon dish
 
Beeh (Lotus root) snack
 
Sindhi Trikundo (triangular) Ofrato bread.
 
Bajhar ji maani
 
Sindhi Kheerni.
 
Sindhi Halwo
 
Paira of Ghotki
 
Sindhi Churi.
 
Sindhi Attay ju Saiyun (Vermicelli).
 
Sindhi Chawran ji Mani, Sagg and Lassi.
 
Sindhi Gheeyar.
 
Pakora
 
Sindhi Beeh Bhaji.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Reejhsinghani, Aroona (2004). Essential Sindhi Cookbook. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-303201-4.
  • ^ Reejhsinghani, Aroona (2004). Essential Sindhi Cookbook. Penguin Books India. ISBN 978-0-14-303201-4.
  • ^ Kent, Eliza F.; Kassam, Tazim R. (2013-07-12). Lines in Water: Religious Boundaries in South Asia. Syracuse University Press. ISBN 978-0-8156-5225-0.
  • ^ Reejhsinghani, Aroona (2004-08-04). The Essential Sindhi Cookbook. Penguin UK. ISBN 978-93-5118-094-4.
  • ^ a b Jillani, Maryam (2019-04-02). "Sindhi food: A vibrant cuisine hidden from the Pakistani and Indian public". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2021-07-20.
  • ^ "Various Sindhi recipes". www.simplysindhirecipes.com. WordPress. Retrieved 3 September 2015.
  • ^ "Koki". 31 May 2008.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2021-04-29). "Khhoraak, the winter special Sindhi sweet". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Khan, M. Hussain (2015-09-03). "The palla, the shrine, the catch and the cook". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ WNN (2020-02-21). "Common Coot: A disappearing migratory bird in Sindh". World Nature News. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  • ^ "Small-town Pakistani chef known for innovative fish recipe eyes Middle East". Arab News PK. 2021-01-09. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  • ^ Sindhi Drinks https://pandareviewz.com/sindhi-food-cuisine/
  • ^ "Busri😍sindhi dish Recipe by Rooha Abdullah". Cookpad. 2019-03-28. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ ڈیسک, ویب (2021-12-22). "سندھ کی سوغات『اگم حلوہ』فوائد جان کر آپ حیران رہ جائیں گے -". ARYNews.tv | Urdu - Har Lamha Bakhabar (in Urdu). Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ "Karachi Halwa Recipe - Bombay halwa Recipe". Indian Vegetarian Recipes in Hindi | NishaMadhulika.com (in Hindi). 2012-08-31. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Lala, Lata (2018-06-06). "Karachi Halwa | Bombay Halwa - Yummy Tales Of Tummy". Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ "Moosani mava: spoiled milk turned into sweet delight". Daily Times. 2022-02-28. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2008-03-16). "Bhori(Kuttti)". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Jillani, Maryam (2019-04-02). "Sindhi food: A vibrant cuisine hidden from the Pakistani and Indian public". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2014-04-06). "Gheeyar Sindhi Jalebi". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ "MM News". 2020-05-24. Retrieved 2024-02-17.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka. "Dessert Archives". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-01-30.
  • ^ Naqsh e Zehra. "Sindhi sweets". Youlin Mazgine.
  • ^ "Sindhi Desserts". Ribbons to Pastas. May 2016.
  • ^ a b Shyam, Radhika D. (2021-08-14). "Papads, pickles and Partition: A Sindhi reminiscence". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  • ^ Mulchandani, Anil (2017-09-09). "Flavours from a Sindhi kitchen". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2008-05-03). "Sanna pakora". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2017-05-21). "Bhuri~Bhurrani Mitti". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ Sherrif, Ahmed (2018-08-09). "Makhana, Nadru & More: Why India's National Flower Is Great For Your Health!". The Better India. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2022-02-01). "Dadhri|Forgotten Sindhi Snack". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ Keswani, Alka (2009-04-13). "Sindhi style gattey ki subzi". Sindhi Rasoi |Sindhi Recipes. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  • ^ "panjakhada.com". Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  • ^ "شکار پور کا اچار". jang.com.pk. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
  • ^ "Lok Mela: Day two showcases colours of Sindh". The Express Tribune. 2014-04-12. Retrieved 2024-02-03.
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    Last edited on 4 April 2024, at 02:21  





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