Celebrate Eid With These Delicious Recipes

To mark this year’s Eid-al-Fitr, we bring you a bunch of delectable recipes from the different regions of India. Try them out, and spread the joy 

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To mark this year’s Eid-al-Fitr, we bring you a bunch of delectable recipes from the different regions of India. Try them out, and spread the joy 

Eid is a celebration of family and food—of feasting after fasting with loved ones. To mark this year’s Eid-al-Fitr, we bring you a bunch of delectable recipes from the different regions of India. We have curated this selection from accomplished home chefs and food enthusiasts in different cities. Many of these delicious recipes, passed through generations, tell stories of times gone by, of people and places that may have been lost along the way. Try them out, and spread the joy. 

 

Hungry in Hyderabad

Dr Afzal Jehan Friese grew up in a large joint family in Hyderabad where Eid was a time of great celebration and joy.  She remembers her home coming alive with the laughter of siblings and cousins and the women of the house busy with all the preparations. And then goats being sacrificed on the day of the feast on Bakri Eid. “Sheer khorma was my favourite; it’s supposed to be a light treat boiled in milk, to be had after all the fasting. However, we Indians like to make our celebrations count, and so Sheer khorma was made rich and spicy,” laughs Dr Friese. “I remember my grandmother seated on a skateboard-like stool in her kitchen, rolling the sevian dough,” she adds. The taste of her childhood, though, is Chota Tala Hua Gosht—balls of ghee and rice, with dried strips of mutton, roasted on a coal fire. Dr Friese first tasted biryani at the age of 22—as children in their family were not allowed to eat spicy food. But she has been cooking it for years for her friends and family during Eid—although these days this treat has become a rare one. Here are two recipes from her kitchen.

Tai Jaan ki Biryani

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