Shufta, a Kashmiri dessert, at a pandit restaurant in New Delhi.[1] One major difference between Kashmiri pandit and Kashmiri Muslim food is the use of onion and garlic.[2]

Kashmiri cuisine is the cuisine of the Kashmir Valley in the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir. Kashmiris have developed the art of cooking to a very high degree of sophistication and evolved a cuisine quite distinct from that of any part of the world.[3] Mughal emperor Jehangir, when asked his dying wish, responded, “Only Kashmir”, which referred not only to Kashmir's ecology but also to its comforting cuisine — crisp lotus fritters, floral kahwa tea and harissa, a fatty sheep dish.[4] Located at the cross roads of subcontinent, central and middle Asia with borders stretching from Russia to Afghanistan, Kashmir has been called a melting pot of cultures, a crucible of practices, ideas and influences.[5]

Rice is the staple food and has been so since ancient times.[6] The equivalent for the phrase "bread and butter" in Kashmiri is haakh-batta (greens and rice).[7] Meat along with rice, some vegetables and salad are prepared on special occasions like Eid.[8] Gravies are thin, very flavourful with no floating oil or masalas.[9] A typical everyday Kashmiri meal — lunch and dinner — consists of a generous serving of rice (about 250 gms), mutton (100 gms) and vegetables (about 100gms, mostly greens) cooked in oil, and yoghurt (50 to 250 gms).[7]

Kashmiris consume meat voraciously.[10][11] They share a love for lamb; the love a Kashmiri has for meat is unparalleled.[12][11] A good Kashmiri would not touch frozen meat, they feel it is not suited for the local cuisine.[13] They are, per capita, the highest mutton consumers in the subcontinent.[12] According to official data, around 2.2 million sheep are slaughtered in Kashmir every year on an average adding up to 21,000 tonnes annual meat consumption in the region.[14] Kashmiri Pandits are all Saraswat Brahmins, and hence avid meat-eaters.[15] The amount of mutton that is generally required to be bought for a Kashmiri Pandit wedding feast is 650 gm per head (not considering chicken).[16] Kashmiri Muslims prefer goat, especially young, while Kashmiri Pandits choose lamb.[17] Meat is called Neni by Pandits and Maaz by Muslims in Kashmir.[18] Asafoetida is mixed with yoghurt by Pandits and shallot mixed with garlic by Muslims.[5] In a majority of Kashmiri Pandit and Muslim cooking, bread is not part of the meal; it's always rice at lunch or dinner.[19] Bread is only eaten with tea in the morning or evening.[19] They may be bought from neighbourhood bakeries (qandurwan).[9]

The main daily staple food of the Muslims of Kashmir is plain cooked rice. They are typically not vegetarian, with very few exceptions. Meat stock is a salient ingredient even for so-called 'vegetarian' dishes.[20] A joke shared is: Find me a Kashmiri vegetarian and I will give you a pot of gold.[20] However they often eat vegetable curries, with meat being an expensive indulgence.[18] The cooking methods of vegetables, mutton, homemade cheese (paneer), and legumes are somewhat similar to those of Kashmiri Pandits, except in the use of onions, garlic and shallots by Muslims in place of asafoetida.[18]

Harissa or Harisse, a meaty staple from Kashmir.

In Muslim cuisine, spices are less used as compared to that in Pandit dishes. Cockscomb flower, called "mawal" in Kashmiri, is boiled to prepare a red food colouring, as used in certain dishes. Pandits use the mildly pungent Kashmiri red chili powder as a spice, as well as Ratanjot i.e., Alkanet root to impart colour to certain dishes like Roghan Josh. Muslims use chilies in moderate quantity, and avoid hot dishes at large meals.[18] There is also a notable difference in the mode of service and eating between Pandits and Muslims, especially in the case of feasts. Amongst Muslims usually four persons eat together, in one big tinned copper platter, called a "traem" in Kashmiri; this is a round vessel of around 45 centimetres (18 in) diameter, typically beautifully embossed.

History of Kashmiri cuisine

There is a legend that aeons ago Kashmir valley was a vast mountain lake.[21] The soil contains remains of fresh-water fish and fossil-oysters and the black shells of water chestnut may be found in layers embedded in the earth at a height of 457 metres above the level of the valley.[21]

From the mythical Mahabharata to the Iranian invasion of Kashmir (which was a part of Gandhara) by Darius in 516 BC,[22] to the Mauryans who established Srinagara to the Kushan Empire to the invasion of Kashmir by Timur in 1398,[23][24] the culture and cuisine of Kashmiris are linked to the greater Indian, Persian and Central Asian[25] cuisines mixed with local innovations and availabilities of ingredients.[26] The term kabab is Arabic in origin, korma has Turkish roots, and rogan josh, yakhaen, ab gosht, rista and goshtaba stem from Persian sources.[27]

Red-ware pottery with horned figure from Burzahom.
Kashmiri Woman and Tree (300s – 400s), her fertile properties cause the tree to fruit.[28]

Early history

The process of Kashmir's amalgamation with outer world commenced with the importation of primitive forms of snake and fire worship from Iran.[29] Since Paleolithic times, serpents were worshipped and buried with a supply of insects in their graves as a provision for their future life.[29] In addition, they splashed grains at shrines and graves to express regard unto snakes and other animals.[29]

The range of tools recovered at the Neolithic site of Burzahom, in the district of Srinagar shows the men were skilled hunters with knowledge of implements for cultivation.[30] Stone hearths have been found at ground levels, near the mouth of pits.[30] The Period II (Ceramic Neolithic) structures show a dish with a hollow stand and a globular pot.[30] Rectangular harvesters with a curved cutting edge have also been recovered.[30] Presence of harpoons indicates fishing.[31] The art-producing behaviour of Neolithic men is witnessed in a hunting scene, with human, a dog and a sun path diagram.[30]

Even before the Megalithic culture that followed the Neolithic period, there is evidence of wheat, barley and lentil cultivation.[30] Mortar and pestle characterised by a rectangular cross-section are made of the same volcanic rock as used by the current Kashmiris.[32] The presence of lentil explains that the people of Burzahom had wide contacts with Central Asia.[30]

At the Gufkral Neolithic site 41 km southwest of Srinagar, archaeologists have confirmed settlers were engaged in wild game as well as domestication of animals.[33] The animals that were known at the time were wild sheep, wild goat, wild cattle, red deer, wolf, Himalayan Ibex and bear.[33] Roasting of food (both flesh and grain) was done only outside as no hearths or fireplaces were found inside the dwelling pits. Piercers were used for making incisions and for tearing open the flesh after the animal was killed and skinned, scrapers were used to scrape fat from the flesh.[34] In the Phase IB of Neolithic occupation, some new additions included cattle and common peas.[31] Pig (sus scrofa) and fish made their appearance in the late Neolithic period. Bones of hare (lepus), hedgehog, rodents and beaver were also recovered.[35]

On the basis of the presence of the Emmer wheat (Triticumdicoccum) crop at Kanispur, seven kilometres east of Baramulla, contacts of Harappans with the Neolithic Kashmir has been suggested.[31] With the Aryan migration to Kashmir around the 8th century BC, the fire worship cult got embedded into the innate religio-cultural texture of Kashmir through practices such as a phallic emblem of cooked rice.[29] The local ceremony of vayuk is again near to the Iranian style of Farvadin. On a special day of the month, Kashmiri Muslims remember their dead, visit their graves and distribute loaves of rice.[29]

Indo-Greek & Kushana period

Badamwari Garden in Kashmir is known for its almond blossoms. The almond (prunus amygdalus) tree has a very old history in the Kashmir valley.

Earthen thalis (pans) have been found at Semthan, north of Bijbehara from the Indo-Greek period (200 BC – 1st century AD).[36] Handis (metal pots), flat plates, pedestalled cups and edged bowls have been reported in large numbers from the excavated sites of Harwan, Kanispur and Semthan.[37] At Kanispur, cooking pots have been found.[37] Kushan coins have been recovered in large numbers from the Kashmir valley with those of Kanishka continuing to emulate Vima's motif of king sacrificing at an altar.[37]

The Kushan period is characterized by a double-cropping pattern, suggesting a change in agricultural practices associated with a population recovery following a post-Neolithic decline.[38] Finds of Vitis vinifera (Common Grape Vine), Emblica officinalis (Indian Gooseberry), Ziziphus nummularia (Wild Jujube), Juglans regia (English Walnut) and Prunus amygdalus (Almond) suggest that horticulture and foraging played an important role in the diet of the occupants.[38] The Kushan remains from Kanispur are dominated by barley, in contrast to Semthan where wheat is more common.[38]

The Kushana history tells us that right from the days of the Kushana rulers (1st century AD – 450 AD) there were contacts between Romans and Kashmir.[39] Kashmir was connected to the southern silk route via Gilgit and Yasin valley at Tashkurghan.[39] The main items of export to Rome were saffron and dolomiaea costus (kutha).[39] Dolomiaea costus was used in Rome for various purposes, among which for scenting of food and seasoning of wine.[39]

Hindu dynasties

There were military contacts between the Karkota kingdom in Kashmir and the Tang (618 AD – 907 AD) court in China.[40] When the Chinese Tang Dynasty successfully defeated the Tibetan forces and entered little Palur in October 722 AD, Kashmir was credited for providing agricultural supplies essential to sustaining the Chinese troops stationed in Gilgit valley.[40]

Kashmir Sultanate (1346 – 1580s)

Shrine of Kashmiri Sufi saint Nund Reshi.

Since Islam did not directly arrive from Arabia to Kashmir, it naturally carried with it mixed Iranian and Central Asian influences.[29] Similarly, the Kashmiri Hindus were doing things which would have frightened orthodox Hindus from India.[41] They drank water brought by a Muslim, ate food that was cooked in a Muslim boat and even Muslim foster-mothers were allowed to feed their children.[41] Hence, the rishi cult identified with Hinduism in subscribing to vegetarianism, non-injury to animals and abstaining from the use of garlic and onion in food.[29] Nund Rishi, according to a legend, subsisted on a diet of dried dandelion leaves and Lal Ded preached and practiced strict vegetarianism.[42]

Moreover, when Yusuf Shah Chak, the last sovereign king of Kashmir signed a treaty with emperor Akbar recognising his symbolic sovereignty in 1586 one of the terms was that the mint, the saffron and game would remain under imperial control.[43]

Mughals (1580s – 1750s)

In Srinagar, poor people's meals were made of ghee, milk, beef, onions, wine, pickles, and vinegar.[citation needed] Rice, fish, and numerous vegetables were staple foods during the Mughal era.[citation needed] Butter and fats were not widely used in cooking since they were believed to be dangerous owing to the cold environment.[citation needed] The river water was not drunk by the people of South Kashmir.[citation needed] They drank Dal Lake water, which was warm, pleasant, and easily digestible.[citation needed]

In 1635–36, during Shahjahan's reign, a violent conflict flared up between the Shias and Sunnis when a group of both the sections were eating mulberries at Maisuma and some were accused of using indecent words against Muhammad.[44] In 1641, unprecedented floods followed by a famine rendered the villages desolate.[44] Shahjahan sent 30,000 rupees to the subedar Tarbiyat Khan to be distributed among the destitute in Srinagar and also ordered that five centres should be opened in the valley to provide free food to the needy.[44]

Sikh Rule (1819–1846)

Cow slaughter was declared a crime punishable by death and many people accused of killing cows were publicly hanged.[45] Owing to the shortsighted policy of the rulers Kashmír witnessed an acute agrarian crisis.[45] Sikh rulers imposed one half of the paddy production as a share of the government.[45] The population of Kashmir decreased from 800,000 in 1822–1823 to 120,000 in 1835.[45]

Dogra Rule (1846–1947)

Coarse rice and haakh constituted the main food.[46] Where paddy cultivation was restricted due to uneven terrain and lack of irrigation facilities, maize constituted the main item of food.[46] In certain parts of Kashmir they lived on aquatic products such as singhara (water nuts).[46]

The famine of 1878–79 was deadly.[46] Also, catching and eating of fish by men driven by hunger was made unlawful by an edict during the reign of Maharaja Ranbir Singh.[47] People did not possess any right to waste land and the only right which the villager had was that he could plant trees on such lands, and was the owner of the trees and not of land.[46]

''Six Artistic views of Kashmir'' by unidentified British painter. Sultan Zain-ul-Abidin built canals to promote agriculture.

Foods mentioned in ancient Kashmiri texts

Rice fields in South Kashmir.
Kashmir was the most favourite part of the Empire of Mughal Emperor Jehangir.
Fish spearing on the Dal Lake (pre-1920).

Foods mentioned in ancient Kashmiri scriptures/chronicles/travellers' accounts include:[48][49][50]

Ingredients and seasoning

Meat

Local sheep in Gangabal, Kashmir.

Apart from chicken, fish and game, Kashmiris use only mutton (meat of mature sheep) or goat's meat.[18] More than 75% of sheep population are cross breeds and are generally called Kashmir Merino that provides the dual purpose of meat and wool.[134] The Bakkarwal (nomadic herders) goats belong to the rare Kaghani breed, prized as one of the world's best in terms of meat.[135]

Beef is consumed in towns and villages of Kashmir more so for its affordability.[136] In some villages, beef-eaters are huddled separately from those supposed to be served mutton during wazwan feasts.[137] There is a class divide between people who eat kat maaz (mutton) considered elite and more sophisticated, and those who eat bad maaz (beef), considered lower-class.[137] The biggest rabbit breeding farm in North India sprawls on six hectares of land in Wussan village of Baramulla district of Kashmir.[138] The consumption of rabbit meat as a substitute for sheep and goat meat among the general masses is becoming popular.[138] People with cardiac problems eat rabbits as the meat is considered lean and white with high nutritious value.[138]

The local geese of Kashmir (Kashmir Aenz) is the first and only recognized domestic geese breed in India.[139] Geese rearing in the Valley dates back to ancient time as has been mentioned by Sir Walter R. Lawrence in his book 'The Valley of Kashmir'.[139] In Srinagar, geese are mainly sold in Batmaloo and Lal Chowk, by vendors, who purchase geese from rearers in villages and sell them live or slaughtered in the city.[139]

Fish

Rainbow and brown trout farm at Kokernag

The Duke of Bedford helped to send 10,000 trout eggs from the UK in 1899 but they perished on the way.[140] A second consignment arrived from Scotland the next year.[140] The rainbow and brown trout adapted well to the Kashmir valley, while the indigenous snow trout continues to flourish.[140] Locally known as alegaad, it can be found in both standing and flowing water bodies throughout the valley.[141] Trout from Kashmir's glacial streams, though smaller than elsewhere, are considered to be among the most delicious in the world.[142] There were 137 private fish farms in just Anantnag district, which was declared as the 'Trout District of India'.[143]

Eggs

Poultry farms are set on European standards, as Kashmir has similar geo-climatic conditions.[144] Using permaculture and no-dig gardening technique, free-range eggs are being sold every day.[145] People collect chick varieties like Kalinga brown, Vanraja, Kashmir Commercial Layer, etc. to dish out a regular supply of organic brown eggs.[146] The Kashmir Duck (batook) is reared for its eggs in all districts of the valley with highest population in Bandipora district, followed by Kupwara, Barmulla, Srinagar and others.[147] Eggs of Kashmir duck are either white or green-shelled and weigh 66.20 g on average.[147]

Kalij pheasant (wan kokur) lays between 6 and 10 eggs per clutch, and are perfect served soft-boiled in their olive-green shells with a mere sprinkle of celery salt and buttered soldiers.[148]

Cereals

People in Kashmir eat different varieties of rice including the nutty and fragrant Mushk Budji, grown in the higher reaches of the Kashmir valley.[149] Sagam belt of Anantnag is known for the aromatic landrace Kamad.[150] Kashmiri red rice, locally called Zaag Batt, is grown in a small village called Tangdhar on the border with Pakistan.[151] The small unpolished grains are sought for their superior texture and taste.[151] In 2009, farmers in the region harvested the legendary Basmati rice for the first time.[152]

Monje Haakh (kohlrabi).

Vegetables

Kashmiri garlic
Floating vegetable market on Dal Lake

The most important and frequently used Kashmiri vegetables are: haakh (collard greens or kale), monj Haak ( kohlrabi), tsochael(mallow), bamchoont (quince), kral mound (shepherds purse), saze posh (holly hock), nadur (lotus stem), praan (shallots), aubuj (sorrel), mawal (cockscomb), wushkofur (camphor), tila gogul (mustard) and gor (water-chestnut).[153] The floating vegetable garden on the Dal Lake is the second largest wholesale market in the world.[154] Men, young and old, on their wooden boats, argue about the price of plump pumpkins and gourds as they share cigarettes or hookahs.[155] The water of Kashmir is sweeter, and that affects the taste and flavour of vegetables.[19] The items for sale include tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers, turnips, water chestnuts, leafy vegetables, and the famous nadur.[154] A porous and fibrous lake vegetable, nadur has grown to become an irreplaceable ingredient in a traditional Kashmiri kitchen.[156] Local accounts date its discovery to the 15th-century sultan Zain-ul-Abidin, who was introduced to the chewy delicacy while on a shikara ride on the Gil Sar lake located in the exteriors of Srinagar.[156] Also, according to a popular legend, the yarn threads that Lalla Ded (1320–1392), the Kashmiri mystic saint wove were thrown into the Dal Lake when her tyrant mother-in-law ridiculed and taunted her for yarning it too thin. These got changed into the fibres of nadur for eternity.[157]

Sun-dried vegetables, locally known as hokh syun, are consumed as fresh produce dwindles.[158] During summer, vegetables are peeled, chopped, salted and sun-dried to preserve them for winter.[158] The various varieties of hokh syun include dried tomatoes (ruwangun haech), dried bottle gourd (al haech), dried turnip slices (gogji haech), dried quince (bamchount haech) and dried spinach (hoech palak).[158] In the Charar Sharief area of central Kashmir, dried pears, locally known as tang haech are considered a delicacy.[158]

Shallots, known as praan, stand out, lending its unique flavour to a multitude of Kashmiri dishes, from soups and stews, to curries and kebabs.[159]Many of Mughal Emperor Akbar's feasts in the 16th century featured shallots.[159] Buthoo village has earned renown for producing prized organic shallots.[159] Snow Mountain garlic, also known as Kashmiri garlic, is a rare single-clove variety of Allium sativum. The clove beneath is bright white to creamy-white color and offers a strong, pungent garlic flavour without the acidity present in other varieties.[160]

In the forests, foragers gather wild morel mushrooms (kanaguchhi) and asparagus (paarglaas), which are both highly prized by cooks.[161] Kashmir valley is the only place in India, where asparagus grows.[162] Until the 1960s, it was grown widely in Kashmir at Pulwama, Budgam, Rajbagh, Tangmarg and Gulmarg. As of now the area of asparagus cultivation is restricted to Tangmarg and Gulmarg.[162]

Sugar and sweeteners

Delicate nectar of the acacia flowers makes for honey in Tral, Verinag and other locations.[163]

Kashmiri apples.

Fruits

Kashmiri apple is famous for its juiciness and distinct flavour as well.[164] In 2019 alone, Kashmir produced over 1.9 million metric tonnes of apples, the highest among Indian states.[164] Further, Kashmir accounts for 90% of India's walnut production.[165] Kashmiri walnuts are a great source of nutrients and widely in demand across the globe.[165] Giant walnut trees can scale 75 feet in Srinagar, the capital of Kashmir.[166] Many years ago, walnut oil used to be a medium of cooking and imparted a sweeter and nuttier flavour to dishes.[167]

The local climate with bright sunshine and moderate rainfall, is ideally suited for strawberry cultivation.

Muhammad Quli Afshar brought cherries from Kabul and planted them during Akbar's time.[58] Mishri variety of cherry is famous in Kashmir and sweeter than other varieties.[168] They are loaded with minerals, vitamins and plant compounds.[168] The exotic berries from Kashmir are sweet and sour mulberry (tuell and shah-tuell), raspberry (chhanchh), barberry (kaawducchh) and red berry (haapat maewaa).[169] Gassu area on the Srinagar outskirts is known for strawberry (istaber) harvesting.[170]

Orange cultivation for commercial purposes was introduced a few decades before in the Urossa village in Uri.[171] The climate and soil is relatively warmer than the rest of Kashmir and conducive for the crop.[171] In this mountainous region, the micro-climate is good for Mediterranean crops like lemons and olives.[172] The lemons are better and juicier than Punjab lemons.[172] A sub-species of wild olives that doesn't bear much fruit but grows even in hardy, rough conditions is used for grafting with fruit varieties, producing about 1,000 litres of extra virgin olive oil each year.[172]

In harud, the harvesting season of Kashmir people give away a share of grapes to neighbours, relatives and friends.[citation needed] Throughout Kashmir's history, soil and climate have been suitable for viticulture.[citation needed] The vines were allowed to grow on the poplars and mulberry trees.[citation needed] In Kashmir as per the official estimates, the grapes are cultivated on almost 500 to 600 hectares of land and production goes up to 1100 to 1500 MT every year.[173]

Dried cheese (maish krej) from Jammu & Kashmir.

Fats

The main cooking fat in the region is mustard oil, which is pressed from the seeds of the plants whose yellow flowers carpet the hills in the spring.[161] The golden oil is similar in flavor to extra virgin olive oil.[161] Cold-pressed Kashmiri walnut oil is sweet and earthy tasting, and known for its nutty flavour and numerous health benefits.[174]

Dairy products

Holstein Friesian (HF) and Jersey cows were introduced in Kashmir several decades ago, producing 4 million litres of milk per day.[175][176] Organic Kashmiri butter wrapped in Chinar leaves was common in the yesteryears, but is now sold only by a few.[177] A traditionally ripened Himalayan cheese is called the milk chapati or maish krej in Kashmiri.[178]

Saffron fields in Pampore.

Spices

Kashmiri Chilli Pepper.
Kashmiri black cumin.

Kashmiri saffron is known for its aroma, colour, and medicinal value.[179] The saffron of Pampore town is considered to be of superior quality with 8.72% crocin content as compared to the Iranian variety which contains 6.82%.[179] In May 2020, Kashmiri saffron was given a geographical indication tag.[179] The spice shahi zeera or imperial cumin or black cumin belongs to Apiaceae (parsley) family and was initially available in the jungles of Gurez Valley.[180] These darker seeds unlike the regular brown zeera are of superior quality because of their smell, relative rarity and shape.[180]

Among the spices used:

Rock salt consumption is quite old in Kashmir.[191] It was and is still being imported from Khewrah area of Pakistani Punjab, where it was first discovered by the troops of Alexander the Great in 326 B.C.[191] Pre-independence, rock salt was imported via Mughal Road, which, before the advent of Mughals, was called Namak Route.[191] After partition, its supply was barred.[191] Because of its benefits, it is now being consumed by almost one-fourth of the population.[191]

Specialties by season

A fruit tree in Spring.

Spring is often considered a season of rejuvenation after a long and harsh winter.[192] Picnics, of which the Kashmiris are very fond, are planned around the theme of food.[3] The countryside is awash with white and pink flowers of almond (badaam), peach (tsunun) and cherry (gilaas) blossoms.[193] The mustard fields join the show with their bright-yellow blooms.[193] The pear (tang) blossoms can be identified by their thick cluster of flowers.[193] Apricot (Tser) blossoms are white in colour, often tinged with a pink or reddish hue.[193] They grow from late spring through early summer.[192] Beans are a spring vegetable.[192] Cherries are a fruit of late spring and summer.[192] Coriander (Danival) is a cool herb whose season predominates between spring and summer in cooler areas.[192] Garlic (Rohan) is found mainly in spring and through fall season.[192] Melons (Kharbooz) are a fruit grown in spring and summer.[192] Tender spring-time haakh (collard greens) are called kaanul.[194]

Trout fishing, such as here in the river Taobat in Kashmir, is open during the summer months.

The season of harvesting lotus stem (nadur) starts in September.[195] With the onset of autumn the markets are filled with the dried vegetables (hokh syun).[196] The samovar bubbles in a corner, spreading the sweet fragrance of saffron and cardamom in the air.[197] Cookie-shaped kandi kulchas made of flour, butter, sugar and sprinkled with poppy seeds are passed around to be dipped into the tea and relished.[197] Men fish under the shade of the chinar tree in Dalgate area.[198] Rice harvest begins setting off the harud (autumn) spirit.[196] Dandelion leaves, also known as haand in Kashmir, are foraged on foot.[197] Going to the countryside, one can see paddy being cut with sickles and then stacked in huge piles to dry.[199] Chestnuts are roasted in the dying embers.[200] Bulbous garlic and red potatoes jostle for space.[197] Saffron fields in full bloom greet you in Pampore, a part of Pulwama district.[199] Going towards the hilly areas one can see the maize and walnut trees with their fruit getting ready to be harvested.[199] Going towards the apple producing areas of Sopore in North Kashmir or Shopian in South Kashmir, one can see cartons of apple being transported to various parts of the country.[199]

During the long winters the days are short, sunlight and electricity in short supply, so there is not much that can liven up existence except interesting food, so it constitutes a major interest of the Kashmiris' lives.[3] On window sills and terraces, one can spot small piles of aubergines, cherry tomatoes, gourds and turnips being sun-dried.[197] When all village roads remained blocked due to heavy snowfall and villagers have to use oil lamps or kerosene lanterns, the entire family is called to the kitchen where flavour of the overnight shab deg fills the entire space.[201] Winter food of Kashmir includes all sorts of pulses: razmah, mong, masoor, channa and warimuth.[196] Kohlrabi (monje) is cold tolerant, and continues to grow on the fields in winter, so much that a little frost even helps it.[202]

List of dishes

Some noted Kashmiri dishes include:

Barbecue

Tujji and Kababs.
Kashmiri kababs can be eaten as a snack or a meal with rice.
Charcoal barbecue in Srinagar.

One version of the origin of kababs is the one in which Turkish soldiers were first known to grill chunks of meat on open fires.[203] Kashmir's kababs are cooked with local spices and accompanied with dips:[203]

Breakfast

For the average Kashmiri, breakfast normally means fresh bread from the local bakery and a cup of noon chai (salt tea).[225] Some affordable luxuries include:

Kashmiri noon chai.

Wazwan Dishes

Tabakhmaaz.
Aab Gosh.

Bulbul shah was the first Sufi Islamic preacher from Suhrawardi order, who converted the then king Rinchan of Kashmir to Islam.[9] Thereafter many people from the kingdom were also converted.[9] The King commissioned a shrine for subjects where they used to run large scale lankars (communal kitchens) to feed the poor, with cooks from Persia.[9] This was the beginning of the wazwaan.[9]

Unlike most dishes of the Indian subcontinent where the flavour is added to the food while cooking on the flames, the wazwan flavours are added while the dish is still uncooked by adding flavoured water to the preparation or soaking in flavoured water (osmosis):[232]

Soups

Soups are often given to new mothers:

Domestic Meat Stews

Shab deg, the Kashmiri pot-au-feu

Meatballs

The wazas are trained for years to learn the art of making the right cuts and grounding the meat to perfection.[290] Traditionally, the lamb is mashed with walnut wood:[167]

Riste.

Vegetarian Sides

Kashmir produces tons of vegetables and forest produce.[299] The traditional dishes are:

Dum Olav.

Mushrooms

The much-prized kanaguchhi (Morchella esculenta)

Grown in the foothills of the Himalayas, Gucchi mushrooms (kanaguchhi) are the costliest among fungi in the world.[355] They grow in clusters on logs of decaying wood in Kashmir:[355]

Tschaman (Cottage Cheese)

Paneer is called tschaman in Kashmiri.[361] The spicing falls into the sweet-savoury spectrum which means using a lot of cinnamon, mace and clove alongside earthier spices like cumin seed and ground coriander.[361] The scarcity of fresh ginger in mountain geography also means that ground ginger is a spice staple.[361] Paneer recipes are:

Chutneys/Raitas

Called the shadowy underbelly of the Kashmiri wazwan,[367] they add real colour to the dishes.[367] They are expected to be served free, when Kashmiris go out to eat or pack food.[368] The varieties of spicy spreads are:

Meat Stir-Fries

Fish

Kashmir is full of fresh water lakes and rivers:[385]

Salads

Rice

Kashmiri polav.

Kashmiris eat a lot more rice than the people of the Jammu region:[402]

Breads

Eggs

In certain rural areas, the tradition of putting an egg or two in kanger (fire pot) is known to each individual.[420] The fragrance of an egg cooking in the kanger would trigger the enzymes signaling the egg is ready:[420]

Game/Hunted Animals (Shikaar)

Ducks on Dal Lake.

Going by estimates, on an average 50-60 birds are killed every day in wetlands across Kashmir:[429] Hunted game (shikaar) is not generally cooked immediately.[430] It has to be hung for some days (faisander) before dressing it for cooking. Hanging makes the meat suppler and less fibrous, making it tastier to eat.[430]

In British India, markhor (screw horn goat) was considered to be among the most challenging game species.[431] It is the largest wild goat in the world.[432] It is locally regarded as the tastiest wild meat.[433]

Indian wild boar was introduced in the Himalayan region by Maharaja Gulab Singh, a Dogra military general.[434] Its meat was a great delicacy for the Dogras and Sikhs, but after 1947 its population started dwindling in the Muslim-majority region.[434]

Game dishes are:

Dals

Kashmiri Pandits who were vegetarian and did not even eat onions and tomatoes were known as Dal Battas (Dal Pandits):[440]

Fermented foods

Kashmiri is one of the tangiest cuisines of the world.[449] Pickling has an important role in the food history of Kashmir that used to remain cut off because of harsh winters:[449]

Street food

Nadur maunj (lotus stem fritters).
A Bakerwal man of Kashmir.

Cheese

The nomadic shepherds of the Kashmir valley, Gujjars and Bakerwals move their herd of dairy cattle and their own settlements up and down the mountains based on changing seasons:[465]

Desserts

English pastry

Before 1918, Abdul Ahad Bhat, of Ahdoos, was under the tutelage of English bakers at Nedou's, a hotel in Srinagar owned by Austro-Swiss Michael Nedou.[482] He quickly picked up the art of baking, and started a small bakery, the first by a Kashmiri at that time.[482] Ahdoos's forte was English goodies, and as India inched towards freedom from British Rule he added Kashmiri items to the menu.[482] Mughal Darbar was established on Residency Road in 1984 and on the road parallel is Jee Enn, founded by Ghulam Nabi Sofi in 1972.[482] Many of the owners and staff of these new bakeries have trained in Ahdoos.[482] The variety of pastries include:

Other Baked foods

The Kashmir Valley is noted for its bakery tradition, that of the Qandarwan. Nowhere else in the Indian subcontinent can be found such a huge variety of leavened breads, another pointer to the Central Asian influence on Kashmiris' food habits.[7] This qandarwan culture is contrary to North & Central India where breads (roti) are always made at home.[9] On the Dal Lake in Kashmir or in downtown Srinagar, bakery shops are elaborately laid out. Bakers sell various kinds of breads with golden brown crusts topped with sesame and poppy seeds. Tsot and tsochvor are small round breads topped with poppy and sesame seeds, which are crisp and flaky, sheermal, baqerkhayn (puff pastry), lavas (unleavened bread) and kulcha are also popular. Girdas and lavas are served with butter.

Kashmiri bakerkhani has a special place in Kashmiri cuisine. It is similar to a round naan in appearance, but crisp and layered, and sprinkled with sesame seeds.[486] It is typically consumed hot during breakfast.[487]

Wazwan

Complete wazwan on one platter (or traem). This is usually presented to the would-be in-laws before/on the day of the marriage.

Wazwan (Kashmiri pronunciation: [waːzɨwaːn]) is a multi-course meal in Kashmiri cuisine, originating from Kashmir.

Almost all the dishes are meat-based using lamb or chicken with few vegetarian dishes. It is popular throughout the larger Kashmir region. Moreover, Wazwan is also served internationally at Kashmiri food festivals and reunions.[488]

Beverages

Noon Chai or Sheer Chai

Kashmiris are heavy tea drinkers. Kashmiris don't use the word "Kashmiri Chai". The word "Noon" in Kashmiri means salt. The most popular drink is a pinkish colored salted tea called "noon chai."[489] It is made with black tea, milk, salt and bicarbonate of soda. The particular color of the tea is a result of its unique method of preparation and the addition of soda. The Kashmiri Hindus more commonly refer to this chai as "Sheer Chai." The Kashmiri Muslims refer to it as "Noon Chai" or "Namkeen Chai", both meaning salty tea.

Noon Chai or Sheer Chai is a common breakfast tea in Kashmiri households and is taken with breads like baqerkhani brought fresh from Qandur (Kashmiri : کاندر ) or bakers. It is one of the most basic and essential food items in a Kashmiri household. Tea was as served in large samavars. Now, the use of Samavars is limited to special occasions and normally kettles are used.

Nuts like almonds and pistachios and edible rose petals can also be added before serving and sometimes malai or fresh cream is added to give the tea viscosity and richness.[490]

Lipton chai

Kashmiri green tea (kahwah).

In Kashmir, chai is essentially salty pink tea.[491] Anything else is called Lipton chai because Lipton was the first brand of tea that came along selling chai.[491]

Kahwah

At marriage feasts, festivals, and religious places, it is customary to serve kahwah – a green tea made with saffron, spices, and almonds or walnuts. Over 20 varieties of Kahwah are prepared in different households. Some people also put milk in kahwah (half milk and half kahwah). This chai is also known as "Maugal Chai" by some Kashmiri Hindus from the smaller villages of Kashmir. Kashmiri Muslims and Kashmiri Hindus from the cities of Kashmir refer to it as Kahwah or Qahwah.

Natural Mineral Water

From one of the oldest and purest spring waters of Kashmir, the Kokernag Spring, Bringi Spring Water has high alkalinity and is well balanced with minerals.[492]

Babribyol

The Babribyol sharbat is a concoction of sweetened milk, rose water or Rooh Afza syrup, and soaked sweet basil seeds that are grown locally.[493]

Lyaess

Made from yoghurt or kefir, Kashmiri lassi (lyaess) is a liquid, salty way to drink up yoghurt.[494] The process of churning the buttermilk with a wooden choomph or churner is rhythmic and there is an art involved.[494] The yoghurt has to be churned the right way, the buttery fats have to float to the top in a nice froth, the spices and dried mint leaves have to be just right.[494]

Sadr-e-kaenz

This fermented rice water drink is supposed to be very good for a sluggish liver.[495]

Shahi Sheera

Made by extracting the juice of different berries, it is prepared at home during Ramadan.[496] It features in 1977 Kashmiri film Arnimaal where guests are sipping on the beverage during wedding festivities.[496]

Food and beverage pairings

The traditional Kashmiri wazwan, which comprises slow-cooked meat dishes is a wonderful pairing that enhances the spicy notes of whisky.[497] The Loire Valley wine Sancerre goes well with Kashmiri goshtabeh.[498] A ripe fruity red works well with the full bodied roghan josh.[499] A recommended wine to try with is Montepulciano.[500]

Special occasions and festivals

Eid-ul-Fitr

While on fast, Muslims avoid consuming food during the day, while at dusk, they indulge in extra-special, bountiful meals prepared during the day.[501] The menu for Ramadan month includes khajur ka laddoo (date balls), babribyol (basil seeds), kulfi, phirin, seemni, fruit chaat, fruit custard, kateer (a drink loaded with health benefits) and noon chai.[501] The smell of slow-cooked mutton hovers, fragrant and sultry in the air, and despite the familiar air of unpredictability in Srinagar, spirits are high and streets are filled with happy greetings of Eid Mubarak.[205]

Eid-ul-Adha

The day begins with the Fajr (dawn) prayer and a breakfast of bakery goods with dodh kehwa (milky green tea).[502] As the festival draws to a close, most well-to-do families start placing orders with the wazas for the feast, which is cooked by chefs at their own places and then sold to the customers for serving at their homes.[503] Sacrificial animals include Delhi Walla, Merino Cross, Bakerwal and Kashmiri varieties of sheep.[504]

Urs of Hazrat Sheikh Dawood

Only vegetarian food is supplied to devotees.[505] Majority of people in Batmaloo and adjoining areas turn vegetarian and do not eat meat or chicken.[505] They widely consume dried turnips (gogji aare) because it is believed, during Dawood's time, sundried turnips helped Kashmir survive a famine.[506]

Urs of Khwaja Masood Wali

The people of Pampore cook dried vegetables, eggs, cheese and other food stuff except meat and invite their relatives, friends on lunch or dinner to keep the tradition of the saint alive.

Urs of Dastageer Sahab

In Khanyar and Sarai Bala areas of Srinagar, the devotees are seen outside the shrines where local and non-local business establishments install their carts and are seen selling the Kashmiri traditional food stuff. Pious men sing hearty hymns over offerings of dates and sweets.[507]

Urs of Raeshmol Saheb

People in Anantnag district in southern Kashmir quit eating meat as a mark of respect for the 16th century mystic.[508] Rarely is a butcher shop open during these seven days.[508] For three-and-a-half days each before and after the saint's Urs, people eat radish braised in tamarind.[509]

Muharram

The first ten days of Muharram, that mark the tragedy of Karbala, the milk-based rice pudding mayir is prepared.[410] Throughout the 10th day, Ashoora, kahwa is served to guests and mayir and sharbat distributed to mourners on the street.[410]

Herath

For Kashmiri Pandits, the prasad offering at Shivratri puja is a charger piled high with rice, cooked lamb and fish, and a luscious raw fish in its entirety atop the pile.[510]

Khets Mavas

Celebrated on the amavasya or the last day of the dark fortnight of Pausha(December–January), Khets Mavas or Yakshamavasya is an important festival of Kashmiri Pandits.[511] A mutton khichdi with fresh mutton marinated in a bit of curd is offered as sacrificial food.[511]

Har Navum

On the 9th day of the month of ashad, Pandits in Kashmir offer the deity Sharika yellow rice cooked with turmeric, a little oil and salt along with tsarvan (goat's liver).[16]

Navreh

The festival of Navreh (Nowruz) is incomplete without nadur.[512] A celebration unknown to most of India, Navreh is the welcoming of spring in the Northern hemisphere, and the valley celebrates this on the 21st day of March.[512]

Diaspora and fusion cuisines

Tibetan exiles in Kashmir, including members of Tibet's small Muslim population live in Srinagar, mainly in a small area near the 18th-century Hari Parbat fort.[513] Popular momo (beef dumplings) shops and Tibetan restaurants are run by their children.[513] Tibetan options include Cantonese chicken and kumloo wonton, fried pasta stuffed with minced mushrooms.[513]

Kashmiri Sikh cuisine has a bit of influence from Punjab with onions and tomatoes, but the flavouring goes the Kashmiri way with elements such as badyaan(saunf).[514] A large number of Indian tourists depend entirely on Vaishno Dhabas, the Valley's generic non-A/C restaurants that serve all-vegetarian North Indian fare.[515]

Cooking methods

Some Kashmiri cooking techniques are:

Blanching

The stalks of dandelion (haand) with their spiky-edged leaves have to blanched four times so that they bear no bitterness.[166]

Convection

The traditional Kashmir food receives heat on two sides, top and bottom and the best results are obtained by slow heat using charcoal.[5]

Braising

The leaves of Kashmiri haakh are braised in lots of water.[516] It is very important to ensure that the haakh stays submerged underwater during the initial cooking process using a wooden spatula or large spoon to continuously push the greens down.[516] Mustard oil, which is used extensively in Kashmiri cuisine, imparts an extra flavour to the dish.[516]

Court-bouillon

The master chefs, the waaze of Kashmir.

The main skill of a wazwan lies in the preparation of a stock made of onions and shallots.[18] Freshly shaped meatballs (rista and goshtabeh) are poached in this lamb stock flavoured with cinnamon and black cardamom, and simmered.[517]

Tempering

Whole spices must be fried in oil – clove, cardamom, cinnamon, bay leaves.[518] Fried too little, and the dish will be lifeless, without fragrance.[518] A second too much, and one will be left with nothing but bitterness.[518] Hot ghee or mustard oil is poured on top and garnished with fried praan (shallots) paste & saffron extract.[517]

Caramelisation

Sliced onions are fried until golden brown and pureed with minimal water.[519]

Emulsification

The yoghurt must be fatty, thick.[518] Dried mint, just a pinch, is added right at the end to freshen the dish.[518]

Food Colouring

Relevant dishes are further enhanced in colour by saffron extract (Rogan Josh, Rista) or Mawal (dried cockscomb flower).[517]

Simmering

The food gets its flavours and textures from the spices being slow cooked with ingredients until they let out their inherent juices and fats and melt together.[520]

Smoke Point

Smoking mustard oil is a treatment known as durust, and gets it ready to use after cooling off.[517]

Dum cooking

The cooking vessel in the shab deg is sealed with dough before being cooked over a simmering fire through the long winter night.[521] Dum cooking was made popular by the Mughal courts around the 16th century.[522]

Tenderising

Goshtabeh and rista, the two meatball dishes are rarely found outside the valley because their unique texture is enormously challenging.[520] The sheep has to be freshly slaughtered and the meat pounded before rigor mortis sets.[520]To incorporate air to make them light and fluffy, the meat undergoes a process of being folded whilst beaten.[517]

Cooking material

The quality of pots is important, according to wosta (ustad) or chef Nazir Ahmed Aram.[20] He says they must have the right content of copper. Using wood (walnut and apple are the best) is important too. Cooking on gas is not the same.

Special equipment

The special equipment used to cook Kashmiri food are:

Dan

On normal days the cooking in both Hindu and Muslim homes is mostly done on a dan, which is an oblong clay oven about 3 ft by 2 ft in length and a foot and a half in height.[523]

Traem

These are large brass plates used for serving food.[523]

Leij/Deigul/Deigcha

Among Kashmiri Pandits, most dishes are cooked in pots of baked clay. Pots used in Kashmir are round-bottomed.[523]

Tasht-naar

These are a portable washbasin and a pitcher that are passed around to wash hands during big banquets.[523]

Goshpar-Kaen

These are a flat coarse stone and a wooden mallet made of walnut wood used for pounding meat to a fine texture.[523]

Krech

These are different kinds of wooden spoons and ladles used for turning the food in clay pots so that the base does not get scraped.[523]

Khalur-Dula

This is a stone mortar with a wooden pestle used for grinding chutneys and pastes.[523]

Samovar

Main article: Samovar

This jug-shaped metallic pitcher has a long tube inside that is filled with charcoal, which keeps the tea in the pot brewing.[523]

Similarities with other national cuisines

Much like Kashmir, its people, and its narrative traditions, Kashmiri cuisine too is an amalgam of influences from Central Asia, Persia, China, and the Indian subcontinent.[524] Food recipes passed down from one culture to another are:

Etiquette of Kashmiri dining

Kashmiris are gregarious and like to share.[3] Language and Food are the two vital parts of the region's identity.[569] 'One who eats properly shall rule the country' it is said.[570] An interesting wedding tradition from Kashmir involves newlyweds making roti together. While the bride flattens the dough and puts it on the griddle, the groom is responsible for flipping it and making sure it is cooked.[571] Kashmiris are very particular about the taste of dishes.[232] Food connoisseurs can easily taste a single morsel and name the waza (chef) who cooked it.[232] They can smell an aubergine from four other kinds, and tell you which one is from Kashmir.[572] When filmmaker Vivek Agnihotri wrote a presumptuous tweet proposing the idea of vegetarian wazwan, social media erupted in spontaneous protest.[515] Also, Gordon Ramsay, multi-Michelin-starred chef and television personality, found himself at the receiving end of criticism for his Rogan Josh by Kashmiris who commented that the cut of the meat and the gravy were wrong.[573]

A Kashmiri family.

In Kashmir, it is said that food should both taste and look good.[18] Its aroma must be appetizing. Success of a meal lies in its appeal to the eyes, nose and then the tongue. Any event, from a minor one such as receiving a guest in one's home, to a major one such as a circumcision or a wedding, becomes a celebration of preparing, laying out, serving and consuming together the most delicious victuals.[574] Delicacies are passed on to neighbours to be relished and there is no shame in asking for something when the nostrils are tickled and tempted by the mouth-watering smells from a neighbour's kitchen.[3]

Giant dastarkhaans (white sheets) are spread on the floor on which the meal is served.[574] However humble or lofty the fare on it, the dastarkhaan has always been the center of warm hospitality and conviviality.[574] In big Kashmiri dinners, a hundred to five hundred people are usually invited.[18] Since insurgency and the resultant violence and bloodshed, food has come to hold even greater meaning as each meal signifies a celebration of life itself.[574] It is worth mentioning that wazas (the descendents of Samarkandi cooks), whose shops are located in particular areas of the city of Srinagar, form a significant political group in Kashmir.[574]

All dishes are eaten by hand as Kashmiris believe in an intimate relationship with food.[232] Even spiritual and religious old biddies feel no qualms in chomping on ear cartilage or marrow bones long after the meal is done, pulverising everything into a heap on the thali.[510] No one bats an eyelid.[510] Kashmiris consider it disrespectful if one refuses food varieties or an extra helping.[232] They can go great lengths to persuade, swearing to die if you refuse an extra serving![232]

Food-related proverbs

Kashmiri language is abundantly rich in proverbs, witty sayings and idiomatic word-combinations.[575] The proverbs on food themes and situations are:

Famous chefs on Kashmir's food

For celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor, Kashmiri cuisine is a rich tapestry of Indian, Iranian, Afghani and Central Asian styles of cooking.

In India

For celebrity chef Sanjeev Kapoor, Kashmir's food counts as one of the top three exotic foods of India.[595] Chef Ranveer Brar loves Kashmiri tea, in which rose petals were added to give the regular milk tea a pinkish tint.[596] Chef Thomas Zacharias went on a mission to discover unknown culinary gems in Kashmir.[597] At dawn on his first day, he rode out in a shikara to Dal Lake's bustling 150-year-old floating market and came away with boxes of saffron.[19] Thomas sampled local cheeses and foraged greens in the village of Langanbal, an hour's drive from Srinagar.[19] Indian Accent's Manish Mehrotra could follow the main course with Kashmiri haakh saag broth.[598] He understands the rootedness of Kashmiri chilli and the way it is used in everyday cooking.[599] The pioneering food writer Jiggs Kalra at his Delhi restaurant made a dehydrated version of the Kashmiri nadur churma topped with red chilli and served with tangy radish and walnut chutney.[600] Celebrity chef, Nalini Moti Sadhu, through the award winning Matamaal Restaurant, offers Kashmiri fare in a casual fine dining experience, celebrating both Kashmiri pandit and Wazwan cuisines.[601]

In the UK

Rick Stein searched the perfect curry in Roghan Josh.

Madhur Jaffrey's recipe of deep, rust-coloured Kashmiri roghan josh saved the British from terrible versions of curry cooked at home involving onions, cooking apple, chuck beef and astringent curry powder.[602] English celebrity chef Rick Stein couldn't film the cooking of roghan josh in Kashmir where the dish comes from because of security reasons but in homage to the classic recipe packs it with flavour.[603] 50 Great Curries of India by Camellia Panjabi, the world's best-selling curry book, has the unusual recipe of turnips (gogjee ta maaz) from Kashmir.[604] British celebrity cook and restaurateur, Keith Floyd cooked Kashmiri lamb in milk (aab gosh) which makes for a nice, subtle, pale curry.[605] When twice Michelin-starred chef Vineet Bhatia made a proper rogan josh in London in the early years, customers complained bitterly calling for British curry house capsicum garnish, so he decided to call it slow-cooked Kashmiri shank of lamb and that's when the press started to take notice.[606] British-based chef and television personality Atul Kochhar tends not to use ghee in roghan josh and marinates the meat in spice and yoghurt for a while.[607] Michelin star chef Rohit Ghai's recipe of dum aloo has baby potatoes and Greek yoghurt.[608] Chef Romy Gill is particularly enthralled by the area of Kashmir, and says she was fascinated by the wazwan likening it to the nose to tail movement.[609] She was inspired by the lamb and vegetarian dishes and when she returned to the U.K., made a whole roast chicken using the Kashmiri spices.[610] Chef Cyrus Todiwala OBE loves cumin and Kashmiri chillies.[611]

Chef Vikas Khanna believes Kashmiri cuisine uses Indian spices differently.

In the USA

Michelin star chef Vikas Khanna is a huge fan of Kashmiri cuisine.[612] Chef Chintan Pandya of Adda Indian Canteen in Long Island City combines cumin, chili and musky lamb to cook his Kashmiri lamb ribs.[613] Pandya says the inspiration for the dish is a Kashmiri classic called tabak maaz, where the lamb is first cooked in milk and then browned in butter.[614] Guy Fieri featured Kashmiri lamb roghan josh on his TV show Diners, Dive-Ins, and Drives.[615] Anthony Bourdain was hoping to shoot in Kashmir and was excited about visiting but the security situation there was problematic.[616] Food and wine expert Antoni Porowski was shocked by the amount of garlic in traditional Kashmiri dishes, but loves the really thick dhals.[617] Mike Bagale, who, until recently, was the executive chef at Alinea in Chicago, one of America's most sought after dining experience, stopped in Srinagar at a spice shop and could smell the cinnamon as he approached it.[618] At his work station, instead of charcoal, his brazier is filled with cinnamon sticks and the aroma of cinnamon envelops the kitchen.[618]

In Australia

Melbourne-based chef Gary Mehigan, popularly known for his 12-year long stint as a judge on MasterChef Australia found the creatively plated Kashmiri morels with goat's testicles at the Indian restaurant Bombay Canteen interesting.[619]

Nadur maund (lotus stem fritters) garnished with edible flowers.

Contemporary Kashmiri cuisine

Prateek Sadhu, formerly at Masque (Mumbai) is mining his Kashmiri roots to win international fame.[620] His food is characterised by dishes such as lobster roghan josh, roghan josh sausages[620] and raisin-glazed quail served with a yakhni broth.[621][622] He sourced quince from Kashmir and made an ice-cream with it.[623] Entrepreneur Tariq Ahmad, the 'Pizza Man' of Kashmir, set chicken on roti and sold it to customers in wazwan loving Kashmir.[624] A family of chefs in Srinagar's Safakadal area makes unique pickles from traditional wazwan dishes like rista and kebab.[625] US-based Kashmiri entrepreneur Uffaq Mattu ships chicken patties, harissa bites, shaami kabaab burgers, crumbled tschaman and tamatar pizzas to almost all the 50 states in the US.[626] At her Uffi's Kitchen, French fries were replaced with Nadir Monje, and chicken wings by waaze kokur wings.[626] At Rooh, San Francisco, they make the signature dish of tabakh maaz with Californian Superior Lamb, and French braising techniques.[627] Helly Raichura, chef-founder of EnterViaLaundry in Melbourne has 10-course degustations serving Gujarati khandvi with Kashmiri chilli oil.[628] Noon in Mumbai has kimchi fermented with Kashmiri red chillies.[629] 2019 Masterchef Australia contestant Sandeep Pandit was born in Kashmir, and cooks tamatar gaad (tomato fish) using Australian barramundi.[630]

Sustainable consumption

Kashmiri women would previously take extra mutton dishes by packing them in old newspapers or plastic bags that they would carry.[631] With time, this tradition became popular, and men soon began travelling with the remaining mutton on their traem (wazwan copper dish).[631] In Kashmir, taking leftover food into carrying bags evolved into a movement, and people also granted it social legitimacy.[631] Even the elites have joined the cause and begun providing specially made carry bags of leftover food.[631] Even the leftover rice is not wasted in marriage functions and is served to animals (dogs, cattle etc.).[632]

In Kashmir, a now-abandoned practice would use green Chinar leaves in packaging delicate things like mulberry, butter, mutton and cheese.[633] This would help these easily contaminable items to stay nontoxic till consumption.[633]

See also

References

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  2. ^ Chaudhary, Arushi (2 November 2019). "Memories of a paradise lost". Tribuneindia News Service. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Mattoo, Neerja (2008). Sal: A Feast of Kashmiri Cuisine. Srinagar: Gulshan Books. p. 11. ISBN 978-81-8339-063-7.
  4. ^ Singh, Mehr (7 March 2023). "Wazwan and the Fight to Keep the 36-Course Kashmiri Feast Alive". The Juggernaut. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d Excelsior, Daily (4 February 2023). "Cuisines of Kashmir: A tradition and a treasure trove". Jammu Kashmir Latest News | Tourism | Breaking News J&K. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
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Further reading