Can I use chicken instead of lamb?
Yes, but the cook time changes significantly. Chicken needs only 20-25 minutes of dum, not 45. Use bone-in chicken thighs, marinate the same way.
Indian · dinner
150m
Total time
6
Servings
560
kcal
hard
Difficulty
tap to check off
FAQ · Things people ask
Yes, but the cook time changes significantly. Chicken needs only 20-25 minutes of dum, not 45. Use bone-in chicken thighs, marinate the same way.
Dum is the technique of sealing a vessel and cooking with trapped steam — no liquid is added. The food cooks in its own moisture and the condensation that forms under the seal.
After 45 minutes of dum at low heat, the lamb should be tender when pressed with a spoon. The rice grains will be separate and fully cooked. The bottom should not be burnt.
Related · You might also cook

Korma is a Mughal-derived technique, not a single dish — the word refers to the braising method where meat or vegetables are cooked in a thick, nut-enriched sauce. A vegetable korma done properly is mild without being bland, and the cashew-onion paste does the work that cream would do in a lesser version.
Kheer is a patience dish — the rice must cook slowly in milk until the milk reduces by at least half and the starch from the rice thickens what remains into a creamy, spoonable consistency. There are no shortcuts; condensed milk is a substitute, not the real thing.

Gajar halwa is a North Indian winter sweet made by slow-cooking grated carrot in milk until the milk is completely absorbed, then enriching it with ghee and khoya. The red Delhi carrots (gajar) used in winter are sweeter than orange carrots — they make a noticeably better halwa.

Shahi means royal in Urdu, and this Mughal-derived paneer dish earns it — the sauce is built from fried onions and soaked cashews blended to silk, enriched with cream and a whisper of saffron. It is richer than palak paneer and milder than kadai paneer.