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Best Indian Recipes You Can Make at Home

Six Indian recipes from butter chicken to naan bread — with techniques that work in a home kitchen.

Best Indian Recipes You Can Make at Home

Recipes in this piece

Butter Chicken
🇮🇳IndiaAdvanced
Meat Dishes

Butter Chicken

Murgh makhani — yogurt-marinated chicken thighs seared until charred at the edges, then finished in a silky tomato-and-cashew sauce with butter, cream, and kasuri methi. The dish came out of Moti Mahal restaurant in Delhi in the 1950s, apparently by accident: leftover tandoori chicken dropped into a pot of spiced tomato gravy with butter. That origin story is either true or a very good myth, but the result is real. The sauce needs to be blended smooth, the chicken needs actual char on it, and the kasuri methi at the end is not optional if you want the flavor to land.

60 min520 kcal4 serves
🌾Gluten-free🌶️Spicy💪High protein
4.8
Chicken Biryani
🇮🇳IndiaAdvanced
Cereal and Pasta Dishes

Chicken Biryani

Marinated chicken layered with par-cooked basmati rice, fried onions, saffron milk, and whole spices, then sealed and slow-cooked on low heat so the steam does the work. This is Hyderabadi-style pakki dum biryani — the chicken is cooked first, then layered with rice and finished in a sealed pot. It takes effort. Not complicated effort, but deliberate effort: the rice must be 75% done before layering, the onions must be genuinely dark gold, and the pot must stay sealed for the full 25 minutes. Each of those things matters more than the spice list.

90 min580 kcal4 serves
🌶️Spicy
4.6
Dal — Spiced Indian Lentil Soup
🇮🇳IndiaMedium
Soups

Dal — Spiced Indian Lentil Soup

A warming Indian red lentil soup tempered with cumin, turmeric, coriander, and ginger — finished with a sizzling spiced ghee pour. One of the most comforting and nourishing dishes in Indian home cooking. Serve with warm chapati or basmati rice.

30 min190 kcal2 serves
🌿Vegetarian🌱Vegan🌾Gluten-free
4.7
Samosa
🇮🇳IndiaAdvanced
Appetizers and Sandwiches

Samosa

Flaky, crispy pastry cones filled with spiced potato and peas, deep-fried until dark golden. The dough uses a technique called moyan dena — fat is rubbed into the flour until the mixture resembles wet sand before any water goes in. That step is what makes the crust flaky rather than bready. The filling is mashed potato with green peas, cumin, green chilli, coriander, and amchur powder for the characteristic sour edge. The frying is two-stage: low heat first to set the dough from the inside, then medium heat for color. Serve hot with mint chutney and tamarind chutney.

75 min310 kcal4 serves
🌿Vegetarian🌱Vegan🌶️Spicy
4.6
Tandoori Chicken
🇮🇳IndiaMedium
Meat Dishes

Tandoori Chicken

Bone-in chicken thighs and drumsticks scored deeply, marinated overnight in spiced yogurt, then cooked at high heat until the outside chars and the inside stays completely juicy. No sauce, no gravy — just the marinade working directly against the heat. The red-orange color comes from Kashmiri chilli powder, the flavor from ginger, garlic, garam masala, and kasuri methi. This is the dish that butter chicken and tikka masala are built on top of. On its own it's simpler and better. Serve with pickled onion, lime wedges, and mint chutney.

50 min340 kcal4 serves
🌾Gluten-free🌶️Spicy💪High protein
4.8
Naan Bread
🇮🇳IndiaAdvanced
Flour and Confectionery Products

Naan Bread

Yeasted flatbread made with yogurt, cooked on a very hot cast-iron skillet until the surface blisters and the edges char. The yogurt softens the dough and relaxes the gluten — without it, the bread would be chewier and more bready. The skillet must be genuinely hot before the dough goes in: that instant heat is what turns the moisture in the dough to steam, inflates the bubbles, and gives the bread its characteristic uneven surface. Brush with butter or ghee immediately off the heat. Makes 6 pieces.

90 min280 kcal4 serves
🌿Vegetarian
4.7

Indian recipes you can actually make at home

Indian food intimidates people. Long ingredient lists, spices you've never heard of, techniques that seem to require years of practice. Most of that fear is unnecessary. The spices are doing the heavy lifting, not you. Buy the right ones, follow the order of operations, and dinner is sorted.

Six recipes that cover the range, from street food to slow weekend cooking.

Butter chicken — the one everyone starts with

There's a reason butter chicken is the gateway drug to Indian cooking. Tomato, cream, butter, and a handful of spices produce a sauce so good you'll eat it with a spoon. The chicken marinates in yogurt and Kashmiri chilli powder overnight, then gets charred under the broiler before going into the sauce.

The cashew paste blended into the sauce is what gives it that restaurant-quality thickness. Don't skip the kasuri methi (dried fenugreek leaves) at the end — crush them between your palms before tossing them in. That one ingredient is the difference between "good tomato sauce with chicken" and actual butter chicken.

Butter chicken recipe

Chicken biryani — worth every minute of the 90 it takes

Biryani is rice and meat layered and steamed together, and people have opinions about it the way Italians have opinions about carbonara. This version uses the dum method: seal the pot, lowest heat, walk away. The saffron milk drizzled on top before sealing creates golden streaks through the rice.

Use aged basmati if you can find it. The grains stay separate and elongate properly. Fresh basmati tends to clump. Fry the onions until they're nearly black — birista, the crispy fried onions, are half the flavour of the finished dish.

Chicken biryani recipe

Dal — the cheapest meal you'll ever love

Red lentils, water, turmeric, and a tadka of fried spices poured on top at the end. That's it. The whole thing costs about a dollar per serving and takes 30 minutes.

The tadka is everything. Heat ghee or oil until it shimmers, drop in cumin seeds, wait for them to crackle, add garlic and dried chillies, and pour the whole thing — sizzling oil and all — right into the cooked lentils. That 30-second step turns plain lentil soup into something you'll make twice a week.

Dal recipe

Samosa — the triangle that launched a thousand cravings

The dough is the hard part, not the filling. A specific ratio of ghee to flour keeps it flaky without being greasy. Roll it thin enough that you can almost see through it, and make sure the potato filling is completely cold before wrapping. Hot filling creates steam, steam creates soggy samosas.

The filling itself is simple: boiled potatoes, peas, cumin, coriander, amchur (dried mango powder) for tang. Fry at 160°C — too hot and the outside burns before the pastry cooks through.

Samosa recipe

Tandoori chicken — fake the tandoor, keep the flavour

No one has a tandoor oven at home. That's fine. A regular oven on its highest setting with the broiler on gets you 80% of the way there. The marinade does most of the work anyway: yogurt, Kashmiri chilli powder (for colour without too much heat), and ginger-garlic paste.

Score the chicken deeply before marinating — the cuts need to go almost to the bone so the yogurt mixture can penetrate. Two hours minimum, overnight is better. The char on the edges is what you're after, so use a wire rack over a tray and get the chicken as close to the broiler element as possible.

Tandoori chicken recipe

Naan bread — the skillet method that actually works

Forget the oven for naan. A cast-iron skillet on high heat, dry, no oil. Slap the dough on, wait for bubbles, flip, brush with melted butter. Takes about 90 seconds per piece and the result is better than most restaurant naan because you're eating it 10 seconds after it comes off the heat.

The yogurt in the dough is what makes it soft and slightly tangy. Let it rise for at least an hour — rushed naan is tough naan. And brush the butter on while the bread is still hot enough to melt it on contact. Cold naan with cold butter is a waste of good dough.

Naan bread recipe

The Indian pantry: what you actually need

You don't need 40 spices. You need about 8: cumin seeds, coriander powder, turmeric, Kashmiri chilli powder, garam masala, kasuri methi, mustard seeds, and asafoetida. With those eight and some fresh ginger and garlic, you can cook most of the Indian recipes on this site.

Buy whole spices when possible and toast them in a dry pan before grinding. Pre-ground spices from a jar that's been open for a year taste like sawdust. Fresh-toasted cumin smells like a completely different ingredient.

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