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Hyderabadi Chicken Biryani

Layered dum biryani with marinated chicken, basmati rice, fried onions, mint, coriander, saffron and ghee.

3 hrPrep time
1 hr 10 minsCook time
Serves 2Servings
AdvancedDifficulty
Hyderabadi Chicken Biryani
About this dish

Hyderabadi Chicken Biryani: the story on the plate

Hyderabadi biryani is a layered act of control: raw marinated chicken below, par-cooked rice above, herbs, fried onions and saffron sealed together so steam carries flavour upward.

Historical background

Hyderabadi biryani grew from Deccan courtly food culture, combining Persian rice techniques with local spices, herbs and meat cookery.

Why it is famous

It is famous because the rice and meat cook together under seal, creating aroma impossible to fake with a quick mixed rice.

Cultural significance

It is celebration food for weddings, Eid, family feasts and grand weekend cooking.

Nutrition

Estimated nutrition per serving

Useful for meal planning and calorie-aware recipe browsing.

690Calories
39gProtein
78gCarbs
25gFat

Estimated from recipe quantities and typical ingredients; review before publishing formal nutritional claims.

Ingredients

What you need

  • 450 chicken on the bone
  • 250 basmati rice
  • 100 yoghurt
  • 1 ginger-garlic paste
  • 1 chilli powder
  • 0.5 turmeric
  • 1 biryani masala
  • 2 onions, fried until golden
  • 15 mint
  • 15 coriander
  • 1.5 saffron in 3 tbsp warm milk
  • 1.5 ghee
  • Whole spices for rice
  • salt
Method

Step-by-step method

Follow the recipe in order, tasting and adjusting seasoning where needed.

  1. Marinate deeply: Marinate meat with yoghurt, ginger-garlic, chilli, whole spices and salt until the surface is well coated.
  2. Parboil the rice: Rinse basmati until the water runs clearer, soak, then boil in salted water at 100°C / 212°F until about 70% cooked.
  3. Build the masala: Cook onions until deep golden, then layer spices, herbs and the marinated meat or curry base.
  4. Layer for dum: Layer rice and masala with saffron milk, ghee, mint and coriander; seal the pot and cook on low heat or in a 160°C / 320°F oven.
  5. Rest before serving: Rest covered for 15 minutes, then lift from the side so rice and masala stay partly distinct.
Cook smarter

Tips, storage and serving advice

Shopping tips

Buy fresh spices in small quantities, use proper basmati rice where named, choose fresh curry leaves when possible, and buy meat, fish or paneer from a reliable source.

Ingredient quality

Toast whole spices where the recipe asks for it, use fresh ginger and garlic, and avoid tired pre-ground masalas for dishes where roasted spice is the signature.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes are rushing onion browning, adding too much water, using stale spices, boiling dairy or coconut milk too hard, or treating every Indian dish like a generic curry.

Chef’s tips

Do not fully cook the rice before layering; it must finish by steam.

How to know it is cooked

Look for the texture named in the method: crisp pastry, tender meat, separate rice grains, soft dal, glossy reduced masala, just-cooked fish or syrup-soaked sweets.

Plating advice

Serve in the regional spirit of the dish: rice with curries, chutneys with snacks, breads with dry masalas, and sweets simply so their texture is visible.

Make ahead

Masalas, chutneys, batters, braises and many sweets can be prepared ahead. Fried snacks, crisp dosas, fish and fresh breads are best finished close to serving.

Storage and reheating

Store covered in the fridge for up to 2 days where suitable. Cool rice, meat, dairy and seafood quickly. Reheat curries and dals gently with a splash of water. Re-crisp fried snacks in an oven or air fryer. Avoid harsh reheating for fish and milk sweets.