arrow Tuesday, 06 January 2009

Main Menu
Indian Foods - Home
Famous Indian Chefs
Indian Cookbooks
Indian Cooking Tips
Indian Cooking Videos
Indian Food Blog Feeds
Indian Food Blogs
Indian Food Articles
Indian Food Guide
Indian Grocery Stores
Indian Herbs and Spices
Indian Recipes
Indian Restaurants
Indian Wines
About Us
Contact Us
Browse
Directory
Indian Food Blogs
Indian Grocery Stores
Indian Restaurants
Featured Recipe
Indian Recipe Menu

Login Form





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register


100 Desi Topsites - Ranking Best Indian Pakistani Websites
Top Listings
1. Dakshin Indian Cuisine...
    Category: Irving
2. Sarovar Indian...
    Category: Munich
3. Sangeet Indian...
    Category: Munich
4. Jaipur
    Category: Munich
5. Garuda
    Category: Munich
6. Sher-E-Punjab
    Category: Munich
7. Goa Indian Restaurant
    Category: Munich
8. Surbahar
    Category: Munich
9. Shanai
    Category: Munich
10. Satnaam
    Category: Munich
Show more...
Bihari Cuisine PDF Print E-mail
(1 vote)
Image  Predominantly, the food of Bihar is vegetarian. However, unlike Gujarat or some communities of south, non-vegetarian food is also quite acceptable even in traditional homes of Bihar. Some sects of Brahmins like the Maithil Brahmins have traditionally eaten some varieties of fish. Mutton or Goat meat is even used as Prasad in some type of pujas, like devi puja. Oddly, many Kayastha families in Bihar, who are generally considered great lovers of non-vegetarian food, are vegetarian in Bihar. Traditional Bihar society did not quite eat eggs and chicken, though other types of birds and fowls were highly acceptable. However, such distinctions are no longer current.

Staple food
As stated earlier, much of the food consumed by people in Bihar is vegetarian and very healthy. The staple food is “bhat, dal, roti, tarkari(vegetables) and achar”, prepared basically from rice, lentils, wheat flour, vegetables, and pickle. They use uncooked sprouts soaked in water and consumed with choora bhunja and Makhana. The famous "jhal moori"(puffed rice with sprouts and many more incredients)is a famous snack.Traditionally, mustard oil and ghee has been the popular cooking medium. "Khichdi", the broth of rice and lentils, seasoned with spices, and served with several accompanying items like thick curd, chutney, pickles(more than 5000 varieties of pickles are prepared by women in a year), papads, ghee (clarified butter) and chokha (boiled mashed potatoes, seasoned with finely cut onions, green chilies) constitutes the lunch for most people of Bihar on Saturdays. People want varieties in food so there are more than six type of vegetable dishes prepared daily with each meal. Kadhi is popular in Bihar with pakora. Salad with cabbage, raw peas, onions, tomatoes, cucumber, coriander eaves, beet root, carrot and fresh winter vegetables are served in huge Thali's along with the food. Milk is boiled till it reduces to half and then thick curd is made from it. Different type of stuffed parotha is also common.

Other dishes which are predominantly used in Bihar is Sattu(flour of fried grams). There are many other dishes which is made with sattu like litti, Sattu ki Roti etc. In rural areas of Bihar, doughed sattu is being consumed with some salt and pickels.


Sweet delicacies
 
Motichoor ka Ladoo.There is large variety of sweet delicacies. Unlike Oriya and Bengali sweets which are soaked in syrups made of sugar and are therefore wet, sweets of Bihar are mostly dry. Some of them are Laktho, Khurma,Balushahi,Anarasa, Khaja, Motichoor ka Ladoo, Kala Jamun, Kesaria Peda, Parwal ka Mithai, Khubi ka Lai, Belgrami, Tilkut, Thekua and Chena Murki. Some of them owe their origin to towns in the vicinity of Patna: Khaja from Silao Nalanda, Ladoo from Maner, Kala Jamun from Vikram, Khubi ka Lai from Barh, Tilkut and Kesaria Peda from Gaya ,balushahi from Harnaut and Chena Murki from Koelwar. Descendants of the original family members of the cooks, called halwais in the local language, have migrated to urban Patna and authentic sweet delicacies are now available in the city itself.


Other traditional snacks and savouries
There are several other traditional snacks and savouries:

Pua, prepared from a mixture of powdered rice, milk, ghee (clarified butter), sugar and honey and its variant Malpua
Pittha, steam cooked, mixture of powdered rice
Chiwra, beaten rice, served with a coat of creamy curd and sugar or jaggery
Makhana (a kind of water fruit) is prepared from lotus seeds and is taken puffed or as kheer, prepared with milk and sugar
Sattu, powdered baked gram, is a high energy giving food. It is taken mixed with water or with milk. Sometimes, sattu mixed with spices are used to prepare stuffed 'chapattis', locally called as 'makuni roti'
Litti/Choka, a fast food item that can be prepared with minimum of utensils by people who away on tour. It is prepared with Sattu and Wheat flour and taken with mashed potato and brinjals.
Dhuska, a deep fried item prepared from a mixture of powdered rice and ghee but is salted
Kadhi Bari, these fried soft dumplings made of besan (gram flour) are cooked in a spicy gravy of yogurt and besan. It goes very well over plain rice.

Non-vegetarian food
The distinctive Bihari flavor of the non-vegetarian cooking finds mention in the memoirs of Maulana Abul Kalam Azad who found it quite tasteful. Forms of Kebabs, Mutton preparations and dishes prepared from the various fowls and birds have a very distinctive flavor. Bihari's are quite famous for their Behari Kebabs another typical Bihari non vegetarian dish. This dish was traditionally made from mutton and is eaten with Roti, Paratha (sort of pita) or boiled rice. Recently in fast food restaurants these Behari Kebabs are also sold as Behari Kebab Rolls. This is essentially the kebabs wrapped up in a Paratha. Some muslim families moved from Bihar to Pakistan during partition in 1947. The Behari culture and their cuisines can be seen quite distinctively in Karachi where they are in quite a large number. Later on few of them immigrated to US and Canada, taking with them their culture and cuisine. There are a number of Behari restaurants that sell various vegetarian and non vegetarian rolls and are rather popular by the generic name Bihari Kebab Rolls whether its Lexington Avenue (South) in New York or Gerard Street in Downtown Toronto.

Comments
Add New Search
+/-
Write comment
Name:
Email:
 
Website:
Title:
UBBCode:
[b] [i] [u] [url] [quote] [code] [img] 
 
 

3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
Next >



Featured Indian Cookbook

 

Sanjeev Kapoor's Khana Khazana 

Sanjeev Kapoor is one of India's most popular chefs and author. This book is the first in the series called "Khana Khazana: Celebration of Indian Cookery" which has been planned in order to familiarize food lovers with long forgotten regional cuisines of India. These recipes will open the doors to the unexplored range of recipes that had been relegated to the archives. A lot of painstaking research has gone into collecting these recipes.

Each state and region included in this book has its own cuisine and local flavour. In this book the author introduces a variety of dishes that have been perfected by our ancestors. At the same time care has been taken to ensure that the ingredients used are easily available and if not, a substitute has been suggested. Chettinad Fried Chicken, Kombdi Wada, Chingri Malai Curry, Rayalseema Pesarettu, Kolhapuri Pandhra Rassa, Kesari Rajbhog, Khajoori Shahi Tukra are just a glimpse of the fabulous tongue tickling recipes you will find between the two covers of this book. They will not only bring in India's diversity into your home kitchens but also help you to satiate the best of gourmet palates.

More Sanjeev Kapoor's Cookbooks

 


Indian Cooking Videos

If you are new to Indian Cooking then your journey to learning how to cook Indian food may be a little simpler if you could see it visually. This section of the website has a number of videos of some of the most popular Indian dishes like Chicken Makhni, Chiken Tikka, Alu Gobi. We will be constantly adding new videos to this site as we come across them. All of the videos are from partner sites that have approved these videos for use on this site.

See the Indian Cooking Videos

Free Food Listing

If you own an Indian Restaurant, an Indian Grocery Store or a blog related to Indian food, you are entitled to your own free listing on this website. Think of this as a free ad for you. You have the following options for registering your site

1. Registered Listing - If you register on this site, you can submit your entries, add images and make changes all on your own.

2. Unregistered Listing - You can submit your listing but you cannot edit it.

3. Claim Your Site - If you site or business is already listed, you can claim your site. Once you place a claim for your site, our administrator will get back to you within 48 hours and you can then own the listing.

Get Started Here  

Featured Recipe

Search Restaurants & Grocery Stores
Search Recipes


 

 

 

 

Most Popular

 

 

 
top
Most of the content on this site is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)