Biryani "India's Perfect Food"
Biryani pronounced [bɪr.jaːniː]: a spicy rice from South Asian mixed rice dish of the Indian subcontinent.It is popular throughout the Indian subcontinent and among the diaspora from the region.
The ingredients are rice and meat (chicken, mutton, beef, prawn, or fish) or egg is also added.
The modern biryani developed in the royal kitchens of the Mughal Empire (1526-1857), as a confluence of the native spicy rice dishes of India and the Persian pilaf. Indian restaurateur Kris Dhillon believes that the dish originated in Persia, and was brought to India by the Mughals.However, another theory claims that the dish was known in India before the first Mughal emperor Babur came to India.The 16th-century Mughal text Ain-i-Akbari makes no distinction between biryanis and pilaf (or pulao): it states that the word "biryani" is of older usage in India. A similar theory, that biryani came to India with Timur's invasion, appears to be incorrect, because there is no record of biryani having existed in his native land during that period.
According to Pratibha Karan, the biryani is of South Indian origin, derived from pilaf varieties brought to the Indian subcontinent by the Arab traders. She speculates that the pulao was an army dish in medieval India. The armies, unable to cook elaborate meals, would prepare a one-pot dish where they cooked rice with whichever meat was available. Over time, the dish became biryani due to different methods of cooking, with the distinction between "pulao" and "biryani" being arbitrary.According to Vishwanath Shenoy, the owner of a biryani restaurant chain in India, one branch of biryani comes from the Mughals, while another was brought by the Arab traders to Malabar in South India.
So far, I really want to taste this food made in India. I love the way how india people cooked. And so far I know India has the most best chef in the world. People in indi must be proud of it.
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