Paneer

Products

AHG Paste Murgh Makhani 50 g

AHG Paste Murgh Makhani 50 g

Rating value is 5 of 5
Not in stock (0 pc)
2 €
(4 €/100 g) 1,82 € excl. VAT
Create a rich, tomato-forward butter chicken-style sauce in minutes—just simmer with chicken, paneer, or veg, then finish with cream or…
Drana Tandoori Masala 500 g

Drana Tandoori Masala 500 g

Not in stock (0 pc)
7,50 €
(1,50 €/100 g) 6,82 € excl. VAT
Bold, aromatic spice blend for classic tandoori flavour—use as a dry rub or mix with yoghurt, oil, or lemon for quick marinades and roasts.

Articles

Recept na Palak Paneer

Recept na Palak Paneer

Prepare delicious Palak Paneer at home and discover the delicious combination of spinach and cheese in Indian style!



Recipe for Matar Paneer

Recipe for Matar Paneer

Try this delicious recipe for Matar Paneer, a tasty Indian dish that will warm you up and delight your taste buds!



Typical Indian dishes: how to understand dhals, "curry", tandoori and street food

Typical Indian dishes: how to understand dhals, "curry", tandoori and street food

"Typical Indian food" does not have a single form. Indian cuisine is a family of regional styles – from delicate legume dhals through various sauce styles (korma, vindaloo, rogan josh, palak paneer, chole) to tandoori and the essential world of street snacks. In this guide, you will get clarity on the most typical groups of dishes, regional differences, and especially how to practically start with Indian flavors at home.



Typical Indian ingredients: their role in food and how to recognize them

Typical Indian ingredients: their role in food and how to recognize them

Indian cuisine is not a single unified tradition, but a broad family of regional styles. That's why it's worth looking at "typical Indian ingredients" as practical building blocks: what forms the base (rice, breads, legumes), what gives the dish richness (ghee, yogurt, paneer), what builds aroma (spices, aromatics), and what provides an important contrast (for example tamarind). The article provides an overview of key ingredients, their functions, and concrete advice on how to start using them at home without unnecessary mistakes.


North and South India in the kitchen: how to recognize the difference on the plate and what to cook at home

North and South India in the kitchen: how to recognize the difference on the plate and what to cook at home

"Indian cuisine" is not one taste or one sauce. For a European home cook, however, the division into north and south is one of the most practical reference points: it helps to understand why sometimes bread and a creamier sauce make more sense, other times rice, coconut, and a more pronounced acidity. This article will show the main differences, what both directions have in common, and how to bring them into everyday home cooking without unnecessary shortcuts and mistakes.



Taste of Indian cuisine: how to recognize it and create it at home

Taste of Indian cuisine: how to recognize it and create it at home

"Indian taste" is not one universal sauce nor a synonym for spicy food. Indian cuisine is a broad family of regional styles – from delicate legume dishes through tandoori breads and marinades to rice dishes with tamarind, coconut, and curry leaves. In this article, you will clarify what typically makes up Indian taste, how the north differs from the south, and how to build it in practice even without "pouring all the spices of the world" into the pot.



Chicken Korma Curry (Creamy, Mild Indian-Style Curry)

Chicken Korma Curry (Creamy, Mild Indian-Style Curry)

Chicken korma is a rich, gently spiced curry known for its velvety sauce made with yogurt, cream, and ground nuts. This approachable home recipe delivers a classic korma texture—fragrant, comforting, and mild enough for most spice levels.



Madras Curry: a Spicy Indian Classic and Easy Ways to Use It at Home

Madras Curry: a Spicy Indian Classic and Easy Ways to Use It at Home

Madras curry is one of the boldest “curry” styles you’ll find in European shops: warming spices, a lively chilli kick, and an aroma that instantly signals comfort food. Here’s what the label usually means, what flavours to expect, and how to turn Madras curry powder or paste into weeknight meals without overthinking it.


Inland cuisines of Asia: why they are richer, grain-based, and built on broths

Inland cuisines of Asia: why they are richer, grain-based, and built on broths

When you say “Asian cuisine,” many people mainly imagine coastal flavors – fish sauce, seafood, or coconut. However, a large part of Asia is inland, mountainous, or steppe, and it is precisely there that cooking styles developed that rely on grains (both rice and wheat), doughs, dumplings, long-simmered broths, and bold seasoning. In this article, we will clarify what “inland Asia” means in cooking, what the main differences are (mainly along the China–India axis), and how to build a usable foundation for home cooking from these principles.


Indian curry: basics and main styles (and how not to get lost in them)

Indian curry: basics and main styles (and how not to get lost in them)

"Indian curry" is not one recipe nor one universal sauce. It is a broad family of saucy dishes and techniques that vary from region to region and household to household. In this guide, you'll clarify terms (curry vs. curry powder vs. masala), understand the main Indian directions, and most importantly: you will learn how to practically choose the right base and set your expectations so that the result tastes exactly how you want.

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