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Royalty Line Pressure Cooker with Marble Finish 24 cm - 6 L


Royalty Line Pressure Cooker with Marble Finish 28 cm - 8 L


Royalty Line Pressure Cooker with Marble Finish 24 cm - 4 L

AHG Marinade Tandoori Tikka 50 g


Ashoka Instant Delhi Dal Makhani 280 g


Ashoka Instant Shahi Navratan Korma 280 g

Lobo Thai Custard with Pandan flavour 120 g


Ashoka Delhi Lentils with Bombay Biryani 250 g

AHG Paste Korma curry 50 g

AHG Chicken Marinade Kai Yang 50 g


Mae Ploy Green curry paste vegetarian 400 g

Lobo Thai Custard with Vanilla flavour 120 g


Cock Brand Red curry paste 400 g

AHG Thai yellow curry paste Nam Prik Kaeng 50 g


Oyakata Instant Hot & Spicy Tantanmen-Style Ramen 63 g


Oyakata Instant Ramen Noodles with Pork, 62 g
Articles

Coconut products in Asian cuisine: how to understand milk, cream, and cream
Coconut is one of the most versatile ingredients in tropical Asia – and at the same time one of the most frequently confused. "Coconut" in a recipe can mean coconut water, milk, cream, concentrated base, dried pulp, and other products that differ in taste, density, and what they do to the final dish. This guide will clarify the differences and especially how to choose the right type for the specific use.

What to watch out for in coconut products: milk, cream, cream, oil, and flour are not the same
Coconut is extraordinarily versatile in tropical Asian kitchens - and that's exactly why there is a lot of confusion around it. Coconut water, coconut milk, cream, “cream,” oil, or coconut flour behave completely differently: they differ in fat content, amount of water, texture, and whether they are intended for cooking, beverages, or desserts. This article gives you a clear map of coconut products and practical rules to help you choose the right type for curry, soups, desserts, and baking.

Coconut milk vs. coconut cream: what is the difference and when to use which
Coconut milk and coconut cream are not just two differently named "coconut things." They mainly differ in fat and water content – and consequently in how they thicken curry, soften soup, or behave in pudding or cream. In the article, we will show practical rules for cooking and desserts, how to read the label, and how to avoid the most common mistakes.

How to work with coconut in savory and sweet dishes: milk, cream, desiccated coconut and oil
Coconut in the kitchen does not mean “one ingredient.” Under the same word are hidden coconut milk, cream, concentrated creams, desiccated coconut, oil, sugar and other products – and each behaves differently. In this guide you will clarify the differences, learn to read labels and gain practical rules for how to use coconut in curry, soups and desserts so that the food is neither watery nor excessively “coconutty.”

When to use coconut water (and when to avoid it in a recipe)
Coconut water is often confused with coconut milk – and this mix-up is exactly why curry tastes "watery," desserts don't hold their structure, or soups lack roundness. Coconut in Asian cuisine is a whole family of products with distinctly different functions. In this article, we will show when coconut water makes sense, when the recipe actually needs coconut milk or cream, and how to quickly decide based on the desired result.

How to choose coconut milk: fat, consistency, and the right type for curry, soups, and desserts
Coconut milk is one of the most important ingredients of tropical Asia – in Thai curries, soups like tom kha, Filipino dishes called "ginataan," but also in various desserts. At the same time, it is a category where significantly different products are sold under the same name. In practice, it is often not that the recipe "doesn't work," but that you have chosen the wrong type (or too thin a variant) for the specific dish.

How to choose coconut milk by fat content and usage (and why it matters)
Coconut milk looks like a simple ingredient, but in practice it is one of the categories where people get confused most often: they buy "coconut milk," cook curry, and the result is watery and lacking depth. In most cases, it's not a recipe error but a wrongly chosen type – mainly depending on fat content, the ratio of coconut component to water, and how the product behaves when heated. This guide will help you pick the right variant for curry, soups like tom kha, desserts, and drinks and avoid the most common mistakes.

Chicken Tikka Masala (Creamy Tomato Curry You Can Make at Home)
Chicken tikka masala brings together smoky, spiced chicken and a silky tomato-based sauce enriched with cream. It’s restaurant-famous, but the home version is very doable—especially if you marinate ahead and build the sauce in layers.

Murgh Makhani (Butter Chicken) Recipe: Creamy Tomato-Butter Curry at Home
Murgh Makhani—often called Butter Chicken—is a classic North Indian curry built on tender chicken, a velvety tomato sauce, warm spices, and a buttery finish. This home-cook friendly version keeps the flavor authentic while giving you practical options for the oven, pan, or grill.

Ube
Discover the magic of ube—a purple superfood packed with vitamins, fiber, and minerals! Try creative recipes with ube jam and enhance your dishes with its distinctive flavor and color.

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.

How to Start with Thai Cuisine: Flavors, Sauces, and the First Sure Steps
Thai cuisine is not just a few famous dishes. It is a cooking method where salty (umami), sour, sweet, spicy, and herb-fresh flavors are deliberately balanced – so the result feels lively but not chaotic. In the article, you will understand what makes the "Thai taste" Thai, how not to get lost in curry pastes, fish sauce, and coconut products, and how to set up a simple, functional start at home.

Mochi, grass jelly and other desserts with a "different" texture: how to understand them and what to expect
For many Asian desserts, the main point is in the texture – whether the bite is elastic, jellied, pearly, smooth, or icy. In this guide, you will get oriented in mochi, agar jellies, grass jelly, and other "textural" sweets and learn how to taste and combine them so they make sense even without complicated preparation.

Custard
Discover the delicious world of custard—a creamy dessert that has won the hearts of gourmets around the world! What is the history of this silky temptation, where did it come from, and how did it become part of our favorite desserts? Read more about how custard is used in cooking and get inspired to make it at home!

Recipe for Delhi Dal Makhani
Cook Delhi Dal Makhani, a creamy Indian specialty made from black lentils and beans, cooked with aromatic spices and cream for an unforgettable taste!

Typical Thai dishes: what they taste like and how to recognize them
"Typical Thai dishes" are not just a few famous names like pad thai, tom yum, or green curry. Thai cuisine is based on balancing contrasts – saltiness and umami, sourness, sweetness, spiciness, and herbal freshness – and it is this flavor logic that connects Thai dishes across styles and regions. In the article, we will show you how to navigate typical Thai dishes, what the main differences between the most common types of dishes are, and how to put together the Thai taste at home without unnecessary mistakes.

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!

Asian desserts: what to expect from them (and why their texture will surprise you the most)
Asian desserts often can't be squeezed into familiar categories like “cake,” “pudding,” or “cookie.” Instead of heavy buttery pastries, they feature rice, coconut, starches, legumes, fruit, syrups, and especially texture – elastic, gel-like, pearl-like, or icy. This guide will help you understand what is typical for Asian sweets, the main dessert families, and how to practically navigate them.

Recipe for Paneer Makhani
Let's cook a delicious paneer makhani together that will delight every foodie!

Lychees in Syrup: Sweet Tropical Fruit for Desserts, Drinks, and Asian-Inspired Treats
Lychees in syrup give you that distinctive floral-tropical aroma without peeling, pitting, or chasing a short season. Keep a jar or can on hand for fast desserts, refreshing iced drinks, fruit salads, and elegant plating—and don’t forget the fragrant syrup, which is useful well beyond “just sweetening.”

Ground Nutmeg: How to Use It, What It Pairs With, and Why It Works in Asian Cooking
Ground nutmeg is one of those “tiny pinch” spices that can make a dish feel warmer, smoother, and more complete. Used carefully, it lifts creamy sauces, potatoes, greens, and desserts—and it can also add a subtle finishing note to coconut curries and spice-forward Asian dishes.

Ground White Pepper: Subtle Heat for Asian Dishes and Everyday Classics
Ground white pepper is a quiet workhorse: it brings a clean, warming pepper bite without the black flecks that can distract in pale soups and creamy sauces. Used thoughtfully, it can lift everything from Chinese broths and stir-fries to mashed potatoes and gravy.

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

Ground Mace: A Gentle Spice with Big Aroma (and How to Use It in Asian Cooking)
Ground mace is one of those “quiet” spices that can transform a dish with just a pinch. It brings a warm, lightly sweet, floral-spiced note that fits surprisingly well into coconut curries, fragrant rice, broths, and creamy sauces—adding depth without taking over.

Texture of Asian desserts: why it matters and how to “read” it at home
With Asian desserts, it's often less about how sweet they are and more about how they feel in the mouth: springy, chewy, jellied, creamy, icy, or crunchy. This article will help you understand the most common textures, why they occur, which ingredients and techniques create them — and, most importantly, how to use texture to guide your choices and first attempts at home.

Asian ingredients and products: how to understand, choose and cook without disappointment
A good "Asian ingredient" is not the most expensive nor the one with the prettiest packaging. The difference mainly lies in whether you understand the function of the ingredient (what it is used for in food), its types and composition – and whether you select it for a specific use. This article is a practical guide: it will teach you to quickly read labels, distinguish between basic and flavored products, and choose the right type, for example with coconut, sesame, chili, and starches.

Sweet preparation in Asian cuisine: techniques, textures, and ingredients that change the rules
Sweet preparation in Asian cuisine often does not follow the “European” logic of cakes, butter creams, and wheat flour. It is much more about working with texture (elasticity, jelly, smoothness, layering), rice and starches, coconut bases, bean pastes – and techniques that are not just baking in the oven. This guide will help you navigate what is typical for Asian desserts, why they are so different, which techniques are most often repeated, and how to choose a good “starter” direction at home without unnecessary mistakes.

Black Sesame Seeds: Flavor, Best Uses, and How to Get the Most Out of Them
Black sesame seeds may be tiny, but they bring a surprisingly bold, nutty aroma, a gentle crunch, and instant visual contrast. Learn what makes them different from white sesame, when to use them whole vs. ground, how to toast them without bitterness, and easy ways to use them in both savory dishes and desserts.

Papaya in Syrup: A Tropical Sweetener for Desserts, Drinks, and Bold Savory Pairings
Papaya in syrup is one of those pantry shortcuts that makes tropical flavor available any day of the year—no guessing ripeness, no peeling, no waste. Use the fruit for quick desserts and refreshing drinks, and don’t overlook the syrup itself: in small amounts it can balance citrus, spice, and salty notes surprisingly well.

Ground Lemon Zest: How to Use It (and When It Beats Fresh)
Ground lemon zest is dried, finely milled lemon peel that delivers citrus aroma without adding liquid. It’s a smart pantry tool for baking, spice blends, creamy sauces, and Asian-style curries—especially when you want consistent results and zero grating.

How to prepare tofu so it tastes good: type of tofu, sauce, and proper technique
Tofu often tastes "bland" on first try – and that is its strength. If you choose the right type (soft for soup vs. firm for pan) and base the flavor on a good sauce and texture, it starts working as an excellent carrier for marinade, spices, and umami. In the article, we will show you how to navigate tofu, the common mistakes that ruin the result, and what to do to make tofu really taste good at home.

Mulled Wine Spices: How to Choose a Blend, Get the Flavour Right, and Use It Beyond Hot Wine
Mulled wine is remembered more by aroma than by alcohol: warm cinnamon, clove, citrus peel and a hint of anise can turn an ordinary evening into a small winter ritual. The spice mix is what decides whether your drink tastes rounded and cosy—or harsh, bitter, and overcooked. Here’s how to choose the right spices, infuse them gently, and put that festive fragrance to work in other drinks and desserts, too.

Spaghetti Seasoning That Won’t Bore You: How to Build Flavor (and Borrow from Asian Sauces)
Spaghetti is quick, reliable, and—if you’re not careful—predictable. The easiest way to keep it exciting is to think of “spaghetti seasoning” not as one fixed mix, but as a flavor direction you can repeat and tweak: herb-forward, garlicky, spicy, smoky, or umami-rich. And once you see spaghetti as “long noodles made from wheat,” it becomes surprisingly natural to season it with Asian-style sauces, pastes, and aromatics too.

Coconut sugar: what it is, how it tastes, and when it makes sense in Asian cuisine
Coconut sugar is important in Asian cuisine mainly because it sweetens differently than regular white sugar: it adds not just "pure sweetness" but also a warmer, caramel tone. To make it work well, you need to understand two things: it is not made from coconut flesh and its taste is not "coconut" in the sense of coconut milk. In the article, we will show which dishes it suits, how to start using it at home, and what to watch out for when choosing and using it.

Coconut oil
Discover the secrets of coconut oil! Read our article, where we show you the differences between its types and their benefits for your skin, hair, and health. Find out which one is best for you!

Syrups, fruits, and sweet ingredients in Asian desserts: how to understand them and how to use them
Asian desserts often don't rely on baking and butter creams but on smart combinations of textures, temperatures, and "sweet pantries": preserved fruit, syrups, pastes, and creams. In this guide, we will clarify why fruit in syrup is a full-fledged ingredient, what role syrup plays as an ingredient (not just a sweetener), and how to assemble your first simple desserts at home so they work in flavor and texture.

How to recognize good tofu (and why it’s not just about the brand)
"Good tofu" is not universally the firmest or the softest. You recognize quality mainly by whether a particular tofu corresponds to what you need from it in a dish: a different type fits soup, another for the pan, and another for cream or dessert. The article explains clear differences between silken and firm tofu and practical signs to identify a quality piece right after opening and during cooking.

Low-fat and fresh dishes across Asia: lightness is not a "diet version"
"Low-fat" Asian food often does not mean tasteless food or a small portion. In many Asian cuisines, lightness is achieved differently: through broth, herbs, acidity, smart seasoning, and a good ratio of rice or noodles to vegetables and other components.

Recipe for Shahi Navratan Korma
A great recipe for the Indian dish Shahi Navratan Kormac

Recipe for Punjabi Choley
Punjabi Choley recipe that brings the traditional taste of India.

Panang Curry (Thai-Style) – Creamy Coconut Curry with a Peanut Note
Panang curry is a Thai classic: rich coconut sauce, aromatic curry paste, and a gentle nutty depth that makes it feel luxurious without being complicated. This home-friendly version works with chicken, tofu, or seafood and comes together fast enough for a weeknight dinner.

Recipe for Japanese Curry Kare Raisu
Discover the secrets of traditional Japanese curry, Kare Raisu! Learn a simple recipe for a delicious dish that combines exotic flavors with home comfort.

Grass Jelly: What It Is, How It Tastes, and Easy Ways to Use It
Grass jelly is a classic East and Southeast Asian dessert ingredient with a dark color, a delicate herbal note, and a pleasantly bouncy texture. Because it’s usually sold ready to eat, it’s one of the easiest ways to add “bubble tea” texture and a refreshing finish to summer drinks and fruit-based desserts.

Coconut and rice desserts across Asia: how to navigate flavors and textures
Coconut and rice are among the most common "building blocks" of Asian desserts – but it’s not just about taste. In many countries, texture is equally important (and often more so): the elasticity of mochi, the slipperiness of tapioca pearls, firm agar jelly, or the icy layer of shaved ice desserts. This article provides an overview of the main types of coconut and rice sweets across Asia and practical tips on how to quickly understand them at home.

Recipe for Fried Bananas Kloay Kaak
Kloay Kaak fried bananas are a delicious sweet dessert with a crispy coating and a soft banana filling. This Thai dish is ideal for a quick and tasty treat. Perfect for any occasion!

Pizza seasoning: how to use it to make your pizza smell great
Pizza seasoning can do much more than act as a last-minute sprinkle. When you understand what’s inside the blend and how heat changes dried herbs, you can boost tomato sauce, lift the aroma of melted cheese, and even give the crust a “pizzeria” finish—without overpowering the toppings.

Ground Ceylon Cinnamon: What It Tastes Like, How to Use It, and How to Store It
Ground Ceylon cinnamon is a gentle, sweet-warm spice with a refined aroma that works in desserts, drinks, and surprisingly well in savory rice dishes and stews. Learn what sets Ceylon cinnamon apart, how to use it without overpowering a dish, and how to keep it fragrant for longer.

Chives: the gentle herb that lifts soups and Asian-style bowls
Chives may look like a modest garnish, but they can quietly transform a dish: a clean, green aroma and a soft onion note that doesn’t overpower broths, noodles, rice bowls, or creamy dips. The key is knowing when to add them—and how to keep that fresh flavor intact.

Ground cinnamon aroma that warms you up
Ground cinnamon is one of those pantry staples that can change a dish with a single pinch. Most people reach for it in baking or coffee, but it can be just as useful in savoury cooking—especially in Asian recipes where coconut milk, rice, chilli heat, and aromatic spices are balanced in one pot.

Whole Nutmeg: How to Use It for Maximum Aroma and Flavor
Nutmeg is one of those spices that works best in tiny amounts: a few light gratings can make a sauce taste rounder, a coconut curry feel creamier, or a broth smell instantly more inviting. Here’s how to get the most out of whole nutmeg—why it beats pre-ground for fragrance, how to dose it correctly, and where it fits surprisingly well in Asian-style cooking.

Garam Masala: the Fragrant Heart of Indian Cooking
Garam masala is one of the most recognizable spice blends from India—and one of the easiest ways to give everyday meals a distinctly Indian aroma. Used in the right amount and at the right moment, it adds warm, rounded depth to curries, lentils, roasted vegetables, and even simple rice without necessarily making food hot or fiery.

Oolong Tea: The Fragrant Middle Ground Between Green and Black
Oolong is the tea people return to when they want variety without switching to a different drink. Depending on how it’s made, it can taste fresh and floral or warm, toasty, and deep—one reason you may even see it labeled as “black tea oolong.” Here’s what that means, how to choose a style you’ll enjoy, and how to brew oolong so its aroma really shows.

Whole Star Anise: The Star-Shaped Spice That Elevates Broths, Sauces, and Desserts
Whole star anise is one of those spices that can instantly shift a dish into an Asian flavor direction—sweetly spiced, gently licorice-like, and deeply aromatic. Used the right way, a single “star” can round out broths, braises, marinades, and even fruit-based desserts without taking over.

Marjoram: a gentle herb with big aroma (and how to use it beyond soup)
Marjoram is one of those quiet kitchen herbs that can make a dish feel instantly warmer and more complete. Its flavor is soft, slightly sweet, and deeply herbal—especially when you add it at the right moment. Here’s what marjoram tastes like, how it differs from oregano, what it pairs well with, and practical ways to use it in everyday cooking, including Mediterranean and West Asian–inspired meals.

Gyros Seasoning: Flavor Profile, Best Uses, and Why It Works with Rice and Noodles
Gyros seasoning isn’t only for pita nights. This herb-forward blend can instantly give chicken, pork, vegetables, or chickpeas a warm Mediterranean character—and it also fits surprisingly well into quick rice bowls and noodle stir-fries. Here’s what it tastes like, how to use it, and how to avoid the most common mistakes.

How to work with rice and tapioca flour: texture, techniques, and common mistakes
Rice and tapioca flour are fundamental building blocks in many Asian sweets – not because they "replace wheat," but because they help create specific textures: elastic, sticky, slippery, jelly-like, or pudding-like. If you approach them with the same logic as cake flour, you will often end up disappointed. This guide will help you understand how to think about them, how to choose the right technique (steaming, setting, baking…), and what to avoid.

Tom Yum vs Tom Kha: how they differ and which Thai soup to choose
Tom Yum and Tom Kha are two Thai soups that look similar at first glance – both are based on sourness, aromatic herbs, and strong seasoning. However, the difference is fundamental: changing the liquid base (clear vs. coconut) turns the entire character of the bowl upside down. In the article, we’ll translate the differences into practice: how to choose the soup, how to "set it" at home without a complicated recipe, and what to avoid.

Black teas
Black teas offer a rich palette of flavors and aromas that will draw you into the fascinating world of tradition and culture. Whether you like the delicate smokiness of Keemun, the earthiness of Pu Erh, or the fullness of Yunnan, each cup of black tea will enrich you with a new experience.

How to start with Filipino cuisine: flavor logic, first dishes, and mistakes beginners make
Filipino cuisine is not just adobo – it is a practical, "homey" island cuisine built on rice, strong sourness, and salty umami seasoning. In this guide, you will clarify how typical Filipino flavor works, how it differs from neighboring island styles (Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore), and most importantly: what to start with at home so that your first attempts make sense and have quick success.

Gluten-free Asian cooking: how to recognize safe ingredients, avoid pastes, and cook at home stress-free
Gluten-free Asian cooking is not about a "special diet cuisine," but about good orientation in ingredients, labels, and preparation methods. In this guide, you'll clarify what is naturally gluten-free in Asia, where gluten typically lurks (often in sauces and noodles), and how to set up a simple system at home to ensure results are both tasty and safe.

Taste of Indonesian cuisine: sambal, kecap manis, coconut, and rice as the center of the meal
Indonesian cuisine is not a single "national taste," but a broad family of regional styles spread across a vast archipelago. Yet, it repeatedly returns to several fixed points: rice as the center of the meal, chili and sambal, sweet-salty depth thanks to kecap manis, aromatic pastes, and coconut, which can both soften and intensely concentrate the flavor. In this article, we will put these pillars together so that when cooking at home for the first time, you know what you are actually looking for and why it tastes "Indonesian."

The taste of Sri Lankan cuisine: coconut, spices, acidity and “rice and curry”
Sri Lankan cuisine is not just “Indian curry on an island.” It is a distinct flavor landscape built on rice, coconut products, bold spices, chili and important accompaniments like sambol and various pickled or sour components. You understand it best not through a single iconic dish, but through the way of dining: several different curries and accompaniments mixed together on the plate.

How to start with Singaporean cuisine: from hawker logic to your first meals at home
Singaporean cuisine is best understood as an urban, port “crossroads of flavors”: Chinese, Malay, Indian and other influences live side by side and create dishes with a clear identity. If you want to start at home, the goal is not to cook “all of Singapore,” but to pick a few typical hawker specialties, understand the role of rice and noodles, broth and coconut components, and learn to work with chilli dips (sambal) and table-seasonings.

Vegan Asian cuisine without loss of flavor: umami, texture, and smart fundamentals
Vegan food in the Asian style does not have to be a compromise or a “substitute” for regular cuisine. In many parts of Asia, vegetarian and vegan cooking has its own traditions – and above all its own way of building flavor fullness: through umami, fermentation, working with texture, the right fat, acidity, and herbs. This article will show how to practically use these principles at home so that the food remains distinctive even without meat, fish, and dairy products.

Vegetarian Asian cuisine: how to build flavor without meat (and without disappointment)
Vegetarian (and often vegan) Asian cuisine is not a 'deprived' version of cooking with meat. In many parts of Asia, it has its own traditions, techniques, and flavor logics – and good food here is not based on substitutes, but on umami, fermentation, texture, spices, herbs, and smart bases. The article provides an orientation in main styles, solid building blocks (tofu, tempeh, legumes), a practical guide on how to start at home, and what to watch out for in 'hidden non-animal' sauces and broths.

Basics of home fermentation for beginners: how to get oriented and start without unnecessary mistakes
Fermentation is not just a 'preservation trick'. In Asian cuisines, it is one of the main ways to create umami, smooth out sharp taste edges, change the texture of ingredients, and build a huge palette of sauces, pastes, side dishes, and soups from a few basics. This article will give you solid foundations: what fermentation means in the kitchen, why it is not the same as probiotics, what types of ferments exist, and how to start with them at home practically (even if you haven't fermented anything yourself yet).

Guide to tofu and soy products: how to understand the types, taste, and uses
Tofu is not just one “white cube” and soy products are not a single universal meat substitute. From the same raw material – soy – both delicate, neutral ingredients (tofu, soy milk) and distinctive fermented products (tempeh, miso, soy sauces) are made. However, they behave completely differently in the kitchen. This guide will help you choose the right type for a specific dish, understand textural differences, and avoid the most common mistakes.

Meals that work for multiple people and an ordinary week: the Asian logic of bowls, noodles and sides
Cooking for more people on a workweek is less about “perfect recipes” and more about how to smartly build a meal: so it’s satisfying without feeling heavy, and can be easily adjusted to the tastes at the table. In many Asian cuisines this practicality is natural – based on a bowl or plate where there is a place for a base, a protein, vegetables, freshness, acidity, texture and precise seasoning.


























































































































