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​7 dishes that turned from royal recipes to street favourites​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 22, 2025, 08:24 IST
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7 dishes that turned from royal recipes to street favourites

Food has always been a social climber. What once simmered in royal kitchens under glittering chandeliers eventually made its way beyond palace walls, reaching bustling bazaars and landing on humble paper plates, eaten standing up. India’s streets are dotted with dishes that were once reserved for kings and courts, polished in silver and served in crystal bowls. Over centuries, these recipes shed their formalities but never lost their charm. Scroll down to discover the foods that journeyed from palaces to pavements...

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Biryani

Perfume in a pot. Biryani was perfected in royal kitchens, where fragrant rice and marinated meat were layered carefully and steamed slowly under tightly sealed lids. Each pot carried the golden glow of saffron and the quiet patience of hours spent perfecting every detail. The aromas told stories of grand celebrations and feasts where every bite mattered. Today, biryani rises from street-side deghs, scooped onto steel plates and paired with raita in simple bowls. Yet the heart of the dish remains the same, long-grained rice, tender meat, and spices balanced just so. From palace halls to bustling streets, every bite still whispers its royal legacy.

3/8

Kebabs

Lucknow’s courts guarded kebab recipes like treasure. Galouti, shami, boti, each spiced, minced, and smoked with precision. They were tender enough to please nawabs with failing teeth, luxurious enough to crown banquets. Today, kebabs drip their fat onto street-side flames, rolled into roomali rotis and served with onions and lime. Royal finesse, now in a smoky lane, eaten on the go.

4/8

Samosa

Surprisingly, the humble samosa began as a royal snack. Early versions, called samsa, arrived from Central Asia and travelled into Indian courts, where they were stuffed with rich meats and dry fruits. Over time, they slipped out of gilded halls into bazaars, trading minced lamb for spiced potato. Now, they are the most democratic of snacks - served at chai stalls, weddings, and office canteens alike.

5/8

Nihari

Invented as a slow-cooked breakfast for Mughal nobility, nihari was once a dish eaten at dawn after fajr prayers. Long hours of simmering marrow bones and meat created a broth that restored energy and warmth. Today, nihari simmers in street-side cauldrons in Old Delhi and Lucknow, ladled into bowls with khameeri roti on the side. What was once royal sustenance has become a crowd’s morning comfort.

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Kebab

7/8

Chaat

Royal kitchens of North India experimented with tangy, spicy, cooling elements to aid digestion after heavy feasts. The result was chaat, crispy, spicy, cooling, layered. Today, it rules the streets in dozens of avatars: aloo tikki, papdi, dahi puri, bhel. The medley is no longer a digestive trick but a carnival in a bowl, eaten standing under neon lights with paper spoons.

8/8

Falooda

Falooda entered Mughal courts as a Persian import, layered with vermicelli, rose syrup, milk, and nuts. It was luxurious, cooling, and ornate. Over time, it became a bridge between royalty and commoners, carrying the same sweetness in simpler forms. Centuries later, it thrives at street-side stalls, served tall in plastic cups with jelly cubes and ice cream. Still indulgent, but now available for pocket change, sipped through wide straws on humid nights, enjoyed with friends and family, and adapted with local flavors like basil seeds, falooda sev, or kulfi, making it both a nostalgic treat and a vibrant street dessert.

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Copyright © May 30, 2026, 06.15AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service