Village Style Chicken Biryani Recipe | How To Make Andhra Chicken Biryani
+What is Indian village-style chicken biryani and what does it taste like?
Most of us have tasted restaurant-style chicken biryani or home-cooked biryani many times but getting to eat village-style chicken biryani is an experience of another level. This authentic chicken biryani is a village-style version of biryani that features long-grain basmati rice cooked with chicken and yogurt on dum. Our traditional chicken biryani recipe is inspired by the biryani that is traditionally made in Andhra village households on a wood-fired stove. While open-fire cooking is a rare privilege, but we can still make South Indian chicken biryani with this biryani recipe in our kitchens on our modern gas hobs and make it taste equally good. Jump to the recipe here.
▲ Traditionally made on a wooden fire, this village style chicken biryani is best served hot straight from the handi.
Though the place of origin of biryani is a subject of heated debate among biryani connoisseurs, the origin of the word Biryani itself has been traced back to Persia. The word Biryani comes from the Persian word ‘Birian’ which means 'fried before cooking'. However, upon landing in India, biryani is known to have evolved drastically and taken various forms and developed a range of varieties that are hard even for a biryani connoisseur to keep up with. Mughlai, Lucknowi, Bombay, Hyderabadi, Malabar, Ambur, Calcutta, Moplah, Bengaluru, Dindigul, and Kashmiri biryani are only a few famous ones in the endless list of different types of biryanis you encounter in India. Based on the ingredients and spices found, and the preferred regional taste profile, the cooking method and the flavour of the biryani vary from each other.
▲ Add the prepared marinade and green chillies and mix well. Set aside to marinate for 30 minutes.
This village-style biryani is placed on dum to allow better infusion of the flavours with the rice which is added at a later stage of the cooking. The juicy and moist chicken in the biryani acquires fall-off the bones texture due to cooking on dum. The aromatic and long-grain basmati rice is coated in the juices from the curry, though fully cooked, is still firm to bite. The spices like cinnamon, cloves, garlic, ginger, fenugreek, and garam masala provide a delectable aroma to the entire dish, which is further enhanced on being liberated from extended dum.
▲ Bring the rice to a boil in ample water with salt and turmeric till almost cooked. It should not be fully cooked.How to make traditional chicken biryani?
Cooking this village-style chicken biryani from scratch can be time-consuming but the experience and the result are surely rewarding. The process of making biryani is pretty straightforward and you will definitely enjoy cooking it for your entire family. In fact, you can easily turn this experience into a fun family cookout by assigning various tasks to each of the families’ members. The recipe can broadly be divided into five main steps - marinating the chicken, boiling rice, cooking chicken in masala, layering rice with masala, and lastly, setting biryani on dum, mixing the rice with masala, and setting it on dum again. Follow the village-style chicken biryani recipe video above for step-by-step instructions.
▲ Tip the marinated chicken into the lightly coloured onions cooking in the copper handi
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▲ Pour yogurt into the handi with the chicken cooking with onion, tomatoes, and other spices. Sauté for about 10 min before adding lime juice.What makes Yummefy’s village-style chicken biryani recipe special?
Once you taste this Andhra biryani recipe, it is hard to miss that this biryani recipe is unlike any other. The difference between any regular biryani and village-style recipe lies in the minimal use of fine spices and condiments. Another feature of this biryani is a special style of providing dum to the biryani, which involves sealing the degh with a cloth wrapped lid, to absorb the steam, further weighed down with stones or a heavy grinding stone. This chicken biryani Andhra village style also does not have separate layers of masala and rice because the last step involves combining the two before setting it on dum for the second time. If you do not mind going another step further, then consider cooking biryani on a wood-fired stove which would provide it a special flavour that will make this biryani authentically village-style in a true sense.
▲ Tip the rice over the chicken and spread in an even layerWhat is the secret ingredient in the dum biryani recipe?
Following a good recipe accurately and with patience are some secret ingredients to cooking a delicious biryani. Making biryani is a multi-step process that requires various ingredients to be processed separately. Therefore, not rushing through the cooking process will result in an awesome tasting biryani.
▲ Cover the handi with a cloth, top with the lid, bring the cloth over the lid, then weigh down with heavy stones to give the chicken biryani dum on low heat.How to provide dum to biryani?
As popularly known, the Hyderabadi dum biryani is cooked with a dough seal around the lid to provide dum, so that the flavours do no escape as they are sealed in, whereas this village-style biryani is set on dum differently. A cloth-covered lid is used to seal the handi and it is weighed down by stones or a heavy utensil filled with water.
▲ Allow the biryani to rest for about 10 minutes still sealed in the handi after taking off the heat. Then serve hot.How to serve and eat chicken biryani Andhra village-style?
Traditionally biryani is cooked and served on special occasions. The aroma wafting from biryani commemorates the celebration of life itself. A biryani cooked with special attention and served with love can never miss the mark. Make sure to remove the biryani from dum a little ahead of serving it so that it gets enough resting time for the flavours to steep in the leftover steam from dum. Serve hot and plate up immediately after opening the seal. Biryani being the main entree is served with a host of sides like cumin-infused yogurt raita, pickled onions, and fresh salad made of cucumber and carrots with a drizzle of lemon. You can try our homemade Kachumber and pomegranate raita as the perfect accompaniments. For an authentic village-style experience, you can serve the biryani on a banana leaf.
▲ Once you taste this Andhra biryani recipe, it is hard to miss that this biryani recipe is unlike any other. Dig in and enjoy!
Get a delicious upgrade on regular chicken biryani by preparing this traditional village style chicken biryani recipe at home. Relish the amazing taste of tender chicken pieces and aromatic rice coated in spicy masala. You are sure to lose yourself in this biryani’s unforgettable taste!
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RECIPE
INGREDIENTS
500 grams chicken, washed and cut into medium-sized pieces
Marinade
2 tablespoons coriander leaves, chopped
2 tablespoons garlic paste, divided use
1 3⁄4 tablespoons ginger paste, divided use
1 teaspoon salt, or to taste
1 1⁄2 teaspoons oil
7 green chillies, slit in half lengthwise, deseeded
2 tablespoons mint leaves, chopped
Rice
1 1⁄4 teaspoons salt, or to taste
1⁄2 teaspoon turmeric powder
350 grams long-grain rice, such as basmati (about 1¾ cups rice), rinsed, and soaked in water for 10 minutes, drained
- 2 tablespoons oil
1 tablespoon ghee
1 piece cinnamon
5 cloves (laung)
200 grams onions, (about 2 medium onions), finely sliced
1 teaspoon garam masala powder
2 teaspoons dried fenugreek (kasuri methi), crushed between your palms
200 grams tomato, (about 2 medium tomatoes), chopped
1⁄2 scant cup yogurt, (100 grams), whisked
2 tablespoons lime juice
3 tablespoons milk, full-cream or whole milk
330 grams onions, finely sliced, fried till golden brown and crispy to make birista
COOKING METHOD
- Make marinade paste: Place coriander leaves in a small wet grinder or blender. Add 1½ tablespoons garlic paste, 1¼ tablespoons ginger paste, and salt and grind to a smooth paste.
- Marinade chicken: Tip cleaned chicken into a large glass bowl and add prepared marinade paste, 1½ teaspoons oil, green chillies, and mint leaves. Mix well to coat evenly and set aside to marinate for 30 minutes.
- Make rice: Pour 1½ liters water into a large deep pan and bring to a boil. Add 1¼ teaspoons salt and ½ teaspoon turmeric and stir. Tip in drained rice, bring back to a boil and reduce the heat to medium. Partially cover the pan with a lid leaving ample space to allow the steam to escape. Boil for 5 to 7 minutes until the rice is partially cooked, about ready but still has a nice bite to it. Remove and drain in a colander.
- Cook masala: Pour oil into a degh or handi over high heat. Once hot but not smoking, toss in cinnamon and cloves and stir well till the cloves look swollen. Tip in 200 grams sliced onion and sauté till just about starting to colour, 7 to 9 minutes. Add the remaining 1½ teaspoons ginger paste, the remaining 1½ teaspoons garlic paste, and sauté for an additional 2 minutes.
- Cook chicken: Tip in marinated chicken along with the marinade, give it a quick stir, then reduce heat to medium and add garam masala powder, dried fenugreek (kasuri methi), chopped tomato, and whisked yogurt. Sauté for about 10 minutes. Pour in lime juice and continue cooking for another 7 to 8 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Add rice and seal pot: Spread cooked, drained rice evenly over the chicken in the handi. Do not stir. Pour milk over the rice, and then top with fried onions (birista) in an even layer. Place a kitchen cloth over the mouth of the handi and cover with the handi’s lid. Bring the cloth over the lid and then weigh down the lid with a heavy weight to create a seal. I used 4 rocks but often use another bowl filled with water or a grinding stone as the weight. Reduce heat to medium-low and allow the chicken biryani to cook in its own steam for 10 minutes.
- Cook chicken biryani on dum: Carefully remove the stones, lid and cloth – the steam is hot and can burn you – and gently but thoroughly stir the rice with a wooden spatula being mindful of not breaking the grains of rice. Cover the rice following the same technique used earlier – cloth, lid, and stones – and continue cooking giving the biryani dum for another 7 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat.
- Rest biryani for 10 minutes: Set the biryani aside, covered, for about 10 minutes before serving in the handi. Serve hot.
Cook’s Note: It’s important that that the fried onions are not browned too much as they tend to take on a bitter flavour. The onions should be just beyond golden-brown and should get crispy upon cooling. They should still have a sweetness to them and should not be bitter. In case your onions turn bitter, discard them, and fry a fresh batch of onions. The burnt flavour of onions will overpower the biryani. These delicious crispy fried golden-brown onions are known as birista or beresta.
Serves: 4 to 6
Prep Time: 35 minutes plus 30 minutes unattended marination time
Cook Time: 60 minutes
- Make marinade paste: Place coriander leaves in a small wet grinder or blender. Add 1½ tablespoons garlic paste, 1¼ tablespoons ginger paste, and salt and grind to a smooth paste.
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Tags:village style chicken biryani, village style chicken biryani recipe, chicken biryani in village style
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