Tahdig means: “the crust of rice at the bottom of the pot” and there are 2 ways of preparation.
- Traditional/Formal style (this recipe): it’s more laborious because we drain the rice. This type of preparation is common for celebrations and formal occasions, or when there are guests at home.
- Kateh style: rice cookes in the pot in 1 hour. It’s easier to cook since we don’t drain anything. The rice will be slightly sticky.
Important: you’ll need a thick bottom nonstick pot to distributes the heat evenly. If the bottom is thin the rice will burn.
Ingredients | 4-5 servings
- 500g/17.6oz Basmati rice
- 2 tbsp Salt
- 2-3 tbsp Ghee/clarified butter
- 2 knobs of Butter
video recipe:
Preparation
– Wash rice until the color of water, is no longer opaque.
– In a big pot boil water and add salt. (just like pasta water).
– Add rice to the pot and wait till it grows in size and floats on water.
– Save 1 cup of rice’s starchy-water, and add a knob of butter to melt (set aside for later).
– Drain the rice, don’t rinse! (to maintain the taste and salt).
– In a nonstick pot, on low heat, add 2-3 tbsp of ghee or oil, followed by 2 knobs of butter. (a greasy bottom helps to have a thicker tahdig and avoids burnings).
– Sprinkle all the rice, and at the end create some holes in it, which helps the humidity to come out more easily.
– Pour in the mix of butter and starchy water (that we saved before).
– Cover the lid with a clean kitchen cloth (in persian it called “Damkoni” دمکنی). It absorbs the humidity, preventing water to return on rice and helps the tahdig becomes crunchy.
– Cook on low heat for at least⏳ 1 hour. If you like a thicker and darker tahdig cook for 2-3 hours.
When the basmati rice comes off the edges, and its color turns to a golden brown, that’s when the Tahdig is ready!
➡️ Grip both pot and serving plate together and overturn. The tahdig falls on the plate and it’s ready to be served.
Notes
- It’s important to save a bit of starchy water from rice to have a beautiful compact tahdig
- The tahdig takes around 1 hour to cook but its color will be pale. Longer cookings makes tahdig more colorful.
- Long-grain rice is usually used for tahdig like: Jasmin, Thai, Basmati, etc.
- It is more authentic, if you serve the rice with saffron.
- People serve tahdig with stews (ghormeh sabzi, khoresh gheimeh, baghali ghatogh, zereshkpolo etc.) but it tastes good even with a fried egg! 🙂
noosh-e-jan ☺️
What measurement are knobs?
Around 20 grams or a bit less than 1 oz 🙂