The overlooked chapter

Persian influence on Indian food began 500 years before the Mughals arrived

Ask most people which foreign culture had the biggest influence on North Indian food and they will say the Mughals. They are not wrong — but they are incomplete. The Mughals arrived in 1526. Persian influence on Indian cooking had already been accumulating for five hundred years before the first Mughal emperor set foot in India. The Mughals themselves were Persian-speaking, Persian-cultured rulers who brought a culinary tradition that had already been partially absorbed into Indian court cooking long before their arrival.

The biryani, the korma, the rich nut-based gravies, the saffron-scented rice dishes — to understand where these came from, you have to go back to Persia. Not to the Mughal court of the 16th century but to Persian traders, scholars, and rulers who began arriving in India from the 7th century onwards, carrying with them one of the most sophisticated culinary traditions in the ancient world.

👤A moment in history
Delhi Sultanate · circa 1300 CE
The cook who brought saffron to an Indian kitchen
A Persian cook arrives at the court of the Delhi Sultanate carrying something the Indian kitchen has never seen in such quantity: saffron — the dried stigmas of the Crocus sativus flower, more expensive than gold by weight. He knows to bloom it first in warm milk, never hot water. He knows the ratio — too little and there is no colour, too much and it becomes bitter. He is transmitting a technique refined in Persian royal kitchens for five hundred years. Within a generation, saffron rice is a staple of Indian court cooking. Within two generations, nobody remembers that saffron was ever foreign.
"The word 'pilaf' and the word 'pulao' share the same ancestry. Long before biryani existed, Persia was perfecting the art of aromatic layered rice — and India was learning."
The History of Indian Food · Chapter 3
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Saffron and the Persian luxury kitchen

How Persia's most prized spice became the soul of Indian rice

Persian cooking was built on a philosophy of balance between opposites: sweet and sour, hot and cold, rich and austere. It used fruit in savoury dishes, nuts to thicken and enrich sauces, rose water and saffron to perfume rice. These are not techniques India had independently developed. They arrived with Persians — and once they arrived, India transformed them completely.

🔍Food Detective
Why does saffron need to be bloomed in warm milk before adding to biryani?
Saffron's colour comes from crocin — a water-soluble pigment. Its flavour comes from safranal — a volatile aromatic compound. Blooming in warm (not hot) milk dissolves the crocin for even colour distribution while the fat in the milk traps and preserves the safranal volatiles that would otherwise evaporate instantly. Warm milk is the precise sweet spot — a technique Persian court cooks discovered empirically 1,500 years before food scientists explained it.
40 second read
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Pilaf becomes Pulao — the long road to biryani

How the Persian sealed vessel technique created dum cooking

The word biryani comes from the Persian "biryān" meaning fried or roasted before cooking. The dum technique — sealing a vessel with dough and cooking food in its own steam at low temperature — is a Persian court invention. In a sealed vessel, volatile aromatic compounds from saffron, cardamom, and rose water are trapped and recirculate continuously through the food. A properly dum-cooked biryani contains more saffron flavour per gram used than any open-pot method — not because more saffron was added, but because the sealed vessel prevents aromatic loss.

🔍Food Detective
Why does dum biryani taste different from biryani cooked in an open pot — even with identical ingredients?
The sealed dum vessel creates three things simultaneously that open cooking cannot. Steam recirculation — moisture laden with spice aromatics continuously bastes the food from above. Aromatic trapping — volatile compounds from saffron and cardamom cannot escape. Even 100°C cooking — temperature cannot exceed boiling point regardless of flame below, protecting both rice and meat simultaneously. This is why restaurant biryani made with a proper dum seal tastes fundamentally different from the same recipe cooked uncovered.
40 second read

The samosa arrived in India during the Delhi Sultanate period — probably the 13th or 14th century. Its original name was sambosa or sanbusak in Persian — a Central Asian portable food, fried pastry filled with minced meat, dried fruits, and nuts. The potato-filled samosa was impossible until the Portuguese brought potatoes in the 17th century — at least 300 years after the samosa arrived. The form is Persian. The filling is South American. The result is entirely Indian.

💭What If?
What if Persian influence had never reached India?
Without Persian culinary influence from the 7th century onwards, North Indian restaurant food would look radically different. There would be no:
  • Biryani — the Persian pilaf technique applied to Indian spices never develops
  • Korma — the nut-thickening and braised meat tradition never enters Indian cooking
  • Saffron in Indian cooking — this luxury ingredient never finds its Indian home
  • Dum cooking — the sealed vessel technique that defines biryani and dum aloo never arrives
  • Samosa — the Persian pastry form that became India's most beloved snack never appears

The North Indian restaurant menu the world associates with Indian food is largely a Persian inheritance, transformed by Indian spices into something entirely new.

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Every time you order North Indian food — you are speaking Persian

The Persian words hidden inside every Indian menu

One of the most concrete measures of Persian influence is linguistic. Biryani from biryān (fried). Korma from kavurma (braised meat). Pulao from pilaf. Kebab from kabāb. Naan from nān (bread). Samosa from sanbusak. Shorba from shōrba (broth). Halwa from ḥalwā (sweet). Every time someone orders biryani, korma, or naan in a restaurant anywhere in the world, they are using words that came to India from Persia — transformed, naturalised, and now entirely Indian.