Photo: stu_spivack · CC BY-SA 2.0 · Wikimedia Commons
Kerala Fish Biryani
Layers of fragrant short-grain kaima rice and spiced fish masala slow-cooked together — a Kerala Muslim (Mappila) tradition that differs from northern biryanis with its use of coconut oil, fennel, and coastal spices.
🧺 Ingredients
👩🍳 How to make Kerala Fish Biryani
- Marinate fish 20 min.
- Shallow-fry in coconut oil until golden and crisp on both sides, about 3–4 min per side.
- Set aside.
- Boil rice with whole spices and salt until 80% cooked (grains still have a slight bite).
- Drain.
- In the same pot, heat ghee.
- Fry sliced onions until deep golden, 8 min.
- Add ginger-garlic paste, fennel; cook 2 min.
- Add tomatoes; cook until oil separates, 5 min.
- Add coconut milk; simmer 2 min.
- Layer masala, fish pieces, mint, coriander, then rice.
- Seal with foil and lid.
- Cook on very low heat (use a tawa underneath) for 20 min until rice is fully cooked and aromatic steam builds.
📖 Cultural notes
|---|---|---|---|---| | 580 kcal | 38 g | 62 g | 18 g | 3 g | Kerala fish biriyani belongs to the Mappila (Malabar Muslim) culinary tradition concentrated in Kozhikode, Malappuram, and Kannur. Unlike the Hyderabadi or Lucknowi traditions, Mappila biriyani uses kaima rice, fennel-forward spice, and coconut oil — influences born from the ancient Arab trade routes that brought Islamic culture to the Malabar spice ports. ---
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