rockstar08
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Ghar ki murgee Daal baraber
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hitting in forehead may be to stun the animal so that it bears less pain unlike halal/kosher which is blood bath and a cruel thing to witness(and may affect the mental state of kids or weak hearted). I know, in Christian/Hindu areas they kill by hitting hammer or by Jhatka(less seen though) in Kerala. but, where I live unfortunately halal is the only option.Actually there is reason to avoid beef.I also ate before 1 years ago.But about 1 years ago there when I saw a news ,I become really shocked .In kerala cattles for beef is killed by using a big hammer by hammering it to the head of cattle.The then I decided
Animal slaughter - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
hahaha too funny
Are you referring to Paya Shorba and Sheermal bread.
Question to the Pakistanis: I have eaten at many Pakistanis restaurants, I love the food. My only issue is that it is too oily. I mean there is nearly an inch of oil floating over the gravy in many of the dishes (obviously not talking about the kababs, haleem etc). My question is do you guys use that much oil in daily cooking too or is it just a restaurant thing?
Total oil which our mummies use on parathas for breakfast in a day is more than KSA's daily oil production.
I was actually asking more about the meat dishes. I understand that "bhun-na" is essential to Pakistani cooking and you want to make sure that the oil separates from the spices. So you can actually decant the separated oil from rest of the gravy (which is what I do generally ). Do you do that too?
Question to the Pakistanis: I have eaten at many Pakistanis restaurants, I love the food. My only issue is that it is too oily. I mean there is nearly an inch of oil floating over the gravy in many of the dishes (obviously not talking about the kababs, haleem etc). My question is do you guys use that much oil in daily cooking too or is it just a restaurant thing?
Oh ya baby paya Shorba. Now tomorrow Paya Shorba with paratha.
What a misleading thread title from Riaz uncle, although that's kind of expected of him. It contradicts the graph he posted. Per capita meat consumption is one of the lowest in Pakistan, just slightly above India which has a large vegetarian population. Most countries on this graph have a higher per capita meat consumption than Pakistan. What surprises me the most is that Bangladeshis (many of whom have Arab, Turk and Afghan origin ) are even lower than Indians.