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Things I miss about Pakistan in the US

I know indians do this.....All our dishes taste yummy....in fact Pakistani aunties used to come to my mom to learn to cook - esp chicken every one dish party mom got the chicken and naan....

If you feel everything tastes the same then I am sorry to inform you:

Laziza Chicken tandoori/ BBQ:

Ingredients:
Red Chilli, Coriander, Salt, Turmeric, Dried Garlic 3%, Dried Ginger 3%, Roasted Cumin Powder, Cardamom, Tartaric Acid, Food Colour E-110 (FD&C Yellow 6), Food Colour E-129 (FD&C Red 40)


Preparation and Usage:
Tandoori/B.B.Q. Masala Recipe (Baked/Grilled Spicy Meat/Chicken)
Meat (Chicken, Mutton or Beef) Preferably Chicken without skin 1 1/2 - kg or 2 chickens each in 8-12 pieces.
Yoghurt (whipped) 1 cup (150 gms).
Lemon Juice or Vinegar 8 tablespoons or juice of 5-6 fresh lemons.
Ghee/Butter/Oil 1/2 cup (75 gms).
Laziza Tandoori/B.B.Q. Masala one bag only.

EASY STEPS
1. To prepare the marinate, mix together Laziza Tandoori Masala (one bag), yoghurt, vinegar or lemon juice and butter/ghee/oil.
2. Now apply & coat the marinate on chicken and pierce the chicken pieces thoroughly with fork or knife so that masala seeps every where and leave for 2-3 hours.
3. Arrange chicken pieces on the oven tray, and put it on pre-heated oven mark 5 375°F/190°C for 45 minutes. Then place the tray under high setting of grill till becomes light brown or pierce the chicken in the rod & B.B.Q. on low coal fire.
Note: You can use 2 inch boneless chicken pieces or full chicken or lambleg to make tandoori dish of your choice.


Shan Chicken Tikka [mix for BBQ chicken]

Ingredients: paprika, salt, red chilli, turmeric, fennel, cinnamon, cumin, brown cardamom, black pepper, mace, nutmeg, star aniseed, ginger, garlic, citric acid, papain

Recipe - Chicken Tikka - Ingredients required: chicken skinless 2kg, garlic paste 1 tbsp, ginger paste 1 tbsp, lemon juice 8 tbsp, ghee/butter 75g, shan chicken tikka mix one packet.

Method: 1] mix all ingredients except ghee and apply the mixture evenly over chicken - marinate for 1-2 hours. 2] put each portion of chicken onto skewer and place on low heat, grill evenly on each side till light brown. 3] apply ghee and grill until cooked.



Shan BBQ Tandoori Chicken [mix for tandoori style BBQ chicken]
Ingredients: paprika, salt, red chilli, citric acid, ginger, nutmeg, black pepper, cumin, brown cardamom, mace, garlic, fennel, cinnamon, papain

Recipe - Tandoori style BBQ chicken - Ingredients required: chicken 2kg, yoghurt 200g, lemon juice 8tbsp, butter/ghee/oil 75g warmed, shan tandoori pack one pack.

Method: 1] mix all above ingredients, 2] coat chicken in the marinate and set aside for few hours in fridge. discard the liquid collected - if any. 3] arrange chicken pieces on a tray and place it in preheated oven 190c for 45 mins. now grill or BBQ till tender and browned crisp on outer.


And then we have National chicken Tikka botti masala which has a different mix of spices if you wanna compare :enjoy:

-Subtle differences

since when BBQ is Pakistani dish :)

by the way its not only you who have these spices, the entire world has it but they have different way of cooking which keep flavor of what ever being cooked.

Have you ever had greek, mediterranean, persian, middle eastern and Italian food. they are not loaded with spices and fried till the last nutrition is burned yet they are equally tasty and retains the flavor of meat and veggies.
 
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since when BBQ is Pakistani dish :)
that was about the masala you said all are the same you cant get it wrong...

by the way its not only you who have these spices, the entire world has it but they have different way of cooking which keep flavor of what ever being cooked.
Exactly my point, just coz you/ your household have a weird way of cooking which results in no taste, you cant say all Pakistanis are the same!

Have you ever had greek, mediterranean, persian, middle eastern and Italian food. they are not loaded with spices
I have had Greek - its weird but edible is the best it can go
Mediterranean - makes me visit the washroom too often
Persian - it is blant but edible
Middle Eastern - weird but nice
Italian - the only spices they have are leafy ones and the most they use is bay leaf or rosemary


Have also tried German- boil everything
Norwegian - smelly stuff though their bakery is creative
Belgian and German are not far
Russian- damn do they even know what is spices!

and fried till the last nutrition is burned yet they are equally tasty and retains the flavor of meat and veggies.
Not everyone does that...in my family it isnt...

maybe you need to eat other people's food before making a sweeping statement
 
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maybe you need to eat other people's food before making a sweeping statement

I do and thats why I am saying this. All my views about Pakistani food were formed after eating at 10s of restaurants and 100s of people that I know when they invite us over. Actually I hate going to desi people's house for dinner for this reason alone and when we invite them and server a very different food they get sick from eating too much...Pakistani people, and specially those who left Pakistan in the 80s are stuck with food of that era. Now in Pakistan food is kind of internationalizing and getting better...away from nikari and paya and quorma and biryani...thank God for that.
 
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after eating at 10s of restaurants
I dont eat much in restaurnts labelled "Pakistani food" 90% of the time the food is adjusted to the gora pallet and the remainder 10% it is indian food disguised as Pakistani ....where they put chili as the only spice so your tongue burns enough not to taste anything! That isnt food to start comparing with Pakistani food!

100s of people that I know when they invite us over
THEN you really need to get that tongue checked...

. Actually I hate going to desi people's house for dinner for this reason alone and when we invite them and server a very different food they get sick from eating too much
You know something I have learnt in life it is if you are good at something you dont find a need to brag about it...The very fact you brag makes me suspect you arent as good as you think!

Pakistani people, and specially those who left Pakistan in the 80s are stuck with food of that era.
:tsk: :tsk: :tsk:

Now in Pakistan food is kind of internationalizing and getting better...away from nikari and paya and quorma and biryani...thank God for that.
Just coz you dont like something doesnt give you the right to be an international bash machine!
 
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I dont eat much in restaurnts labelled "Pakistani food" 90% of the time the food is adjusted to the gora pallet and the remainder 10% it is indian food disguised as Pakistani ....where they put chili as the only spice so your tongue burns enough not to taste anything! That isnt food to start comparing with Pakistani food!


THEN you really need to get that tongue checked...


You know something I have learnt in life it is if you are good at something you dont find a need to brag about it...The very fact you brag makes me suspect you arent as good as you think!


:tsk: :tsk: :tsk:


Just coz you dont like something doesnt give you the right to be an international bash machine!

I guess that good tasting Pakistani food is only cooked in your kitchen :) why are you bragging about it
I never said we cook good food, I said different
 
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I guess that good tasting Pakistani food is only cooked in your kitchen :) why are you bragging about it
I never said we cook good food, I said different
I never bragged about it by shoving down another person's cooking!

I only agreed with you after you said this:
they have different way of cooking
with this:

Exactly my point, just coz you/ your household have a weird way of cooking which results in no taste, you cant say all Pakistanis are the same!
 
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Like boss ......
what a happy person...Salute..:smitten::smitten:

images
 
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since when Samosa is South India. Samosa is Samosa no matter where you make it
beta thats what u think. Considering yr a canadian resident pakistani and pakistanis in that country have generally some issues with their home country, i can understand yr lack of awareness and knowledge abt these thing since i can see where yr coming from. But calling a south indian made samosa or whatever being pakistani or the fact that u tasted all the desi foods in one Samosa is the greatest chawwal i have heard till now in this year.:rofl:
 
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Cant think of a single thing..
Dont miss it at all rather.
 
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since when BBQ is Pakistani dish :)

by the way its not only you who have these spices, the entire world has it but they have different way of cooking which keep flavor of what ever being cooked.

Have you ever had greek, mediterranean, persian, middle eastern and Italian food. they are not loaded with spices and fried till the last nutrition is burned yet they are equally tasty and retains the flavor of meat and veggies.
i have the pleasure of tasting these mentioned foods, Although the Middle eastern and Persian food are good and closer to pakistani food, but italian:lol: Oh my, thats the most tasteless food i have ever eaten.
 
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I miss the rain, singing in the rain, mitti ki khushboo in the rain. Apparently, American soil doesn’t get all fragrant for some very non-filmi reason


things-i-miss-about-pakistan-in-the-us-1433350850-6349.jpg


I’m under the impression that people in Pakistan are under the impression that United States of America comprises only of Chicago, New York and Houston or cities that are like Chicago, New York and Houston, and is confined only to the state of Virginia. And sometimes Texas because everybody knows Texas!

I say this because every time I muse about oh, how I miss this about Pakistan, some ultra-enlightened random commenter makes it his business to tell me how wrong I am and if I were to just go to Houston…

Uhm, honey, no. I can’t just go to Houston. Houston is some 568 miles away from where I live. That’s approximately 9 hours by car if driven non-stop, which means 12 hours for me since I love stop-overs. No matter how much I love to drive and have my own car, I can’t just go to Houston whenever I feel like it. That’ll be like telling a resident of Multan to go have dinner in Karachi and be back home for breakfast.

There are more small towns in America than there are big ones and although a large number of Pakistani expats live in or around your regular NYC, Chicago whatev and perhaps that’s all you get to see on HUM/ARY/GEO plays, a greater number lives in small towns where we don’t have a lot of desi-ness to go around. Hence, pangs of homesickness at odd times.

Besides, it is okay to miss Pakistan some, is it not? It is okay to be nostalgic.

Since, I couldn’t totally rely on my own memory to recall the things I missed about Pakistan while living in the US, I rallied my friends and we had a nice chat and I realized there were things about Karachi (and other cities) that I never even knew simply by virtue of that city being so expansive and culturally diverse. For instance, some areas had dhol people to wake them up for sehri…? I never knew that.

However, we came up with a list of things we thought we could never live without, still miss tons, and have survived the separation regardless:

Mangoes

It’s summertime here in the United States…without my sindhri/langra/desi. I should die, really. Instead of that divine fruit, they give us a Mexican mutation of the divine fruit. The locals call it exotic. My children will never know the real thing. It’s a nightmare! And it doesn’t end here. We also do not have falsa, jamun, amrood, kinu and leechee. Do you know what that means? No fruit chaat in Ramzan! Or ever! Not to mention, there is also no Ramzan anymore…only Ramadan since Arabs rule the mosque. And speaking of Ramadan, Chand Raat means a 6-12 evening event in a community hall; not an enthusiastic shopping spree. *insert murderous scream*

Street Foods & Fast Foods

Gol guppay, makai, halwa puri breakfasts, chicken tikka, dandi wali kulfi, masalay wali mooli or shakarqandi I hated that shakarqandi and kulfi and I still wouldn’t touch it but doesn’t mean I don’t miss it. Confused much? Yeah, me too. What else? That chaat at the thela, the bun kebab at the thela, the gola gunda at the thela – the damn thela itself! Those roadside dhabas and their doodh-patti. We also have no paan ki dukaan or mithai ki dukaan or konay ki dukaan where that nice uncle sells everything from eggs, milk and bread to color pencils and photo copies. That Kroger there – doesn’t even compare. We miss the kebab rolls and ice cream shops that weren’t much to look at but dished out finger-lickin’ flavors. There are no milk shops either. My kids will never grow up knowing baalai the way I did (and I wasn’t a fan but still). They know of this cream that comes in a can or carton. And that sugarcane juice! How did I ever survive so long without gannay ka rass or ganderi?!!! Also, the KFC and ilk here isn’t halal. *pout*

Real Pakistani Cuisine

Ammi’s cooking and Nani’s homemade achhar – sans the filminess, it is something to crave if you have the proverbial saat samandar in between you and mom. Chances are you’ll be treated to her cooking once every 5 years to never at all. So, yes, cravings. Other than that, small towns like ours do not feature authentic Pakistani cuisine. We have a few Indian restaurants that try, emphasis on try, to cook our dishes but fail efficiently. The taste simply isn’t there. And the chicken is always orange to red. Then, there are those that offer fine Mediterranean cuisine. Yeah, so not Pakistani. Sorry. You got nothing on our nihari and paya.

Shopping

Come on now, an all-women focus group and no mention of shopping? Just couldn’t happen. Number 1 item on the list of things we longed to shop for were the fresh, crisp lawn prints. Oh, yes! There is nothing in the world that can trump that feeling. The malls here are nice. Too nice. With their organized shops and aisles and mannequins and sparkly dresses/bags/shoes/everything, these shopping areas are a treat to be in. But I long for Tariq Road, for Saddar, for Anarkali. The shops here don’t spill merchandise onto the very pavement the shoppers walk on, the shopkeepers don’t haggle, don’t call to me with loud chants of Bibiji, baat to sunnain, I’ll slash the price in half! No, it is allsophisticated here. And since, I live in a world of mostly readymade stuff, it’s been a while since I’ve made a trip to my darzee. Well, the tales of the unruly tailor alone deserve a whole new blog, wouldn’t you say?

What else?

We miss the rickshaws. Yes! There isn’t a ride more fun than that and do take our word for it. Explaining it to the locals here alone is fun enough. We miss the gajray – husbands have to buy bouquets instead but what good is a flower when you can’t wear it? We miss the chhatt (rooftops). Last when I went to Pakistan and saw quite a few houses with sloped roofs, I wanted to knock on their door and tell them they knew jack about what the heck they’d done. Don’t do that! Leave the chhatt alone. Where else would you enjoy monsoons then? I miss the rain, singing in the rain, mitti ki khushboo in the rain. Apparently, American soil doesn’t get all fragrant for some very non-filmi reason. Last but not the least – cricket. I’ve already written an entire blog on that alone. And was consequently told to go to Houston. *eye roll*

There’s something else I miss when I visit Pakistan. I miss the country that I remember from my childhood. A lot has changed since then. The streets are less safe and the people more estranged and I’m not the only one who feels that way. Most of my expat friends and, what’s worse, the ones still living in Pakistan feel and miss it, too. That last bit is strange. How come the ones still in Pakistan cannot save Pakistan? They have every right, duty and opportunity to.

I wonder, once all that good is lost for good, where would they go to find it?


Things I miss about Pakistan in the US


Haiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sadda dil...Kulfi kiya yaad agiyea :cray:

Gol Gappay, Golay :cray:

ok I am miserable again :cray:



Are you in the US? Because if you are those are the last things you will miss in that country. These ridiculous food items are all available there. We even managed to hunt down some pakola in devon street. Not even available in those days in new york.
 
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Are you in the US? Because if you are those are the last things you will miss in that country. These ridiculous food items are all available there. We even managed to hunt down some pakola in devon street. Not even available in those days in new york.

Try down south.There is NOTHING that is in Pakistan that is not available here. NOTHING.
Even Paan stains in the street.
 
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Are you in the US? Because if you are those are the last things you will miss in that country. These ridiculous food items are all available there. We even managed to hunt down some pakola in devon street. Not even available in those days in new york.
lolz...the author is in some remote area in Texas...

I on the other hand am in a remote area in Europe (1 institute) and in a capital city of another country which mind you doesnt have a Pakistani restaurant only Indian and Nepalese....Turkish and some Lebanese but the city next door has a Pakistani restaurant prob coz more Pakistanis live there :(
 
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