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Indian Cuisine

🇮🇳 Indian Cuisine

Continent-scale culinary diversity unified by spice grinding, regional staples, and religious dietary traditions

Geographic
510 Recipe Types
16 Sub-cuisines

Definition

Indian cuisine encompasses the vast and heterogeneous culinary traditions of the Republic of India, a nation of over 1.4 billion people spanning 28 states and 8 union territories, each harboring distinct regional food cultures shaped by geography, climate, religion, caste, and trade history. As a national cuisine, it resists reduction to a single flavor profile or technique set; instead, it is best understood as a civilizational culinary tradition — a family of related but distinct regional cuisines bound by shared structural principles and a deep philosophic engagement with food.

At its core, Indian cuisine is defined by the masala — a composed spice blend, either dry or wet, that forms the aromatic foundation of most savory preparations. Spices including cumin (jeera), coriander (dhania), turmeric (haldi), mustard seed (rai), fenugreek (methi), and chili are deployed not merely as seasoning but as structurally integral elements, often bloomed in fat through a technique known as tadka (tempering). Cooking mediums vary by region: ghee (clarified butter) dominates the north and west, coconut oil characterizes the coasts, and mustard oil defines the eastern and northeastern traditions. Staples shift markedly across the subcontinent — wheat-based flatbreads (roti, paratha, naan) prevail in the north and northwest, while rice anchors the south, east, and coastal regions. Legumes (dal) constitute a near-universal dietary pillar, providing protein across the wide vegetarian tradition enforced by Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist practice.

Meal structure typically follows a plated or thali format, in which multiple preparations — a starch, one or more vegetable or protein dishes, a lentil preparation, a condiment or chutney, and a dairy component — are served simultaneously rather than sequentially, reflecting an Ayurvedic principle of balancing six tastes (sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter, and astringent) within a single meal.

Historical Context

Indian culinary tradition has roots in the Indus Valley Civilization (c. 3000–1500 BCE), where archaeological evidence attests to the early cultivation of wheat, barley, sesame, and turmeric. The Vedic period formalized dietary codes linked to ritual purity, caste, and the Ayurvedic medical system, creating a framework for food classification (sattvic, rajasic, tamasic) that continues to influence practice. The Maurya and Gupta empires facilitated the codification of agricultural and culinary knowledge, while the spice trade integrated Indian flavors into global commerce millennia before European contact.\n\nThe medieval period introduced transformative Persian and Central Asian influences through the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughal Empire (1526–1857), giving rise to the Mughlai tradition — characterized by slow-cooked dum preparations, rich kormas, biryanis, and a refined court cuisine that shaped north Indian cooking profoundly. Portuguese colonization of Goa (1510–1961) introduced the chili pepper, tomato, and vinegar to Indian cooking, elements now considered indispensable. British colonial rule (1858–1947) affected supply chains, commodified certain spice trades, and produced hybrid dishes (e.g., Anglo-Indian mulligatawny) that entered the global imaginary. Post-independence urbanization and internal migration have produced cosmopolitan food cultures in cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru, layering regional traditions atop one another.

Geographic Scope

Indian cuisine is practiced across all states and union territories of the Republic of India, with particularly distinct regional expressions in Punjab, Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Goa, and the northeastern states. Significant diaspora communities in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, the Gulf states, Southeast Asia, East Africa, and the Caribbean actively maintain and adapt these traditions.

References

  1. Achaya, K.T. (1994). Indian Food: A Historical Companion. Oxford University Press.academic
  2. Collingham, L. (2006). Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors. Oxford University Press.academic
  3. Davidson, A. (2014). The Oxford Companion to Food (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.culinary
  4. Khare, R.S. (Ed.). (1992). The Eternal Food: Gastronomic Ideas and Experiences of Hindus and Buddhists. State University of New York Press.academic

Sub-cuisines

Recipe Types (510)

Subzi
RCI-VG.004.1364

Subzi

RCI-BV.007.0160

Summer Fruit Smoothie Twister

Summertime Fruit Skewers
RCI-DS.004.0283

Summertime Fruit Skewers

Sushi Roll
RCI-RC.003.0023

Sushi Roll

RCI-SW.003.0081

Sweet and Savory Rollups

RCI-VG.001.0590

Sweet and Sour Salad

Sweet pongal
RCI-RC.005.0088

Sweet pongal

Sweet Potato Curry
RCI-SP.005.0248

Sweet Potato Curry

Tadka Dal
RCI-VG.004.1393

Tadka Dal

RCI-VG.004.1394

Tadkal

Tamarind Chutney
RCI-SC.001.0058

Tamarind Chutney

Tameta Kothmir nu Shorbo
RCI-SP.001.0137

Tameta Kothmir nu Shorbo

Tandoori Chicken
RCI-MT.004.0798

Tandoori Chicken

Tandoori Chicken Recipe
RCI-MT.004.0799

Tandoori Chicken Recipe

Tandoori Fish
RCI-SF.001.0362

Tandoori Fish

Tandoori Roti
RCI-BR.002.0104

Tandoori Roti

RCI-SN.002.0285

Tangy Paneer Pakodas

RCI-SC.001.0061

Tequilla Lime Hot Wings

Thai Green Curry
RCI-SP.005.0256

Thai Green Curry

RCI-PF.001.0029

Thenga Churuttu

Thoran
RCI-VG.004.1421

Thoran

RCI-SP.003.0680

Thotakoora Fry

RCI-VG.004.1425

Three-bean Super Stew

RCI-SP.005.0262

Three-vegetable Curry

Tikka Kebabs
RCI-SN.003.0274

Tikka Kebabs

RCI-VG.004.1430

Tinda Fry

Todd's Green Beans
RCI-VG.004.1432

Todd's Green Beans

Tofu Scramble
RCI-EG.002.0079

Tofu Scramble

Tomato and Onion Chutney
RCI-SC.007.0328

Tomato and Onion Chutney

RCI-SP.002.0219

Tomato Madras Soup

Tomato Rice
RCI-RC.004.0305

Tomato Rice

RCI-BV.007.0167

Tomato-Yogurt Shake

RCI-MT.006.0046

Tropical Chicken Curry

RCI-SC.007.0335

Uncooked Cilantro Chutney

RCI-SC.007.0337

Unreal Mango Chutney

Upma-Uppitu
RCI-RC.006.0141

Upma-Uppitu

RCI-VG.004.1478

Vaal ki Usal

Vada
RCI-SN.002.0300

Vada

Vada
RCI-SN.002.0301

Vada

RCI-RC.001.0228

Vangibhat

Vegetable Curry
RCI-SP.005.0281

Vegetable Curry

Vegetable Curry I
RCI-SP.005.0282

Vegetable Curry I

Vegetable Fried Rice I
RCI-RC.004.0315

Vegetable Fried Rice I

Vegetable Hyderabadi Biryani
RCI-RC.001.0229

Vegetable Hyderabadi Biryani

Vegetable Pilaf
RCI-RC.001.0232

Vegetable Pilaf

Vegetable Puff
RCI-BR.007.0127

Vegetable Puff

Vegetable Rice
RCI-RC.004.0316

Vegetable Rice

Vegetables with Sweet Potatoes and Eggplant Curry
RCI-SP.005.0285

Vegetables with Sweet Potatoes and Eggplant Curry

RCI-VG.004.1498

Vegetable Uppama

RCI-VG.001.0639

Veggie Salad