Our story begins not with a chef, but with a young boy named Bilal, whose grandfather, Haji Usman, was the keeper of the flame. Haji Usman had inherited the recipe from his own father, a cook in the last days of the British Raj, who claimed the dish was born out of both scarcity and rebellion. The original Pak Liyari Biryani was not born in a palace kitchen, but in a small, crumbling tenement during the 1947 Partition riots. As millions crossed the newly drawn border, Haji Usman’s father found himself with nothing but a sack of rice, a handful of bones from a scrappy goat, and a pouch of spices salvaged from a burning market. Desperate to feed his family and the orphans who had gathered around him, he layered the rice and meat in a heavy-bottomed pot, sealing it with dough because there was no lid. He added an extra handful of green chilies and dried plums—not for tradition, but because that was all he had. That night, hungry, exhausted refugees tasted something miraculous: the rice was separate yet infused, the meat was tender enough to fall apart with a spoon, and the heat hit the back of the throat like a promise of survival.
The meat was seared until it began to stick to the bottom, then yogurt was added in a slow, steady stream. Haji Usman would say, “Yogurt is the patience of the dish. Rush it, and you get bitterness.” Then came the water, and the meat simmered until the oil separated—a sign of perfection.
One year, disaster struck. A property developer wanted to raze the old lane to build a shopping mall. Haji Usman was offered a fortune for his small kitchen. He refused. The developer sent thugs to break his pots. Still, he refused. But when they poisoned his beloved goat supplier’s well, Haji Usman fell silent. That Friday, no biryani was made. The lane felt dead. Bilal, now fifteen, saw his grandfather weep for the first time. pak liyari biryani recipe
Meanwhile, the rice was parboiled with star anise, lemon juice, and salt. The secret, Bilal learned, was to undercook the rice slightly, so that when it was layered over the meat and sealed for dum (steam cooking), it would absorb the meat’s juices without turning to mush.
Decades later, young Bilal would watch his grandfather prepare the biryani every Friday morning before Jummah prayers. The ritual was sacred. Haji Usman never measured with cups or spoons; he measured with instinct and memory. He would first marinate the goat meat—always from the Lyari butcher who named his goats after famous boxers—in a paste of ginger, garlic, crushed green chilies, fried onions, and a fistful of fresh mint. The marinade sat for exactly the time it took to recite Surah Yasin twice. Then came the baghaar —the tempering. He would heat ghee in a massive deg (pot), adding whole spices: cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, bay leaves, and black cumin. The sound was like applause. Our story begins not with a chef, but
Thus, the Pak Liyari style was born—fierce, unapologetically spicy, and rich with sour notes from plums or yogurt, a signature that set it apart from the milder Lucknowi or the sweeter Hyderabadi biryanis.
He brought the fish home, deboned it carefully, and marinated it with the same spices—though less yogurt, more tamarind to cut the fishiness. He used the same rice, the same layering, the same sealing method. Haji Usman watched silently, then nodded. As millions crossed the newly drawn border, Haji
The moment the seal was cracked open, the entire street would pause. Rickshaw drivers would stop their engines. Children playing cricket would drop their bats. Neighbors would appear at windows holding empty plates. That was the power of Pak Liyari Biryani—it was not just food, but a community event.