Murgh musallam explained

Murgh musallam
Country:Indian Subcontinent
National Cuisine:India, Bangladesh, Pakistan
Course:Main course
Served:Hot
Main Ingredient:Chicken, tomato, egg, ginger, garlic, onion

Murgh musallam (English: whole chicken) is a Mughlai dish originating from the Indian subcontinent.[1] It consists of whole chicken marinated in a ginger-garlic paste, stuffed with boiled eggs and seasoned with spices like saffron, cinnamon, cloves, poppy seeds, cardamom and chilli. It is cooked dry or in sauce, and decorated with almonds and silver leaves.[2]

History

Murgh musallam literally means 'whole chicken'.[2] The dish was popular among the royal Mughal families of Awadh, now the state of Uttar Pradesh in India. It also means well done. Ibn Battuta described Murgh Musallam as a favourite dish of Muhammad bin Tughluq.[3] The dish was also served in the Delhi Sultanate.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Singh. Prerna. Whole chicken (Murg Musallam). The Guardian.
  2. Web site: Murgh Musallam: stuffed chicken has never tasted this good. firstpost.com. 19 July 2011 . Firstpost.
  3. News: Tirmizi. Bisma. 30 June 2014. Food Stories: Murgh Musallam. Dawn. Pakistan. 3 May 2019.
  4. Book: Pargal. Sharda. The Chicken Cookbook. 1 January 2001. Penguin UK. 9789351181514. 302.