Black Cardamom Recipes · Pakistani Classics

Nihari Recipe: Authentic Pakistani Beef Stew with Black Cardamom

Slow-cooked beef shank in a silky, camphor-spiced gravy — built on homemade nihari masala, bone marrow, and three whole black cardamom pods. Stovetop, pressure cooker, and Instant Pot methods covered.

Prep 30 min
Cook 3.5 hrs
Total 4 hrs
Servings 6
Difficulty Intermediate
Black Cardamom 3 pods
📅 Published: Jan 15, 2025 🔄 Updated: Apr 22, 2025 ✅ Fact-checked by Dr. Michael Bennett
Emily Rhodes, culinary writer at CardamomNectar
Written by Emily Rhodes

Covers South Asian spice culture and kitchen science. Direct market visits to Kerala, Karachi, and Dubai.

Dr. Michael Bennett, food scientist at CardamomNectar
Reviewed by Dr. Michael Bennett

Specialist in volatile oil composition and spice phytochemistry. Ensures all technical content is peer-reviewed.

📌 What is Nihari?

Nihari is a slow-cooked Pakistani and North Indian beef shank stew with origins in 18th-century Mughal Delhi. The name derives from the Arabic word nahar (morning) — it was traditionally prepared overnight and eaten at sunrise. Modern nihari is built on a complex homemade spice blend called nihari masala, which always includes black cardamom as its smoky backbone, alongside fennel, mace, and long pepper. The gravy is thickened with whole wheat atta flour and enriched with bone marrow, producing a silky, intensely flavored stew that is served with naan, fresh ginger, and green chilies.

Why Black Cardamom is Non-Negotiable in Nihari

Most Western recipes for Pakistani beef stew treat black cardamom as optional — a garnish, something to swap for green. That is a fundamental mistake. Black cardamom (Amomum subulatum, called badi elaichi in Urdu) contributes the primary aromatic architecture of authentic nihari. Its camphor-rich volatile oils — principally 1,8-cineole — are heat-stable compounds that do not degrade during the 3–4 hour slow-cooking process required for proper beef nihari. Green cardamom’s delicate linalool compounds, by contrast, largely volatilize within the first 40 minutes of cooking, leaving almost no impact in a long-braised dish.

The authentic Karachi and Lahore nihari recipe relies on exactly three black cardamom pods, dry-roasted until their camphor compounds crack open, then ground into the spice blend. This creates the characteristic earthy smokiness that distinguishes a properly made beef nihari from any generic spiced meat curry. Combined with nalli (bone marrow), which renders into the gravy during slow cooking, and atta flour slurry for thickening, the black cardamom is what gives nihari its identity — not just its flavour.

Street nihari shops in Karachi’s Burns Road have used the same whole-spice masala formula for over 60 years. The three constants across every version are: black cardamom, bone marrow, and whole wheat flour. Everything else is interpretation.

This recipe targets a Tier 1 audience familiar with cooking from scratch — home cooks in the UK, US, Canada, and Australia who shop at halal grocery stores, own a pressure cooker or heavy Dutch oven, and understand terms like tarka, bhuno, and bhona gosht. We cover both the traditional stovetop method (3.5 hours, superior depth) and the pressure cooker method (under 1 hour, excellent weeknight substitute). The nihari masala we build here is also the base for the haleem recipe on this site — make a double batch and store half.

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The Recipe Card

Authentic Pakistani nihari recipe with bone marrow beef shank, garnished with ginger and green chilies, served alongside naan

Authentic Nihari Recipe

Slow-cooked Pakistani beef shank stew with homemade nihari masala and black cardamom. Rich bone marrow gravy, atta-thickened, classically garnished.

4.8 / 5 (214 ratings)
Prep Time 30 min
Cook Time 3 hrs 30 min
Total Time 4 hours
Servings 6
Difficulty Intermediate
Black Cardamom 3 pods

Key Ingredients

  • 1.2 kg beef shank, bone-in
  • 400g nalli (marrow bones)
  • 3 black cardamom pods
  • 2 tbsp homemade nihari masala
  • 5 tbsp atta (wheat flour)
  • 2 tsp Kashmiri red chili
  • 2 tbsp ginger garlic paste
  • Ghee + cooking oil
  • Fresh ginger, green chilies
  • Coriander + lemon to serve
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Full Recipe Breakdown

Ingredients & Nihari Masala

Serves 6. All quantities based on 1.2 kg bone-in beef shank. The masala recipe makes ~4 tablespoons — use 2–3 tbsp for this recipe and store the rest for up to 6 months.

Nihari Masala — Whole Spices to Grind
4 pods Green cardamom (choti elaichi)
1 tsp Black peppercorns
4 Cloves (laung)
1 stick
Cinnamon (dalchini) 2-inch piece
1 tsp Fennel seeds (saunf)
1 tsp Cumin seeds (zeera)
1 tsp Coriander seeds (dhania)
½ tsp Mace (javitri)
¼ Nutmeg (jaifal), grated
1 Star anise (badyan)
2 Bay leaves (tej patta)
1 tsp
Ginger powder (sonth) Ground — add after roasting, not before
Meat & Base
1.2 kg
Beef shank, bone-in Ask butcher for ‘nihari cut’ — large cross sections
400 g
Nalli — marrow bones Femur or humerus; ask halal butcher
¾ cup Cooking oil (neutral)
2 tbsp Ghee (clarified butter)
2 tbsp Ginger garlic paste
10 cups Hot water
Ground Spices & Thickener
2 tsp Kashmiri red chili powder
1 tsp Red chili powder
½ tsp Turmeric (haldi)
5 tbsp
Atta — whole wheat flour Do not substitute all-purpose without dry-roasting first
to taste Salt
Tarka & Garnish
1 medium Onion, thinly sliced — for tarka
3 tbsp Oil — for tarka
to serve Julienned fresh ginger, green chilies, coriander leaves, lemon wedges

Black Cardamom vs. Nihari Without It

AttributeWith Black CardamomWithout Black Cardamom
Aroma after slow cookDeep, smoky, camphor-forward — persists after 4 hrsFlat and one-dimensional; clove and cinnamon dominate
Gravy colourDeep reddish-brown, almost mahoganyLighter, less developed colour
Flavour complexityMulti-layered: smoke, menthol, earthy, spiceMissing the earthy backbone; tastes generic
Authenticity (street standard)Matches Karachi Burns Road / Lahore Mohammadi standardDoes not pass as authentic nalli nihari
Heat stability1,8-cineole compounds stable up to 200°C — survives slow cookGreen cardamom linalool lost within 40 min of cooking
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Interactive Tool

No Black Cardamom? Find Your Substitute

Select what you have available — the tool shows the right amounts, what flavor you’ll lose, and how to partially compensate. Note: no substitute fully replicates the camphor-smoke profile of black cardamom in a 3-4 hour slow cook.

Green Cardamom — Best Available Substitute
Amount to Use Half the quantity — 1.5 pods instead of 3 black
Flavour Lost Camphor smokiness, earthy depth — entirely absent
Compensation Add ¼ tsp smoked paprika + 1 extra bay leaf

💡 Green cardamom’s linalool is highly volatile — add it in the last 45 minutes of cooking, not at the start. This preserves what little floral note it contributes. The nihari will taste cleaner but lack the characteristic smokiness of Burns Road street style.

Star Anise — Good for Broth-Heavy Nihari
Amount to Use 1 whole star anise per 2 black cardamom pods replaced
Flavour Lost Camphor, menthol — replaced with anise sweetness
Compensation Add ⅛ tsp ground nutmeg + pinch of clove powder

💡 Star anise is already in authentic nihari masala, so this doesn’t clash — it simply over-indexes on its own note. Result: a slightly sweeter, more anise-forward gravy that works acceptably. Use with restraint — star anise can overwhelm if overused.

Cloves + Cumin Seeds — Last-Resort Whole-Spice Option
Amount to Use 1 clove + 2 tsp cumin per black cardamom pod
Flavour Lost All smokiness — result is a simpler, sharper masala
Compensation ½ tsp smoked paprika stirred in with the atta slurry

💡 This combination can work in a pinch — cloves provide some of the intensity and cumin adds earthiness. But the nihari will taste noticeably more like a generic curry than an authentic nalli nihari. Consider ordering black cardamom online for the next batch.

Smoked Paprika Only — Absolute Last Resort
Amount to Use ½ tsp total — add with ground spices, not at blooming stage
Flavour Lost Menthol, camphor, all aromatic complexity of black cardamom
Compensation None sufficient — this is damage control only

💡 Smoked paprika provides a surface-level smokiness but lacks the volatile aromatic compounds that make black cardamom irreplaceable. It will colour the gravy and add a faint smoke note, but the nihari will taste like a western beef stew with Pakistani spices — not the real thing.

Skip It — Here’s the Honest Impact
Proceed Without? Yes, but the result is fundamentally different
Flavour Impact Missing earthy smokiness — tastes like generic spiced beef curry
Authenticity Rating ≈ 55% — still a good meal, not authentic nihari

💡 Nihari without black cardamom is technically possible but not recommended if your goal is the street-food experience. The dish will be good — the other spices are complex enough — but the camphor-smoke note that defines nalli nihari’s identity will be entirely absent. Buy black cardamom for the next time and adjust expectations now.

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Step by Step

How to Make Nihari — Complete Method

Stovetop method shown. Pressure cooker note included in Step 4. Total active cooking time is approximately 45 minutes — the rest is passive slow cooking.

  1. Dry roasting black cardamom and whole spices in a skillet for authentic nihari masala

    Toast & Grind the Nihari Masala

    Place all whole spices — black cardamom (lightly cracked), green cardamom, peppercorns, cloves, cinnamon, fennel, cumin, coriander, mace, star anise, and bay leaves — into a dry skillet over low heat. Stir constantly for 3–4 minutes. The moment the black cardamom releases its camphor fragrance (you’ll smell menthol distinctly), remove the pan from heat immediately. Transfer to a plate to cool completely — 10 minutes. Once cool, grind to a fine powder in a spice grinder. Transfer to a bowl and mix in the ginger powder, Kashmiri chili, red chili, and turmeric. Your nihari masala is ready.

    💡 Why this matters: Dry-roasting activates the volatile oil compounds in black cardamom and other spices — particularly the 1,8-cineole in badi elaichi and the eugenol in cloves. Cooling before grinding prevents the heat of grinding from cooking off these aromatic compounds before they enter the dish.
  2. Searing bone-in beef shank and nalli marrow bones in ghee and oil for Pakistani nihari

    Sear the Beef Shank & Marrow Bones

    Heat oil and ghee together in a large, heavy pot (minimum 5-litre capacity — a karahi or Dutch oven works well) over medium-high heat until the ghee shimmers. Pat the beef shank pieces and nalli bones completely dry with paper towels — moisture prevents browning. Add beef in a single layer without touching. Sear without moving for 3–4 minutes until deeply browned. Flip and brown the other side. Work in batches — do not crowd the pot. Remove browned meat and set aside. Do not discard the browned bits at the bottom of the pot — that is flavour.

    💡 Why this matters: The Maillard reaction between meat proteins and sugars at high temperature creates hundreds of aromatic compounds that cannot be replicated by slow cooking alone. Properly browned nihari has a deeper colour and a complexity of flavour that skipped-browning nihari simply cannot achieve.
  3. Blooming homemade nihari masala in hot oil and ghee showing oil separation

    Bloom the Masala in the Fat

    Lower heat to medium. In the same pot with residual fat and browned bits, add ginger garlic paste. Stir and cook for 90 seconds until the raw smell disappears entirely. Add the entire prepared nihari masala blend. Stir constantly for 2 full minutes. If spices begin to stick, add 2–3 tablespoons of water. The critical visual cue: you should see the oil beginning to separate around the edges of the spice paste — this is called the masala “drying” — indicating the moisture has cooked off and the oil-soluble flavour compounds are now properly dissolved in the fat.

    💡 Why this matters: Most volatile aromatic compounds in spices (terpenes, phenols) are fat-soluble, not water-soluble. Cooking the masala in hot fat — a process called tempering — extracts and carries these compounds throughout the gravy. Under-bloomed masala gives a raw, powdery taste in the final nihari.
  4. Nihari stew slow simmering on low heat in a covered pot for 3 to 4 hours

    Slow Cook for 3–4 Hours

    Return all browned beef and nalli to the pot. Stir to coat in the masala. Add 10 cups of hot water and bring to a vigorous boil over high heat. Skim any grey foam that rises to the surface using a spoon — this removes proteins and impurities for a cleaner gravy. Reduce heat to the lowest possible setting, cover tightly, and cook for 3–4 hours. The meat is ready when it falls apart when pressed with a spoon and the bone marrow is completely softened. Stir every 45 minutes. Pressure cooker method: After adding water, seal the lid and cook on high pressure for 40 minutes. Natural release for 15 minutes, then quick release. Proceed to Step 5.

    💡 Why this matters: The extended low-heat cooking breaks down the collagen in the beef shank into gelatin — this is what gives nihari gravy its signature silky, slightly sticky mouthfeel. High heat toughens the same collagen and produces a dry, chewy result. Low and slow is not optional for nalli nihari.
  5. Adding atta wheat flour slurry slowly to thicken nihari gravy while stirring

    Thicken with Atta Slurry & Add Bone Marrow

    In a separate bowl, whisk 5 tablespoons of atta into 1 cup cold water. Use a hand blender or whisk vigorously until completely smooth — no lumps. With the pot on medium heat, pour the slurry in a slow, steady stream while stirring the nihari constantly in one direction. Once all slurry is incorporated, cook uncovered for 20–25 minutes, stirring every few minutes to prevent sticking on the base. Using a thin spoon or butter knife, gently push against the nalli bones — the marrow will slide out. Stir it directly into the gravy. It melts in within a minute and enriches the gravy significantly. Adjust salt.

    💡 Why this matters: Whole wheat atta contains more fibre and bran than refined flour, which provides both a nuttier flavour and a different thickening mechanism. Adding cold atta to cold water before introducing it to the hot broth prevents instant starch gelatinization (lumps). The bone marrow provides additional fat-soluble flavour carriers that bind with the black cardamom’s volatile oils.
  6. Golden fried onion tarka being poured over simmering nihari stew to finish

    Prepare the Tarka & Finish

    In a small pan, heat 3 tablespoons of oil over medium-high heat. Add one medium onion, thinly sliced, and fry until deep golden-brown — nearly chestnut coloured but not burnt. This takes 12–15 minutes and cannot be rushed. Pour the entire contents of the tarka pan (hot oil and onions) directly over the surface of the nihari — it will sizzle loudly. Cover the pot immediately and simmer on the lowest heat for 10 more minutes. Remove lid. The rogan — a layer of deep amber oil — should be visible floating on the surface. This is the correct sign of a properly finished nihari. Serve immediately or rest for 30 minutes (flavors deepen).

    💡 Why this matters: The tarka is not decoration — deeply fried onions in hot oil undergo caramelization that produces complex flavour compounds including furans, pyrazines, and volatile aldehydes. Pouring hot tarka over the finished nihari in a sealed pot creates a secondary steaming that integrates these compounds into the gravy rather than losing them to evaporation.
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Pro Technique

Expert Tips for Perfect Nihari

Four techniques that separate a good nihari from an exceptional one — based on lessons from Burns Road-style street kitchens and home cooking across three generations.

Black cardamom pods showing the camphor-rich dark seeds used as smoky backbone of nihari masala

Crack Black Cardamom Before Roasting

Use the flat of a knife to lightly crack each black cardamom pod before dry-roasting — just enough to expose the seeds without crushing them. The outer husk is woody and contributes little flavor; it is the dark, camphor-rich seeds inside that carry 1,8-cineole. Cracking exposes more surface area to heat, accelerating the release of volatile oils during roasting. Uncracked pods in a 4-hour slow cook release only a fraction of their aromatic potential.

Bone marrow being scooped from nalli bones to stir into authentic nihari gravy

Do Not Discard the Nalli Marrow

After slow cooking, the bone marrow should slide out of the nalli bones with almost no resistance. Stir it directly into the gravy — don’t serve it on top as a separate garnish (that is a restaurant presentation choice, not the home-cooking method). Marrow mixed into the broth thickens and enriches the entire pot with fat-soluble flavor compounds. It also binds with the atta starch to produce the characteristic silkiness that distinguishes authentic nihari from a regular beef curry.

Wheat flour atta slurry being whisked smooth to thicken nihari gravy without lumps

Cold Water for the Atta Slurry — Always

Mixing atta into warm or hot water causes instant starch gelatinization — lumps that cannot be whisked out. Always use cold water and whisk vigorously before the slurry goes anywhere near heat. A hand blender achieves a perfectly smooth slurry in 30 seconds. When adding to the pot, maintain medium heat and pour in a slow, thin stream while stirring constantly in one direction. Stopping or adding too fast creates lumps that ruin the texture of the final gravy.

Nihari garnished with julienned ginger, green chilies, and coriander — the essential finishing combination

Garnish is Not Optional — It Is the Recipe

Raw julienned ginger, sliced green chilies, fresh coriander, and squeezed lemon are not decorative. They serve distinct functional roles: the ginger aids digestion of the rich fat-heavy gravy and provides sharp contrast to the deep smokiness; the acid from lemon brightens the entire bowl and prevents the heaviness of the marrow; the fresh coriander introduces volatile compounds that complement rather than clash with black cardamom. Eating nihari without these garnishes is equivalent to eating it incomplete.

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Skill Assessment

Difficulty Level & Time Breakdown

Intermediate
3 / 5
Prep Time 30 minutes (masala grinding + meat prep)
Active Cook Time ~45 minutes (browning, blooming, tarka, slurry)
Passive Cook Time 3–4 hours (slow simmering, largely unattended)
Total Time 4–4.5 hours stovetop / 1.5 hours pressure cooker
Skills Required
  • Dry-roasting whole spices without burning
  • Searing meat in high-heat fat
  • Recognizing oil-separation in masala
  • Making lump-free flour slurry
  • Controlling slow-simmer heat (very low flame)
  • Safe pressure cooker operation (if using)

This recipe is for home cooks who are comfortable with South Asian cooking techniques and have at least 2–3 hours available on a weekend. The technique is not complicated — it is primarily about patience and following the masala-blooming process correctly. First-time nihari makers who follow each step precisely produce excellent results. If you are familiar with making mutton biryani or any slow-cooked gosht, nihari is well within reach.

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Per Serving

Nutrition Information

Nihari Recipe — Nutrition Per Serving (Based on 6 servings, beef shank + gravy, no bread)
780 Calories (kcal)
52g Protein
58g Total Fat
18g Carbohydrates
3g Fiber
14g Saturated Fat
620mg Sodium
4mg Iron

Values are estimates based on standard USDA data for bone-in beef shank, whole wheat flour, and listed spices. Actual values vary with bone-to-meat ratio and fat skimmed. Does not include naan or bread.

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People Also Ask

Nihari Recipe — Frequently Asked Questions

Bone-in beef shank (also labeled beef shin or ‘nihari cut’ at halal butchers) is the traditional and best choice. The bone and marrow are essential — not optional. The marrow renders during slow cooking, giving nihari its signature silky, buttery gravy texture that no boneless cut can replicate. Ask your halal butcher specifically for large cross-cut pieces of shank. You can supplement with separate nalli (large marrow) bones for extra richness.
Stovetop: 30 min prep + 3–4 hours slow simmering + 20 min for thickening = approximately 4 to 4.5 hours total. Pressure cooker: 30 min prep + 40 min pressure cook + 20 min thickening = under 1.5 hours. Instant Pot: similar to pressure cooker. Nihari consistently tastes better the following day — the spices continue integrating overnight, and the fat redistributes into the gravy rather than floating on top.
Nihari is a medium-thick broth-based beef shank stew, thickened only with atta flour — the meat pieces remain identifiable. Haleem is a thick, slow-cooked mixture of lentils, broken wheat, and meat that is blended together into a smooth porridge-like consistency. Both use similar whole spices including black cardamom, but haleem takes 6–8 hours and involves a completely different technique and texture. Nihari is brothier; haleem is denser.
Absolutely — the stovetop method is traditional and produces the deepest flavour. A heavy-bottomed pot (Dutch oven or any thick-base pot with a tight lid) is all you need. The key is maintaining the lowest possible simmer for 3–4 hours. If your stove runs hot, use a heat diffuser under the pot. The slow cooker method also works well — cook on Low for 8–10 hours or High for 5–6 hours, adding the atta slurry in the final 30 minutes.
Traditionally, nihari is served with khameeri roti (leavened bread), naan, or kulcha — the bread functions as the eating utensil for scooping the thick gravy. Garnishes are not decorative: julienned fresh ginger, sliced green chilies, fresh coriander, and a squeeze of lemon are considered part of the recipe. Nihari without these garnishes is considered incomplete in Pakistani and North Indian culinary tradition. Some restaurants also serve crispy fried onions (barista) on top.
Three common causes: (1) Meat not properly browned — sear until deep mahogany, not just pale. (2) Masala not bloomed until oil separates — if you added water before seeing the oil pull away from the spice paste, the masala wasn’t ready. (3) Insufficient Kashmiri red chili powder — this spice provides deep red colour without excessive heat. For a watery consistency, add more atta slurry and cook uncovered on medium heat for 10–15 minutes to reduce.
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Who Created This Recipe

Emily Rhodes, culinary writer and spice researcher at CardamomNectar
Written by Emily Rhodes Culinary Writer & Spice Researcher

Emily covers South Asian spice culture, recipe development, and market sourcing. She has visited spice markets in Kerala, Karachi, and Dubai and writes all recipe content on CardamomNectar. Her research into black cardamom use across Pakistani street food culture directly informs the technique in this nihari recipe.

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Dr. Michael Bennett, food scientist and phytochemist at CardamomNectar
Reviewed by Dr. Michael Bennett Food Scientist & Phytochemist

Dr. Bennett reviews all scientific and technical content on CardamomNectar. His expertise in volatile oil composition and spice phytochemistry ensures all data meets peer-reviewed standards. He verified the 1,8-cineole heat-stability claims and the oil-solubility explanation for masala blooming included in this article.

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