Haleem Recipe with Black Cardamom
Authentic Pakistani haleem — beef, five lentils, cracked wheat, barley, and rice slow-cooked 3 hours with black cardamom in both the meat and lentil base. Hand-pounded to the correct stranded texture. The Ramadan classic done properly.


What is Haleem?
Haleem is a thick Pakistani slow-cooked stew of beef or mutton, five types of lentils, cracked wheat, barley, and rice. Cooked together for 3 hours until lentils and grains dissolve, then cooked meat is shredded and incorporated. Black cardamom is added twice — to the meat cooking base (crackled in ghee) and to the lentil base (whole pod in water). Hand-pounding produces the correct texture: thick porridge with visible meat strands. It is Pakistan’s most celebrated Ramadan dish, served with birista onions, fresh ginger, lemon, and green chillies.
Black Cardamom in Haleem — The Two-Stage Method
Most haleem recipes add black cardamom once — with the meat. This recipe uses it twice. The first pod is crackled in ghee at the start of cooking the meat, extracting fat-soluble camphor and cineole compounds into the cooking fat that then permeates the beef throughout the 90-minute slow cook. The second pod is added whole to the lentil and grain base, slowly infusing the water-based cooking liquid over 60–90 minutes — extracting the more water-soluble aromatic components of black cardamom.
The result: haleem where the black cardamom note is present in both the meat strands and the lentil base — not just in one component. This is what gives authentic haleem its depth at every layer. Dr. Michael Bennett confirmed this dual-extraction approach is technically sound and explains why traditionally made haleem from Karachi’s haleem vendors tastes more complex than home versions that add spices only once.
The other technique that separates authentic haleem from shortcut versions is pounding vs blending. A hand blender used aggressively produces a smooth homogeneous paste. Traditional hand-pounding maintains visible strands of shredded beef in the thick lentil base — each spoonful contains both the smooth, rich grain-lentil texture and the textural contrast of the meat fibres. This cannot be achieved through blending. For another celebrated Pakistani slow-cook, see our nihari recipe.
↑ Back to topThe Five Lentils — What Each Contributes
Understanding each lentil’s role lets you substitute intelligently if one is unavailable.

Authentic Pakistani haleem — beef, five lentils, wheat and barley, black cardamom in both meat and lentil base. Slow-cooked 3 hours, hand-pounded to the correct stranded texture.


















