Black Cardamom Recipes · Pakistani Biryani

Beef Biryani Recipe with Black Cardamom

Authentic Pakistani beef biryani — overnight marinated beef chuck, black cardamom bloomed in ghee, birista onions, saffron milk, dum sealed on tawa. Beef needs different treatment than mutton or chicken. This recipe covers exactly why.

Marination8–12 hrs
Cook Time2 hrs
Total~10 hrs
Servings6
DifficultyIntermediate
Black Cardamom3 pods
📅 Published: April 29, 2026 🔄 Updated: April 29, 2026 ✅ Fact-checked by Dr. Michael Bennett
Emily Rhodes culinary writer
Written by Emily Rhodes Covers South Asian spice culture and kitchen science. Market visits to Kerala, Karachi, and Dubai.
Dr Michael Bennett food scientist
Reviewed by Dr. Michael Bennett Specialist in volatile oil composition and spice phytochemistry. All technical claims peer-reviewed.
Quick Answer

What is Beef Biryani?

Beef biryani is a Pakistani layered rice dish in which marinated beef chuck is slow-cooked in a spiced masala base, then layered with par-boiled saffron basmati rice and sealed for dum (steam) cooking. It follows the same method as mutton biryani but requires three key adjustments: overnight marination (not 4 hours), longer pressure cooking (4–5 whistles vs 2–3), and the addition of tomatoes to the masala to help break down beef’s denser collagen. Black cardamom anchors the spice base and provides the distinctive camphor-smoke depth that defines Pakistani biryani.

↑ Back to top

Why Beef Biryani Needs Different Treatment

Most biryani recipes treat all proteins the same — marinate for a few hours, cook until tender, layer with rice. Beef does not work this way. Beef chuck has significantly denser muscle fibres than mutton or chicken, and its collagen takes longer to break down. A recipe designed for mutton will produce tough, under-tenderised beef if the marination and cook times aren’t adjusted. This is why many home beef biryanis disappoint — the technique is correct but the timing is wrong for beef specifically.

Three adjustments make beef biryani work: first, overnight marination (8–12 hours minimum) rather than 4 hours — the yogurt acid and salt need this extended time to penetrate the denser muscle fibres. Second, extended pressure cooking — 4–5 whistles for beef vs 2–3 for mutton. Third, tomatoes in the masala — the acidity from tomatoes helps the collagen breakdown during the long cook in a way that yogurt alone cannot achieve for beef. The biryani spice architecture, including black cardamom as the anchor spice, is identical to mutton biryani. For a detailed look at the mutton version and the dum technique, see our mutton biryani recipe.

Black cardamom in beef biryani works the same as in every biryani on this site — crackled in ghee, its camphor and cineole volatile compounds extract into the fat and then permeate the masala and rice during dum. With beef, the longer cook time actually benefits the black cardamom extraction: more time in the pressure cooker means more compound integration into the masala before layering. The result is a biryani with a deeper, more persistent spice note in the final dish. For a comparison of black cardamom’s compound profile, see our green vs black cardamom guide.

↑ Back to top

Beef vs Mutton Biryani — Full Comparison

Use this table when adapting between the two proteins.

VariableBeef BiryaniMutton BiryaniSame?
Marination time8–12 hrs (overnight)4 hrs minimum (overnight preferred)Different
Pressure cooker whistles4–5 whistles2–3 whistlesDifferent
Pot method cook time90–100 minutes70–80 minutesDifferent
Tomatoes in masalaYes — 2 chopped tomatoesOptional — not traditionalDifferent
Black cardamom pods3 pods3 podsSame
Masala dryness before layeringMust be very dry — beef releases more liquidThick clingy gravy — less criticalDifferent
Rice (70% par-boil)Identical methodIdentical methodSame
Dum time20–25 minutes20–25 minutesSame
Recommended cutChuck (shoulder) — bone-in preferredLeg or shoulder — bone-in essentialSimilar
Spice baseIdenticalIdenticalSame
↑ Back to top
Pakistani beef biryani with black cardamom saffron rice birista onions and raita
Beef Biryani with Black Cardamom

Authentic Pakistani dum beef biryani — overnight marinated beef chuck, birista onions, saffron milk, black cardamom in ghee. The adjustments that make beef biryani work properly.

Marination8–12 hrs
Cook Time2 hrs
Total~10 hrs
Servings6
DifficultyIntermediate
Black Cardamom3 pods
★★★★★4.8 / 5 — based on 298 ratings
Key Ingredients
Black Cardamom ×3 1kg Beef Chuck Sella Basmati Rice Full-fat Yogurt Ghee Birista Onions Tomatoes Saffron

Ingredients

Serves 6 · Marinate the night before

⭐ The Key Spice
3 pods
Black Cardamom (Badi Elaichi)
2 pods for beef masala tempering · 1 pod for rice water · lightly crush before use 🛒 Buy Black Cardamom on Amazon →
Beef & Marinade (Overnight)
1 kg
Beef chuck, bone-in preferred 2-inch pieces · ask butcher for biryani cut · marbling is essential
1.5 cups
Full-fat yogurt room temperature
3 tbsp
Ginger-garlic paste
1 tbsp
Kashmiri red chilli powder
1 tsp
Turmeric powder
2 tsp
Coriander powder
1 tsp
Cumin powder
3 tbsp
Biryani masala homemade or store-bought
2 tsp
Salt
🍅 Beef-Specific Addition (Not in Mutton Biryani)
2 medium
Tomatoes, chopped the acid helps break down beef collagen — skip for mutton biryani
Birista (Fried Onions) + Base
3 medium
Onions, thinly sliced for birista
4 tbsp
Ghee
3 tbsp
Neutral oil for frying birista
Whole Spices
4 pods
Green cardamom
1 stick
Cinnamon (3-inch)
6
Whole cloves
2
Bay leaves
1 tsp
Shahi jeera (caraway seeds)
Rice & Finishing
3 cups
Sella basmati rice soaked 45 min
generous pinch
Saffron bloomed in 4 tbsp warm milk
2 tbsp
Fresh mint
2 tbsp
Fresh coriander
1 tbsp
Kewra water (optional)
↑ Back to top
No Black Cardamom? Find Your Substitute

Select what you have — get exact quantities and what you’ll lose.

✓ Green Cardamom

Use: Increase green cardamom from 4 to 8–10 pods total. Add ½ tsp smoked paprika to the masala with the ground spices.

Impact: The biryani will be aromatic but the camphor-smoke base note will be absent. Still an excellent biryani — just lighter in character and closer to a Lucknowi profile.

✓ Star Anise

Use: 1 extra whole star anise pod added during tempering + ¼ tsp smoked paprika to the masala.

Impact: Star anise adds anise-sweetness rather than camphor-smoke. The biryani will be fragrant in a different direction — noticeable difference if you know the original.

✓ Smoked Paprika Only

Use: 1 tsp smoked paprika added with the ground spices — not during tempering.

Impact: Minimal substitute — a hint of smoke but none of the camphor aromatic quality. Use this only if nothing else is available.

✓ Extra Cloves + Cumin

Use: 2 extra cloves + ½ tsp extra cumin seeds per black cardamom pod omitted. Add ¼ tsp smoked paprika to the masala.

Impact: Adds warmth and depth but not the camphor-smoke note. Clove can become dominant if overdone — do not exceed 8 total cloves for this recipe size.

Skipping It Entirely

The biryani will still be good from the other whole spices, biryani masala, and technique. Extend the bhuno time by 5 minutes to build more Maillard depth in the masala. The camphor-smoke dimension will be absent — experienced biryani eaters will notice.

Black cardamom is inexpensive — source it before making this recipe →

↑ Back to top

Step-by-Step Instructions

8 steps · Marinate overnight · ~2 hrs active cook day

  1. Beef chuck pieces coated in yogurt spice marinade in bowl ready for overnight refrigeration
    1

    Marinate Beef — Overnight is Non-Negotiable

    Combine yogurt, ginger-garlic paste, Kashmiri chilli, turmeric, coriander powder, cumin, biryani masala, salt, and half the birista onions in a large bowl. Add beef chuck pieces and coat thoroughly using your hands — press the marinade into the meat. Cover and refrigerate for a minimum of 8 hours, overnight preferred. Remove from refrigerator 1 hour before cooking. The beef should be at room temperature when it hits the hot ghee.

    💡 Why this matters
    Beef chuck has significantly denser muscle fibres and more connective tissue than mutton or chicken. The yogurt’s lactic acid and the salt require 8+ hours to penetrate beyond the surface and reach the inner fibres. A 4-hour marination on beef produces surface-only seasoning — the meat will taste well-spiced on the outside but bland inside. Overnight marination produces noticeably more tender, uniformly seasoned beef in the finished biryani.
  2. Black cardamom cinnamon green cardamom and whole spices crackling in ghee for beef biryani
    2

    Bloom Black Cardamom and Whole Spices in Ghee

    Heat 4 tbsp ghee in a heavy karahi or pressure cooker pot on low flame. Add 2 crushed black cardamom pods, cinnamon stick, green cardamom pods, cloves, bay leaves, and shahi jeera. Let them crackle for 60–90 seconds until the camphor-smoke note of the black cardamom is clearly detectable rising from the ghee. Do not burn — the ghee should be fragrant and the spices should be sizzling gently, not browning.

    💡 Why this matters
    Black cardamom’s camphor and cineole volatile compounds are fat-soluble — they extract into ghee far more effectively than into water. This extraction step ensures the compounds are carried into the beef masala during the long pressure cook and into the rice during dum. With beef’s extended cook time, the black cardamom compounds have even more time to integrate deeply than in a mutton or chicken biryani — which is why beef biryani often has a more persistent spice note in the finished dish.
  3. Birista golden brown caramelised onions draining on paper towels for beef biryani
    3

    Fry Deep Golden Birista Onions

    Slice 3 onions uniformly thin. Fry in neutral oil on medium-low heat for 20–25 minutes, stirring constantly, until deep amber-golden and slightly crispy. Do not rush on high heat — pale onions produce a raw, bitter note in the biryani. Drain on paper towels. Reserve the frying oil for cooking the beef masala. Use half the birista in the marinade (already done in Step 1), the rest for layering.

    💡 Why this matters
    Birista onions are caramelised through slow Maillard browning — deep golden colour means the furan and pyrazine compounds have formed, which add sweet-savoury depth. Light golden onions are undercooked and contribute raw onion taste instead. The onion-infused frying oil is one of the most flavourful cooking fats in Pakistani cuisine — using it for the beef masala compounds the depth further.
  4. Beef chuck pieces bhuno technique browning in spiced ghee with masala drying
    4

    Bhuno Beef Until Oil Separates — Then Add Tomatoes

    Add room-temperature marinated beef to the spiced ghee. Bhuno on medium-high heat, stirring and scraping frequently, for 12–15 minutes until the masala dries and oil separates at the sides. The beef should be browned on all surfaces. Add the chopped tomatoes. Continue cooking on medium heat for 8–10 minutes, stirring until tomatoes completely break down into the masala and the oil separates again. The masala should look thick, dark, and clingy with no standing water.

    💡 Why this matters
    Tomatoes are a beef-specific addition not typically used in mutton biryani. Tomato acid (malic and citric acid) works alongside the yogurt to further break down beef’s tougher collagen bonds — they also provide body and umami to the masala that helps compensate for beef having less intramuscular fat than mutton. The tomatoes must cook down completely before pressure cooking — standing tomato water in the pressure cooker dilutes the masala.
  5. Pressure cooker sealed with beef biryani masala for 4-5 whistles cooking
    5

    Pressure Cook — 4–5 Whistles (Not 2–3)

    Add ½ cup water to the thick masala, stir, cover pressure cooker tightly, and bring to full pressure on high heat. Reduce to medium and cook for 4–5 whistles. After natural pressure release (10–15 minutes), open the cooker. If using a pot method: add ½ cup water, cover tightly, and cook on low for 90–100 minutes. After pressure releasing, bhuno the beef masala uncovered on medium-high heat for 5–7 minutes until the masala is thick, dry, and oil is clearly separating — this critical drying step prevents soggy biryani rice.

    💡 Why this matters
    Beef chuck requires 4–5 whistles because its denser collagen takes longer to break down than mutton’s. At 2–3 whistles (mutton timing), the beef will still be tough and the collagen unconverted. The post-pressure bhuno step is more important for beef than mutton: beef releases significantly more liquid during pressure cooking. If this liquid is not cooked off before layering, it will absorb into the rice during dum and make it soggy.
  6. Sella basmati rice par-boiling with spices draining at 70 percent cooked stage
    6

    Par-Boil Sella Basmati to 70%

    Bring a large pot of heavily salted water to a rolling boil. Add 1 black cardamom pod, 2 green cardamom pods, 2 cloves, 1 bay leaf, and shahi jeera — boil 2 minutes. Add drained soaked rice. Cook on high heat until each grain has a visible white core at the centre when bitten — approximately 70% cooked. Drain immediately through a colander and spread on a tray to stop cooking.

    💡 Why this matters
    The 70% par-cook rule is identical for beef and mutton biryani — rice finishes during dum by absorbing steam from the masala below. The black cardamom pod in the rice water infuses the grains with a subtle camphor note that reinforces the spice profile from the masala layer. Sella (par-boiled) basmati rice is used because its structure holds integrity during the double-cook process better than standard basmati.
  7. Layering beef masala with saffron rice birista and mint in degchi for dum biryani
    7

    Layer Beef Masala with Rice

    Verify the beef masala is thick and dry — no pooling liquid. Spread the beef masala evenly in the base of a heavy degchi. Layer par-cooked rice evenly over the beef. Drizzle saffron milk in streaks across the rice. Scatter remaining birista, torn mint, coriander, and 2 tbsp ghee over the rice. Add kewra water if using.

    💡 Why this matters
    For beef biryani specifically, confirming the masala is dry before layering is more critical than for mutton. Beef releases more total liquid during its longer pressure cook — any residual liquid in the masala during dum will steam upward and over-hydrate the rice. The rice should be absorbing the masala’s aromatic steam, not pooling water from a too-wet beef base.
  8. Sealed degchi on tawa for dum cooking beef biryani with dough seal
    8

    Dum on Tawa — Seal, Low Flame, 20–25 Minutes

    Seal the degchi tightly with stiff dough pressed around the lid rim (traditional) or a cloth-wrapped lid. Place on a preheated tawa or griddle over low flame. Dum cook for 20–25 minutes undisturbed. Remove from heat and rest 15 minutes before breaking the seal. Open by breaking the seal, then serve by gently folding from the sides inward. Do not stir aggressively — the layered presentation is part of the dish.

    💡 Why this matters
    Dum pukht (sealed steam cooking) is identical for beef and mutton biryani. The sealed pot traps steam from the masala, which carries the volatile aromatics of black cardamom and saffron upward through the rice layers. The tawa diffuses the heat evenly across the wide base of the degchi, preventing hot spots that would scorch the bottom beef layer during the 20-minute dum. The 15-minute rest allows steam to redistribute evenly through all rice layers before serving.
↑ Back to top
Expert Tips

What Makes Beef Biryani Work vs Fail

Beef chuck vs stew beef cuts for biryani — marbling and correct cut selection
Chuck is the Only Correct Cut — Fat Marbling is Essential

Lean beef cuts (sirloin, tenderloin, round) dry out and become stringy during the pressure cooking stage. Beef chuck (shoulder) has the correct fat marbling — not excessively fatty, but enough intramuscular fat to keep the meat moist and add flavour to the masala during the long cook. Ask your South Asian butcher for “biryani cut” or “korma cut” from the shoulder — they will cut it to the right size with the right fat ratio. Bone-in pieces add additional depth from marrow. If buying from a regular butcher, ask for “stewing beef” from the shoulder cut specifically.

Black cardamom pods for beef biryani — camphor smoke depth through long pressure cook
Beef’s Long Cook Benefits Black Cardamom Extraction

Black cardamom’s camphor and cineole volatile compounds are heat-stable, unlike more delicate aromatics that evaporate quickly. With beef’s extended pressure cook (4–5 whistles vs 2–3 for mutton), the black cardamom compounds have significantly more time to migrate from the ghee into the masala and then into the beef. The result: beef biryani often has a more deeply integrated, persistent spice note than the quicker-cooking mutton version. Use fresh, plump pods from a South Asian grocer — see our buying guide.

Overnight marinated beef in bowl showing deep spice penetration from extended yogurt marination
The Masala Must Be Drier Than for Mutton — Always Test

After pressure cooking, beef releases significantly more liquid than mutton. Before layering, the masala must pass the “dry masala” test: stir the masala and push it aside with a spoon — oil should pool visibly at the sides and no water should pool at the base. If water pools: bhuno uncovered on medium-high for 5–7 more minutes. This step is the single most common point of failure in beef biryani — too-wet masala produces soggy, clumped rice that defeats the entire dum process.

Perfect birista golden brown onions for beef biryani — correct caramelisation level
Make Extra Birista — It Keeps and Upgrades Everything

Birista (fried caramelised onions) take 20–25 minutes to make properly. If you’re going to do it, double the batch — extra birista stores in a sealed container in the refrigerator for 5–7 days. Beyond biryani, birista improves dal makhani, nihari, haleem, and any slow-cooked curry. The onion frying oil is equally valuable — store it separately and use it as a cooking fat for any Pakistani recipe. Both are dramatically better than anything store-bought.

↑ Back to top

Difficulty Level & Time Breakdown

Intermediate
Difficulty Rating3 / 5
🌶🌶🌶🌶🌶
Time Breakdown
Marination8–12 hrs (passive)
Rice soaking45 min (passive)
Birista prep30 min (active)
Bhuno + tomatoes25 min (active)
Pressure cook20 min + natural release
Post-pressure bhuno7 min (active)
Rice par-boil10 min (active)
Layering10 min (active)
Dum + rest40 min (passive)
Hands-on time~80 min active
Skill Requirements
Can manage pressure cooker safely
Patient with birista (20+ min non-negotiable)
Can identify 70% rice par-cook stage
Can judge masala dryness (oil separation test)
Comfortable with dum technique on tawa
Who is this for?
A cook who has made biryani before with chicken or who has followed our mutton biryani recipe successfully. The technique is identical — only the timing and the tomato addition differ. First-time biryani cooks should start with our mutton biryani recipe to learn the core technique, then switch to this recipe for beef. Budget a full day — marinate the night before and cook the following afternoon.
↑ Back to top

Nutrition Information

Per serving (approx. 350g — 1 plate). Does not include raita or salad. Values are estimates based on beef chuck; actual fat content varies with the specific cut and trimming.

640Calories
40gProtein
62gCarbs
26gFat
10gSat. Fat
3gFibre
840mgSodium
5mgIron
↑ Back to top

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best cut of beef for biryani?+
Beef chuck (shoulder) is the best cut for biryani. It has the correct fat marbling — enough intramuscular fat to keep the meat moist and flavourful during pressure cooking, without being so fatty the masala becomes greasy. The connective tissue in chuck converts to gelatin during the long cook, enriching the masala. Ask your South Asian butcher for “biryani cut” or “korma cut” from the shoulder. Avoid lean cuts like sirloin or tenderloin — they dry out and become stringy. Brisket is a good alternative to chuck.
How is beef biryani different from mutton biryani?+
Three key adjustments: (1) longer marination — 8–12 hours for beef vs 4 hours minimum for mutton; (2) longer pressure cooking — 4–5 whistles for beef vs 2–3 for mutton; (3) tomatoes in the masala — tomato acid helps break down beef’s tougher collagen. The spice base including black cardamom is identical in both versions. The extra pressure-cook time also means the masala requires a more thorough drying bhuno before layering, as beef releases more liquid during pressure cooking.
How long should I marinate beef for biryani?+
Minimum 8 hours, overnight strongly preferred. Beef has significantly denser muscle fibres than mutton or chicken. The yogurt’s lactic acid and the salt both need extended time to penetrate beyond the meat surface and reach the inner fibres. A 4-hour marination on beef produces surface-only seasoning. Overnight marination produces noticeably more tender, uniformly seasoned meat and is the standard practice in professional Pakistani biryani kitchens for beef specifically.
Why does beef biryani masala need to be drier?+
Beef releases significantly more liquid during pressure cooking than mutton. If the masala is not reduced to a thick, oil-separating consistency before layering, the excess beef liquid will be absorbed by the rice during dum — producing soggy, clumped rice. After pressure releasing, bhuno the masala uncovered on medium-high for 5–7 minutes until oil visibly pools at the sides when you push the masala aside. This is the dry masala test — only proceed to layering when it passes.
Can I make beef biryani without a pressure cooker?+
Yes — slow cook the bhunoed beef masala covered in a heavy pot on low flame for 90–100 minutes, checking every 25 minutes and adding hot water by the tablespoon only if sticking. Beef chuck will become tender at around 90 minutes. The slow pot method produces a richer, more complex masala than pressure cooking. Allow extra time for the masala to dry out before layering — the pot method often requires a longer uncovered reduction after the beef is tender.
What does black cardamom do in beef biryani?+
Black cardamom provides the deep camphor-smoke base note that defines authentic Pakistani biryani. Its fat-soluble volatile compounds extract into ghee during the crackling step and then integrate into the beef masala during the long pressure cook. The heat-stable nature of these compounds means they survive both the pressure cooker and the dum process, continuing to flavour the rice during steaming. Beef’s extended cook time actually benefits black cardamom extraction — the compounds have more time to integrate deeply, often producing a more persistent spice note in beef biryani than in the quicker-cooking mutton version.
↑ Back to top
About the Authors
Emily Rhodes culinary writer 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 approach prioritises kitchen science — the why behind technique — and sourcing accuracy grounded in direct market experience.

View Profile →
Dr Michael Bennett food scientist at CardamomNectar
Reviewed by
Dr. Michael Bennett
Food Scientist & Phytochemist

Dr. Bennett reviews all scientific and technical content on CardamomNectar. He verified the claims in this article on beef muscle fibre density and marination penetration depth, collagen conversion temperature requirements in beef chuck vs mutton, and black cardamom volatile compound integration timelines during extended pressure cooking.

View Profile →

Similar Posts