Keema Matar

Keema matar — spiced minced meat cooked down with green peas, Mughal Corridor

Keema is simply minced meat, and the word is a traveller — क़ीमा in Hindi, قیمہ in Urdu, kıyma in Turkish, kimás in Greek — carried along the same trade and conquest routes as the dish itself, which the Mughals brought to the plains from Persia. Keema matar is its everyday form: lamb or mutton mince cooked down with green peas in an onion-tomato masala, a winter dish in Punjab and Delhi when the fresh peas come in. The whole thing turns on roasting — the mince and onions fried together until they let go of their own fat and the colour deepens to brown, the point at which a Punjabi cook knows the keema is done; whole spices and garam masala matter less than that patient bhuna. The same mince, drier, fills a samosa or tops a keema-pav. This version follows Hina Gujral, who set down her family’s Punjabi-style mutton keema on her site Fun Food Frolic — an English-language record of a recipe carried down at home.

Zone: Mughal Corridor
SOURCE: Adapted from Hina Gujral’s Fun Food Frolic — a Punjabi-style mutton keema matar built on roasting the mince until it releases its fat (English-language; family recipe)
LOCAL NAME: कीमा मटर
Servings 4 people
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes

INGREDIENTS 

METHOD 

  • Warm the ghee in a heavy pan and fry the cardamom, cloves, cinnamon and bay leaves for a few seconds until they sputter.
  • Add the onions and fry over medium-high heat until deep golden, 10–12 minutes.
  • Stir in the ginger and garlic pastes and cook for a minute, then add the mince, breaking up any lumps, and fry on high heat until it browns and the moisture dries off, 8–10 minutes.
  • Add the puréed tomato, yogurt, Kashmiri chilli, red chilli, coriander, cumin, turmeric and salt, and fry this masala down with the meat until the fat separates and pools, 12–15 minutes.
  • Pour in about 200ml hot water, cover, and simmer on low until the mince is tender, 15–20 minutes.
  • Stir in the peas and cook, uncovered, for another 5–7 minutes until they are just done and the keema is nearly dry.
  • Stir through the garam masala and slit green chillies, and check the salt.
  • Finish with julienned ginger and coriander, and serve with roti, paratha or jeera rice.
Start Cooking

NOTES

UK adaptation: Lamb or mutton mince from any butcher — ask for about 20% fat, since the keema cooks in its own fat and lean mince turns dry. Frozen peas are fine and often sweeter than out-of-season fresh. Kashmiri chilli powder for colour, or paprika with a pinch of cayenne. Everything else widely available.
US adaptation: Ground lamb or goat from a halal butcher; ground beef is the common diaspora choice and works well. Frozen peas. Kashmiri chili powder from an Indian grocer or online, or paprika with cayenne. Everything else widely available.
Cook’s note: Keema is made or ruined at the bhuna: fry the onions and mince together over real heat until the meat browns, the onion dissolves and the fat separates and pools — that release of fat, not the garam masala, is where the flavour comes from. Add the peas only near the end so they stay sweet and whole rather than going grey and mealy.
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