Seekh Kebab

	Seekh kebab — spiced minced meat moulded on skewers and charcoal-seared, Lucknow, Mughal Corridor

The seekh kebab is Awadhi court food gone to the street — spiced minced meat moulded onto a flat iron skewer (the seekh) and seared over glowing charcoal until it chars outside and stays juicy within. Lucknow’s bawarchis refined it under the Nawabs, originally from beef, now usually lamb or goat for its softer texture, and Old Delhi’s grills around Jama Masjid turned it into a late-night staple eaten off the skewer with onion, lime and green chutney. The mince must carry enough fat to stay moist, and is kneaded until it binds so it grips the skewer without slumping into the coals. This version follows Philip Hirshon of The Food Dictator, whose seekh kebab is built closely on the recipe of the late Awadhi chef Jiggs Kalra — an English-language record of the Lucknawi original.

Zone: Mughal Corridor
SOURCE: Adapted from Philip Hirshon’s The Food Dictator, after the Awadhi chef Jiggs Kalra’s Lucknawi seekh — minced lamb kneaded onto flat skewers and charcoal-grilled (English-language)
LOCAL NAME: सीख कबाब
Servings 4 people
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes

INGREDIENTS 

METHOD 

  • Mix the mince with the onion, ginger-garlic paste, green chilli, coriander, mint, garam masala, ground coriander, cumin, Kashmiri chilli, roasted gram flour and salt.
  • Knead the mixture firmly for a few minutes until it turns sticky and binds, then chill at least 1 hour.
  • For the smoking trick, sit a small bowl on the mince, drop in a piece of red-hot charcoal with a little ghee, cover for 4–5 minutes, then remove.
  • With wet hands, press portions of the mince along flat metal skewers into even logs about 15cm long.
  • Cook over hot charcoal (or under a hot grill, or on a fierce griddle), turning and basting with butter, until charred outside and just cooked through, 8–10 minutes.
  • Rest a couple of minutes, slide off the skewers, and serve with sliced onion, lemon and green chutney.
Start Cooking

NOTES

UK adaptation: Lamb or mutton mince with about 20% fat (ask the butcher for a fattier cut); ginger, garlic, green chilli and garam masala; flat metal skewers. A charcoal grill, or a hot griddle with the smoking-coal trick for the char. Everything else widely available.
US adaptation: Ground lamb or goat with around 20% fat; ginger, garlic, green chilli and garam masala from Patel Brothers or H-Mart; flat metal skewers. A charcoal grill or a broiler. Everything else widely available.
Cook’s note: A seekh kebab stays juicy only with fat in the mince and a thorough knead so the meat binds and clings to the skewer — lean mince crumbles into the coals and dries out. Cook it fast over fierce heat, basting with butter; with no grill, finish it with a smoking coal under a covered bowl for the charcoal scent.
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