The Pantry / Raisin
Raisin
kishmish
Sweetness that swells in the pot.
What it is
Raisins are dried grapes — sweet, chewy, plumping up when cooked — scattered through festive rice, sweets and rich dishes for little bursts of sweetness against savoury or spiced backgrounds. Often fried briefly in ghee until they swell.
Where it comes from
Used across the north's richer cooking, raisins belong to the same nut-and-dried-fruit luxury as almonds and pistachios — the fruit of the feast, the sweet, the celebratory pilaf. The Silk Road brought dried fruit deep into the region's grand cooking.
What it's called
Raisin · kishmish (Hindi). Golden and dark varieties both used.
In the kitchen
Fried in a little ghee until plump, then folded through biryani, pulao, sweets and rich gravies for pockets of sweetness. They pair with the fried onions and nuts that crown a festive rice. A little sweetness against spice is the effect.
What we know about the claims
Dried fruit is concentrated natural sugar with some fibre and minerals — wholesome in the small amounts used here. No special caution.
Choosing and buying
Everywhere; golden (sultana-style) or dark, plump and not overly dry. Soak or fry briefly to plump before using.