The Pantry / Kasuri methi

Kasuri methi

Trigonella foenum-graecum · dried fenugreek leaves

A pinch of dried leaf that says ‘restaurant’ in a breath.


What it is

Kasuri methi is dried fenugreek leaves — pale green-grey, crushed to a fragrant crumble with a distinctive scent somewhere between maple, hay and celery, and a gentle bitterness. It is quite different from fenugreek seed; the leaf is milder and more aromatic.

Where it comes from

Fenugreek is grown across the subcontinent; the name kasuri points to Kasur, a town in the Punjab (now in Pakistan) long associated with the finest dried leaves. It is a hallmark finishing note of Mughal Corridor cooking.

What it's called

Kasuri methi · dried fenugreek leaves · kasoori methi. Fresh, the leaf is methi saag. Botanically Trigonella foenum-graecum.

In the kitchen

Crumbled between the palms and stirred into a gravy near the end of cooking — butter chicken, dal makhani, kormas — where it adds that unmistakable savoury-sweet fragrance. It is a finishing touch, not a base spice; a little, added late, does the work.

What we know about the claims

Fenugreek carries a well-known folk association with blood-sugar control, mostly studied for the seed; the dried leaf here is used in pinches for aroma, so treat it as flavour. No culinary caution.

Choosing and buying

Sold in boxes in every South Asian grocer (UK and US); it keeps its scent for months in a sealed pack. Crush just before adding.

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