Palak Paneer

Palak paneer — paneer cubes in a smooth pure-spinach gravy, Mughal Corridor

Palak paneer is spinach and nothing but spinach — and that is the first thing to get right, because the dish it is so often confused with, saag paneer, is a mix of winter greens and is largely an invention of restaurants abroad; you rarely meet it on a menu in India. The palak version belongs to the Punjabi dhaba and the home kitchen: spinach blanched hard and shocked in ice so it stays a deep, living green, blended to a gravy, then simmered with onion, ginger and garlic, cut with cream and a crush of kasuri methi, with cubes of paneer folded in at the close. Some cooks pull it closer to the highway dhaba with a dhungar — a lump of glowing charcoal rested in the pot under a lid to lay smoke over the greens. The recipe here comes by a properly found route: the food writer Dassana Amit set it down on Vegrecipesofindia from her father, who in turn had it from a Punjabi friend who ran a dhaba in the Mumbai suburbs — a place now closed, its restaurant-style palak built on onion rather than tomato and finished with that coal smoke.

Zone: Mughal Corridor
SOURCE: Adapted from Dassana Amit’s Vegrecipesofindia — a restaurant-style palak paneer from a Punjabi-run dhaba in the Mumbai suburbs, finished with a charcoal dhungar (English-language)
LOCAL NAME: पालक पनीर
Servings 4 people
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes

INGREDIENTS 

METHOD 

  • Bring a pan of water to the boil, drop in the spinach for no more than 2 minutes, then lift it straight into a bowl of iced water to set the colour.
  • Drain the spinach and blend with the green chillies to a coarse purée, without adding water.
  • If you like, sear the paneer cubes in a little ghee until pale gold, then rest them in warm water so they stay soft.
  • Warm the ghee in a wide pan, add the cumin and let it sizzle, then fry the onion until soft and pale gold, 6–8 minutes.
  • Add the ginger and garlic and cook for a minute, then stir in the tomato, if using, and cook until it breaks down.
  • Stir in the Kashmiri chilli and a little salt, then add the spinach purée and simmer gently for just 4–5 minutes, so it holds its colour.
  • Fold in the paneer, cream, garam masala and kasuri methi, and warm through for 2–3 minutes.
  • For the dhaba smoke, rest a small steel bowl on the surface, drop in a glowing coal, spoon over a little ghee, cover for 2 minutes, then lift it out.
  • Finish with a swirl of cream and serve with naan, roti or jeera rice.
Start Cooking

NOTES

UK adaptation: Paneer is now stocked by most large supermarkets (Tesco, Sainsbury’s) as well as every South Asian grocer; fresh spinach is everywhere. Kasuri methi (dried fenugreek leaves) from any South Asian grocer is the dhaba note worth seeking out. Double cream, not single, which can split. Everything else widely available.
US adaptation: Paneer from Patel Brothers, H-Mart, or the cheese aisle at Whole Foods (Gopi is a reliable brand); fresh spinach anywhere. Kasuri methi from an Indian grocer. Heavy cream for double cream. Everything else widely available.
Cook’s note: Keep the spinach green: blanch it for no more than two minutes, plunge it straight into iced water, then blend — boiled-grey spinach is the difference between a dhaba palak and a sad one. Don’t cook the purée long once it goes into the pan; a few minutes to marry with the masala is enough, and the colour holds.
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