
Shahi tukda — the royal piece — is the Mughlai kitchen’s way with leftover bread: slices fried golden in ghee, soaked in cardamom-and-rose sugar syrup, then drowned in thick saffron rabri and scattered with pistachios and a sliver of silver leaf. Its name marries Persian and Urdu, shahi for royal and tukda for a piece, and it belongs to the Awadhi and wider Mughlai dessert table, where reduced milk and slow patience turned a humble loaf into a feast sweet. It is the close cousin of Hyderabad’s double ka meetha, and the two are often confused, but the Awadhi shahi tukda is set apart by its thick rabri and the restraint of its sweetness, where the Hyderabadi version soaks the bread harder in syrup and runs a thinner milk. This version follows Aarthi of Yummy Tummy, whose shahi tukda keeps the ghee-fried bread and the slow-cooked rabri that mark the Mughlai original.
INGREDIENTS
- 6 slices white bread (crusts removed)
- ghee (for frying)
- 1 litre full-fat milk (for the rabri)
- 4 tbsp sugar (for the rabri)
- a generous pinch of saffron
- ½ tsp ground cardamom (for the rabri)
- ½ cup sugar (for the syrup)
- ½ cup water (for the syrup)
- 1 tsp rose water (or kewra water)
- chopped pistachios and almonds (to garnish)
- a little silver leaf (varak, optional)
METHOD
- Bring the milk to a boil in a heavy pan, then simmer, stirring and scraping the sides, until reduced to a thick rabri.
- Stir in the 4 tbsp sugar, saffron and cardamom, cook a few minutes more, then set aside.
- Make the syrup by simmering the ½ cup sugar with the water until it reaches a one-string consistency, then stir in the rose water.
- Fry the bread slices in ghee over low-medium heat until golden and crisp on both sides, and drain.
- Dip each fried slice briefly in the warm syrup, just enough to coat, and arrange on a plate.
- Spoon the thick rabri generously over the bread.
- Garnish with chopped pistachios, almonds and a little silver leaf, and serve.