Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Gulab Bibi
KP Home Cooking Authority
Growing up in the valleys of Swat, Gulab shares generations-old Pathan family recipes. Her cooking reflects the hearty, unpretentious flavors of KP mountain households.
Recipes by Gulab Bibi 24
Peshawari Chapli Kebab
KP
Flat, sizzling meat patties from Peshawar — loaded with tomatoes, coriander, and pomegranate seeds, fried in bone marrow fat until crispy on the outside, juicy within.
Peshawari Namkeen Gosht
KP
Peshawari salt meat — lamb or mutton cooked with just salt, pepper, and fat until it surrenders all its flavour. Pashtun simplicity at its most profound.
Shinwari Karahi — The Tribal Lamb Fat Karahi
KP
The Shinwari tribe's legendary karahi — bone-in mutton cooked only in lamb tail fat, salt, cracked black pepper, and green chillies. No garlic, no tomatoes, no garam masala. Pure meat, pure fire, pure smoke.
Kabuli Pulao (Afghan-Peshawari Rice)
KP
Afghanistan's national dish — long-grain basmati rice cooked in rich lamb stock, crowned with caramelised julienned carrots, plump raisins, and slivered almonds. Mildly sweet, deeply fragrant, impossibly elegant.
Kahwah — Peshawari Saffron Green Tea
KP
Kahwah is the soul of Peshawari hospitality — a fragrant, golden green tea simmered gently with green cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and a pinch of saffron, served with whole almonds floating on top and a drizzle of honey. It is warmth in a cup, and it will make your kitchen smell like a spice market in the best possible way.
KP Style Nihari
KP
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's take on nihari — bolder with whole spices, less flour-thickened, and more about the pure flavour of good meat. Simple, confident, and deeply satisfying.
KP Namkeen Karahi
KP
The legendary Peshawari karahi — tender mutton cooked in a minimal masala in a steel karahi, finished with tomatoes, green chillies, and fresh coriander. The dish that tourists queue for in Peshawar.
Kashmiri Sweet Pulao
KP
Kashmiri Sweet Pulao is a fragrant, gently sweetened rice dish that bridges the border between savoury and dessert — saffron-kissed rice topped with dry fruits, nuts, and a hint of sugar makes this the most festive and unusual pulao in Pakistan.
KP Chicken Pulao
KP
KP Chicken Pulao is the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa household staple — simple, deeply aromatic, and made with the confidence of a tradition that knows exactly what it's doing. Less spice, more flavour, and a generosity of ghee that makes every grain taste like a celebration.
Mutton Seekh Kebab
KP
KP Mutton Seekh Kebab is the finest expression of the seekh kebab form — minced mutton with mountain herbs and Peshawari spicing, cooked in a tandoor to a spectacular char. Rich, smoky, and unforgettable.
KP Sabzi Gosht
KP
KP Sabzi Gosht is a hearty mountain-style meat and greens curry from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa — mutton slow-cooked with spinach and mixed local greens in a minimal but powerful spice base that lets the ingredients shine.
Khaddi Kabab — Underground Earth-Pit Kabab
KP
KP's ancient underground-cooking technique — a whole marinated goat suspended and slow-roasted inside a sealed pit over charcoal for 4-6 hours. This is Pakistani barbecue at its most primal and spectacular.
Chicken Khaddi — Home-Scale Pit-Style
KP
A home-friendly adaptation of KP's underground khaddi cooking technique using whole chicken — marinated in robust Pashtun spices and slow-roasted in a sealed clay pot or dutch oven to capture that signature earth-oven tenderness.
Bannu Chapli Kebab — The Original
KP
Bannu is widely considered the birthplace of chapli kebab, and this recipe captures the original Bannu version — flatter, crispier, and more aggressively spiced than the Peshawar versions that became famous. A foundational Pakistani recipe.
Pashtun Hareesa — Wheat and Mutton Porridge
KP
KP's ancient wheat-and-mutton slow-cooked porridge — an overnight dish that requires patience but delivers extraordinary depth. Hareesa has been a Pashtun winter breakfast and celebration food for over a thousand years.
Saffron Kahwah — Premium Celebration Blend
KP
The elevated, saffron-forward kahwah reserved for weddings and special guests — a richer, more aromatic brew with crushed pistachios, rose petals, and a generous hand with the saffron.
Afghan Mantu — Steamed Dumplings
KP
KP's Afghan-heritage steamed dumplings — thin dough pockets filled with spiced minced beef and onion, served over a bed of yogurt and topped with a rich tomato-lentil sauce. One of the most complete and underappreciated dishes in Pakistani cuisine.
Chicken Chapshuro — Valley Variation
KP
A lighter chicken-filled chapshuro — the minced chicken version popular in the tourist guesthouses of Hunza Valley, adapted for those who prefer poultry but still want the authentic stuffed mountain bread experience.
KP Kaak — Mountain Version
KP
The KP mountain version of double-baked kaak — slightly richer with a touch of oil and sesame seeds, reflecting the different ingredients available to mountain communities compared to the desert Balochi version.
Pashtun Beef Karahi — Tribal Belt Style
KP
The tribal belt beef karahi — made with fresh beef instead of the more common lamb, cooked over wood fire in a heavy iron karahi with the Pashtun spice philosophy of less-is-more.
KP Chicken Hareesa — Lighter Version
KP
A lighter, faster hareesa using chicken instead of mutton — delivering the same comforting wheat porridge in half the time, perfect for home cooks who want authentic KP breakfast flavors on a weekday morning.
Swat Trout — Mountain River Fish
KP
Swat Valley's rainbow trout — fished from the crystal-clear mountain rivers, marinated in minimal Pashtun spices, and pan-fried crispy in ghee. The simplest and perhaps most sublime fish dish in Pakistan's repertoire.
Karak Chai — KP Street Tea
KP
Bold, brassy KP-style karak chai made by simmering loose tea leaves hard in water before adding full-fat milk, simmering again, and serving strong enough to wake up a whole baithak. The Pashtun chai standard — dark, punchy, barely sweetened, deeply satisfying.
Kashmiri Pink Chai — Noon Chai
KP
Authentic Kashmiri noon chai (pink tea) made by brewing Kashmiri gunpowder tea with baking soda until it turns deep red, then adding cold milk which magically transforms it into a beautiful rose-pink colour. Served salted and topped with cream and crushed pistachios.