Sindh cuisine
Aloo Tuk Crispy
Aloo Tuk Crispy is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Aloo Tuk is Sindh's legendary twice-fried potato side dish — crispy, golden, and seasoned with the perfect blend of earthy spices. The ideal accompaniment to sindhi kadhi or as a standalone snack.
If there's one thing that could make Sindhi kadhi even better, it's aloo tuk.
In Pakistan, it appears in Sindhi cooking; in Belgium, it produces the world's crispiest chips; the same technique produces Japanese katsu crunch. These twice-fried, spiced potato rounds are one of the most deceptively simple yet impossibly addictive preparations in Pakistani cooking. The secret is the double-frying technique: first fry until partially cooked, press flat to increase surface area, then fry again until shatteringly crispy. Fun fact: the word 'tuk' in Sindhi means 'piece' or 'chunk' — so aloo tuk literally means 'potato pieces', which doesn't begin to describe how magnificent this preparation is. The pressing step — using a flat utensil to flatten the partially fried potato — is what makes the difference. It creates more surface area, more crunch, and allows the spice coating to stick better. This recipe is genuinely easy and produces results that will impress everyone at the table. Make extra — they disappear faster than you think possible.
Ingredients
Instructions
- PREP POTATOES: Peel potatoes and cut into thick rounds (about 1.5cm) or halve small potatoes. Par-boil in salted water for 8 minutes — they should be partially cooked but still firm in the centre. Drain and let steam off for 5 minutes.
- FIRST FRY: Heat oil in a karahi (wok) to 170°C. Fry potato rounds in batches for 5-6 minutes until a pale golden colour forms and they're nearly cooked through. Remove and drain.
- PRESS FLAT: Place the fried rounds on a flat surface. Using a flat-bottomed bowl, glass, or your palm, press each round firmly to flatten to about half its original thickness. This is the tuk technique — the pressing creates the signature shape.
- SECOND FRY: Return oil to 190°C (hotter than first fry). Fry the pressed rounds in batches for 3-4 minutes until deep golden, crispy, and sizzling vigorously. Drain on a wire rack.
- SEASON: While still hot, combine all the dry spices and sprinkle generously over aloo tuk. Toss gently to coat all surfaces.
- SERVE IMMEDIATELY: Garnish with hara dhania. Aloo tuk must be served immediately — the crispiness is the point, and it doesn't last.
Chef's Secrets
- The double-fry technique is non-negotiable for maximum crispiness
- Season while hot — spices stick better to freshly fried potatoes
- Amchur is what makes this distinctly Sindhi — don't skip it
- The second fry oil should be hotter than the first — this creates the final crunch
Common Questions
How long does Aloo Tuk Crispy take to make?
Total time is 35m — 10m prep and 25m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Aloo Tuk Crispy from?
Aloo Tuk Crispy is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Aloo Tuk Crispy?
The classic pairing is alongside Sindhi kadhi on rice. Also excellent as a standalone snack with green chutney. Perfect with any Sindhi meal.
Goes Well With
Aloo Tuk (Sindhi Double-Fried Spiced Potatoes)
Thick potato slices that go through two rounds of frying — first to cook through, then pressed flat and fried again until shattery and golden — then immediately tossed in a fierce spice mix of amchoor, red chilli, and chaat masala while still blazing hot. The result is a snack that is simultaneously crispy, soft inside, sour, spicy, and completely addictive. You will eat them faster than you can fry them.
Masala Aloo Tuk
Masala Aloo Tuk takes the classic Sindhi twice-fried potato and loads it with a vibrant street-food style topping of yoghurt, chutneys, and chaat masala — a festival of textures and flavours in one plate.
Sindhi Sai Bhaji
Sindh's beloved green mash — spinach, split chickpeas, and whatever vegetables are to hand, slow-cooked together until completely unified into a thick, deeply flavourful green mass. Finished with a sizzling garlic tarka.
What Cooks Are Saying
The instructions are so clear and easy to follow. Came out perfectly first try.
Authentic taste, clear steps. Exactly what I was looking for.
Better than the restaurant version. The tips in the recipe really make a difference.
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