Punjab cuisine
Beef Tikka Boti
Beef Tikka Boti is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. Beef Tikka Boti is Punjab's rugged BBQ heavyweight — cubes of marinated beef char-grilled to a caramelised crust with a juicy, flavourful centre. For those who believe everything is better with beef, this is the definitive answer.
Beef boti doesn't get enough love in the recipe world, overshadowed by its more famous chicken counterpart.
Pakistan's beef tikka tradition developed alongside the country's cattle-farming culture in Punjab and KP, producing a distinct preparation that uses tougher cuts slow-marinated overnight. But ask any serious Lahori BBQ enthusiast and they'll tell you: beef boti done right is actually the superior form. The beef's natural richness, enhanced by a longer marinade and aggressive charring, creates a depth of flavour that chicken simply can't achieve. The cuts matter enormously here — you want cuts with some intramuscular fat (marbling) that will render and baste the meat from within during grilling. Fun fact: Punjab's cattle farming traditions go back to the Indus Valley Civilization — beef has been part of Punjab's food culture for millennia. Modern Pakistani beef BBQ culture is simply the latest chapter of an ancient carnivore tradition.
Ingredients
Instructions
- TENDERISE FIRST: Mix tenderiser (kachri powder or raw papaya paste) with beef cubes and let sit for 30 minutes before adding the rest of the marinade. This pre-step makes all the difference for beef tenderness on the grill.
- MAKE MARINADE: Mix all remaining ingredients with yoghurt. Combine with the pre-tenderised beef. The marinade should be thick and deeply coloured. Ensure every piece is coated.
- LONG MARINATE: Refrigerate for minimum 6 hours; overnight is much better. Beef is a denser protein than chicken and needs significantly more time to tenderise and absorb flavour.
- ROOM TEMPERATURE REST: Remove from fridge 1 hour before cooking — beef especially benefits from coming to room temperature before grilling.
- HIGH-HEAT COAL GRILL: Thread onto skewers and grill on high charcoal heat for 5-6 minutes per side. Beef boti needs a longer cook time than chicken. Check by cutting into a piece — medium should be slightly pink; well done will be uniform.
- CHAR WITH CONFIDENCE: Beef benefits from more char than chicken — the caramelisation of the beef and marinade creates complex, almost smoky flavours. Don't pull it off the heat too early. Rest 5 minutes before serving.
Chef's Secrets
- The tenderiser step is essential — skip it and your beef boti will be chewy
- Overnight marinade is not optional for beef — minimum 6 hours
- Cuts with some fat marbling stay juicier; extra-lean beef dries out on the grill
- Rest the meat for 5 full minutes after grilling — the juices redistribute
Common Questions
How long does Beef Tikka Boti take to make?
Total time is 40m — 20m prep and 20m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Beef Tikka Boti from?
Beef Tikka Boti is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Beef Tikka Boti?
Serve with thick naan, green chutney, sliced onions, and fresh lemon. A tamarind chutney works beautifully with beef boti. Finish with a cup of strong chai.
Goes Well With
Charcoal Beef Boti
Beef Boti is the cornerstone of Pakistani BBQ — spiced cubes of beef threaded onto seekhs (skewers) and grilled over live charcoal until smoky, charred, and deeply flavoured. This is street-food BBQ at its most honest: bold spices, high heat, and that irreplaceable smell of meat over coal.
Chicken Malai Tikka
Cream and cheese-marinated chicken grilled until charred and smoky — Lahore's favourite non-spicy appetiser that melts on your tongue.
Lahori Seekh Kebab
Juicy, spiced minced meat kebabs grilled on skewers over live charcoal — the smell alone will bring your entire neighbourhood to the gate. Lahori seekh kebab is richer and spicier than its Peshawari cousin, packed with herbs and fried onion for moisture and depth.
What Cooks Are Saying
Incredible depth of flavour. The spice balance is just right — not too hot, not too mild.
Made this for Eid and everyone asked for the recipe. Highly recommend.
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