KP cuisine
Beef Chapli Kebab
Beef Chapli Kebab is a traditional KP Pakistani dish. Beef Chapli Kebab is Peshawar's most famous export — a flat, disc-shaped kebab packed with beef, tomato, pomegranate seeds, and whole spices, shallow-fried in beef tallow to produce a crispy edge and juicy centre that is genuinely addictive.
Chapli kebab is Peshawar's gift to the world, and it's a magnificent gift.
Beef chapli is the Pashtun variant, distinguished from the more common mutton version by its slightly denser texture. The use of pomegranate seeds and fresh tomato in the mixture is a signature that distinguishes chapli from every other Pakistani kebab. These flat, disc-shaped kebabs — 'chapli' comes from the Pashto word for flat or sandal-shaped — are the most distinctive kebab in all of Pakistan. The combination of ingredients sounds unusual at first: pomegranate seeds (anardana), tomato pieces IN the kebab, corn flour, and the whole spice mixture give chapli kebab a flavour that is simultaneously herbaceous, acidic, meaty, and aromatic. The shallow-frying in beef fat creates a crackly caramelised crust around a juicy interior. Fun fact: Namak Mandi in Peshawar is the original home of chapli kebab — and the best ones there are still fried in pure beef tallow, which creates a flavour that cooking oil simply cannot replicate. If you see a Namak Mandi-style chapli kebab restaurant, GO. This recipe brings that tradition to your kitchen.
Ingredients
Instructions
- DESEED THE TOMATO: Cut tomato in half, squeeze out seeds and excess juice. Finely chop. Adding seeds makes chapli kebab too wet and the discs won't hold shape. HINT: Pat tomato pieces dry on paper towel.
- CRUSH THE CORIANDER: Coarsely crush whole coriander seeds in a mortar — you want rough pieces, not powder. The visible coriander seed fragments are part of chapli kebab's texture and identity.
- MIX EVERYTHING: Combine all ingredients including the deseeded tomato pieces, pomegranate seeds, and crushed coriander. Mix firmly for 5-6 minutes. The mixture will be slightly looser than seekh kebab mixture — that's correct.
- SHAPE FLAT DISCS: Wet hands and press mixture into flat, round discs about 3-4 inches in diameter and 1/2 inch thick. Press a slight indent in the centre (this prevents puffing). They should be flat — this is not a round patty.
- FRY IN FAT: Heat beef tallow or oil in a flat pan on medium-high. Shallow-fry chapli kebabs for 5-6 minutes per side. They should sizzle actively. Do not crowd the pan — fry 2-3 at a time for proper heat.
- CRISPY EDGE: The corn flour and fat create a crackling, slightly crispy edge around each chapli kebab. The top and bottom should be deep brown with the sides slightly crisper. Drain on paper and serve immediately.
Chef's Secrets
- Anardana (pomegranate seeds) are not optional — they're the flavour that defines chapli kebab
- Coarsely crushed (not ground) coriander seeds are a visual and textural signature
- Beef tallow for frying is the single biggest authentic upgrade you can make
- Deseeding the tomato is essential — wet tomato kills the kebab's shape
- Flat is correct — chapli should not be thick or round
Common Questions
How long does Beef Chapli Kebab take to make?
Total time is 55m — 30m prep and 25m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Beef Chapli Kebab from?
Beef Chapli Kebab is from KP, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Beef Chapli Kebab?
Serve with naan, sliced tomatoes, and green chutney. Chapli kebab is also exceptional in a roti roll. Raita on the side. Eat the same day — chapli kebabs do not reheat well.
Goes Well With
Peshawari Chapli Kebab
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.
Chicken Chapli Kebab
Chicken Chapli Kebab brings the iconic Peshawari flat kebab tradition to white meat — all the pomegranate seeds, whole coriander, and aromatic complexity of the original, adapted for chicken with extra care for moisture and binding.
Bannu Chapli Kebab — The Original
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.
What Cooks Are Saying
Turned out well. I used boneless meat which changed the cook time slightly but flavour was great.
This is now my go-to recipe. Made it three times already.
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