Punjab cuisine
Slow Dum Chicken
Slow Dum Chicken is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. Punjab's take on dum cooking applied to chicken — yogurt-marinated chicken sealed and slow-cooked so every piece is impossibly tender and infused with spiced aromatics. Restaurant quality at home.
Applying dum technique to chicken brings it closer to the boneless richness that makes dum gosht legendary, but in a fraction of the time.
It is one of the most important and distinctive techniques in the Mughal culinary tradition. Chicken cannot endure 5 hours of dum cooking — but 60-90 minutes is enough to transform it into something extraordinary: meat so tender it slides from the bone at a touch, saturated with the spices it's been sitting with throughout the cook. Punjab's dum chicken leans into a yogurt marinade and aromatic whole spices, making it closer to a spiced dum biryani in spirit. The sealed cooking also means the chicken essentially braised in its own juices plus the marinade — no water is added, making the resulting sauce intensely concentrated. Fun fact: the Punjabi term for dum cooking at home is 'dum dena' — to give breath or steam to the food. It's a poetic description of a technique that's both ancient and brilliant.
Ingredients
Instructions
- MAKE BIRISTA AND MARINADE: Fry sliced pyaaz in ghee to deep golden. Remove and grind half to paste. Mix birista paste with yogurt, adrak-lehsan paste, all ground spices, and salt — this is the marinade. Coat chicken pieces thoroughly. Marinate 2 hours minimum, overnight is better.
- LAYER IN THE POT: In a heavy pot, heat remaining ghee. Add whole spices (cardamom, cinnamon, cloves) and sizzle 30 seconds. Add marinated chicken with all the marinade. Spread evenly.
- ADD FINAL TOUCHES BEFORE SEALING: Drizzle saffron-milk over the top. Add kewra water. Scatter remaining whole birista on top. HINT: Everything that goes in before sealing will be amplified by the dum — the saffron and kewra will perfume the entire dish.
- SEAL AND DUM: Make dough rope, seal pot completely. Cook on lowest heat for 75-90 minutes. Chicken dum is faster than gosht dum — 75 minutes is usually sufficient for medium pieces.
- TEST AND SERVE: Crack seal and test one piece — it should slide from bone easily. If not, re-seal for 15 more minutes. Open at table for the aroma effect. Top with fresh hara dhania.
Chef's Secrets
- The marinade time is crucial — minimum 2 hours, overnight produces noticeably better results.
- Chicken dum takes 75-90 minutes unlike mutton which needs 4+ hours — don't overcook chicken.
- Kewra added before sealing (rather than after) creates a fragrance throughout the chicken rather than just on the surface.
- If you're nervous about the dough seal, use a double layer of heavy-duty foil pressed under the lid.
Common Questions
How long does Slow Dum Chicken take to make?
Total time is 1h 50m — 20m prep and 1h 30m cooking.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated medium difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Slow Dum Chicken from?
Slow Dum Chicken is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Slow Dum Chicken?
Serve with naan or plain rice. Dum chicken has enough richness to stand alone — a simple kachumbar salad and yogurt raita are all the sides needed. This dish works beautifully as a showstopper for a dinner party.
Goes Well With
Balochi Dampukht
Balochistan's above-ground sealed-pot slow-cook — meat layered over charbi (sheep tail fat) with whole unpeeled vegetables, lid sealed with flour dough, cooked for 2-3 hours in its own steam with no added water. Salt and black pepper only. The charbi renders and bastes everything from below. NOT an underground dish — that is Khaddi Kabab.
Balochi Dampukht Mutton
The ancient Balochi slow-cooked sealed meat — dampukht means 'cooked in its own steam' and this dish delivers mutton of extraordinary tenderness with minimal spicing and maximum natural flavour.
KP Dampukht Beef
KP's version of dampukht using beef — the Pashtun approach to sealed slow-cooked meat with slightly more whole spices than Balochistan, creating something with extra depth and warmth.
What Cooks Are Saying
Made this last weekend and the whole family loved it. Will definitely make again.
This is now my go-to recipe. Made it three times already.
I've tried many recipes for this dish but this one is the best by far.
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