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Indians Love Pakistani Meat Dishes

@qamar1990

Eating Indian food abroad does not necessarily give you the same experience like eating in India.

I´ve eaten south Indian dishes from Kerala in many other states and abroad, but most of them never had the same taste as the original.

If you really want to taste the food of another country, you need to actually go there.
 
DO pakistanis have anything for vegetarians like me.....
or they only serve meat.....
Desert_de_Retz_Grass.jpg

ontopic: there are vegetable dishes too, like saag
 
Which one would you recommend ?

In the city go to Haandi in Brooklyn go to Bukhara or Skyway but Bukhara is better, skyway is run by beghairat people they will serve you well first few times but if they see you are now a regular the quality will go down lol.

Oh yeah Lahore Kebab in the city is also good.
 
@qamar1990

Eating Indian food abroad does not necessarily give you the same experience like eating in India.

I´ve eaten south Indian dishes from Kerala in many other states and abroad, but most of them never had the same taste as the original.

If you really want to taste the food of another country, you need to actually go there.
ok well i do intend to visit india in the next few yrs with an indian friend of mine so we'll see.
 
Haq's Musings: Indians Love Pakistani Spicy Grilled Meats

"When Delhi's Press Club organised an evening of Pakistani food and music, flying in chefs from Islamabad, the racks of richly-spiced meat on the grill quickly ran out as hundreds of Indian journalists brought their families, equipped with "tiffin" boxes to take away extra supplies" BBC Report 26 June 2014



The BBC story highlights the fact that the vegetarian India demonstrates its deep love of the exquisite taste of Pakistan's meat dishes whenever the opportunity presents itself. To further illustrate the phenomenon, let me share with my readers how two famous Indians see meat-loving Pakistan:

Sachin Tendulkar:

The senior cricketer...said he gorged on Pakistani food and had piled on a few kilos on his debut tour there. "The first tour of Pakistan was a memorable one. I used to have a heavy breakfast which was keema paratha and then have a glass of lassi and then think of dinner. After practice sessions there was no lunch because it was heavy but also at the same time delicious. I wouldn't think of having lunch or snack in the afternoon. I was only 16 and I was growing," Tendulkar recalled. "It was a phenomenal experience, because when I got back to Mumbai and got on the weighing scale I couldn't believe myself. But whenever we have been to Pakistan, the food has been delicious. It is tasty and I have to be careful for putting on weight," he said.

Source: Press Trust of India November 2, 2012

Hindol Sengupta:

Yes, that's right. The meat. There always, always seems to be meat in every meal, everywhere in Pakistan. Every where you go, everyone you know is eating meat. From India, with its profusion of vegetarian food, it seems like a glimpse of the other world. The bazaars of Lahore are full of meat of every type and form and shape and size and in Karachi, I have eaten some of the tastiest rolls ever. For a Bengali committed to his non-vegetarianism, this is paradise regained. Also, the quality of meat always seems better, fresher, fatter, more succulent, more seductive, and somehow more tantalizingly carnal in Pakistan. I have a curious relationship with meat in Pakistan. It always inevitably makes me ill but I cannot seem to stop eating it. From the halimto the payato the nihari, it is always irresistible and sends shock shivers to the body unaccustomed to such rich food. How the Pakistanis eat such food day after day is an eternal mystery but truly you have not eaten well until you have eaten in Lahore!

Source: The Hindu August 7, 2010

Silicon Valley Indians:

I personally see vivid proof of how much Indians love Pakistani food every time I go to Pakistan restaurants serving chicken tikka, seekh kabab, biryani and nihari in Silicon Valley, California. Among the Pakistani restaurants most frequented by Indians are Shalimar, Pakwan and Shan. These restaurants are also very popular with white Americans and East Asians in addition to other ethnic groups including Afghans, Middle Easterners and South Asians.

Carnivorous Pakistanis:

A recent study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Nature magazine reported that Pakistanis are among the most carnivorous people in the world.

The scientists conducting the study used "trophic levels" to place people in the food chain. The trophic system puts algae which makes its own food at level 1. Rabbits that eat plants are level 2 and foxes that eat herbivores are 3. Cod, which eats other fish, is level four, and top predators, such as polar bears and orcas, are up at 5.5 - the highest on the scale.

Trophic Levels Map Source: Nature Magazine
After studying the eating habits of 176 countries, the authors found that average human being is at 2.21 trophic level. It put Pakistanis at 2.4, the same trophic level as Europeans and Americans. China and India are at 2.1 and 2.2 respectively.


Source: Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences

The countries with the highest trophic levels (most carnivorous people) include Mongolia, Sweden and Finland, which have levels of 2.5, and the whole of Western Europe, USA, Australia, Argentina, Sudan, Mauritania, Kazakhstan, Pakistan and Turkmenistan, which all have a level of 2.4.

United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) also published recent report on the subject of meat consumption. It found that meat consumption in developing countries is increasing with rising incomes. USDA projects an average 2.4 percent annual increase in developing countries compared with 0.9 percent in developed countries. Per capita poultry meat consumption in developing countries is projected to rise 2.8 percent per year during 2013-22, much faster than that of pork (2.2 percent) and beef (1.9 percent).

Summary:

Although meat consumption in Pakistan is rising, it still remains very low by world standards. At just 18 Kg per person, it's less than half of the world average of 42 Kg per capita meat consumption reported by the FAO.

While Pakistanis are the most carnivorous people among South Asians, their love of meat is spreading to India with its rising middle class incomes. Being mostly vegetarian, neighboring Indians consume only 3.2 Kg of meat per capita, less than one-fifth of Pakistan's 18 Kg. Daal (legumes or pulses) are popular in South Asia as a protein source. Indians consume 11.68 Kg of daal per capita, about twice as much as Pakistan's 6.57 Kg.

India and China with the rising incomes of their billion-plus populations are expected to be the main drivers of the worldwide demand for meat and poultry in the future.

Haq's Musings: Indians Love Pakistani Spicy Grilled Meats
A delegation was invited by my father friend for some conference from India in respect they started serving them vegetables and grains they tolerated it for two days but than one off them came to my father's friend and said if you had to eat this after independence than why the hell did you got independence and than they were served meet @Aeronaut @Slav Defence
 
In the city go to Haandi in Brooklyn go to Bukhara or Skyway but Bukhara is better, skyway is run by beghairat people they will serve you well first few times but if they see you are now a regular the quality will go down lol.

Oh yeah Lahore Kebab in the city is also good.
Thanks bro will try out these joints. Moonh mein abhi se paani aa raha hai
 
Worst photoshop..... again, what dishes pak uniquely has that distinguishes it from India? on side note, if you give free food, Indians (and we in SA generally) will even eat poison, doesn't mean we like it....
 
DO pakistanis have anything for vegetarians like me.....
or they only serve meat.....

We have variety for vegetarians but not as much as India. The Indian vegetarian cuisine is awesome from certain areas, I tasted few from Rajhistan, Punjab and some from my friends from Delhi and Mumbai; but does not like from Kerala because every dish's taste is dominated by coconut and seems same.
 
I am a meat eater but this obsession that some Pakistanis seem to have with meat, and their equivalence of meat eating with some sort of macho posturing- see Master Zarvan's post above- just seems plain contrived, if not unhealthy.
 
Well @acetophenol @seiko @nair @gslvmk3 @kurup
Our friends in here dont tasted the excellent karimeen dishes and others in kuttanad.

On topic .I dont use beef.I used that till recently.But not anymore.Not safe and killing of poor animals by hammering.
But poultry ,fishes arecstill my favourite dish.
 
I am a meat eater but this obsession that some Pakistanis seem to have with meat, and their equivalence of meat eating with some sort of macho posturing- see Master Zarvan's post above- just seems plain contrived, if not unhealthy.

Lol I have actually heard stories like his as well though.
 
Lol I have actually heard stories like his as well though.

Yeah, fair enough. I have read elsewhere that meat is a lot more ubiquitous in Pakistan in India.

Personally, meat eating has become less and less attractive to me over the years. I love the taste, and I believe that the meat = protein equation is still more or less valid.

However the more I hear, read and see the horrific modern slaughtering practices (in India as well), it just seems to become more and more of a mental burden to me, and the less I can stop thinking about it.

Ah well, getting really old I guess.
 
I think Pakistani cuisine is an extn of Indian cuisine, obviously they would excel in meat.
 

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