Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Gosht
Persian meat dish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Gosht or ghosht[a] is tender meat cooked for a long time that is an ingredient in a number of Middle Eastern cuisine, Central Asian cuisine and cuisine of the Indian subcontinent.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2010) |
In India, most gosht dishes include goat or mutton. In India, the term mutton is more likely to refer to the meat of a goat rather than that of an adult sheep, as it does elsewhere in the English-speaking world. When Indian dishes are adapted for Western diners, lamb is the meat most often used in the adaptation. This has led to a common misconception that gosht means "lamb".[citation needed]
The popular Indian subcontinental dish of Biryani as well as the Afghan dish of Biryan use Gosht as a primary ingredient.[2]
Some dishes include:
- Bhuna gosht, a curry with a thick, reduced sauce
- Karahi or Kadhai gosht, cooked in a traditional round-sided pot
- Raan gosht, roasted leg of mutton
- Dal gosht, with lentils or peas
- Nihari gosht, a meat stew
- Rara gosht, roasted mutton curry
- Saag gosht, with cooked spinach leaves or mustard greens
- Biryani gosht, especially the non-vegetarian version of it
- Chelo Gosht, Iranian dish consisting of tender, savory lamb or goat meat (gosht) served with fragrant, saffron-infused rice (chelo) and often garnished with barberries and crispy onions
Remove ads
See also
- Rogan josh, Kashmiri curried meat, often romanised as roghan ghosht
Notes
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads