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Classic Indian Cooking

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This extraordinary cookbook is a complete course in Indian cuisine. When it was first published it was hailed by both Jane Grigson and Elizabeth David, who said of it.. 'This is a marvellous book. Julie Sahni tackles the daunting task of presenting the multiple, complex traditions of Indian cookery to the English-speaking world and brings it off triumphantly.' Illustrated throughout with explanatory line drawings it introduces all the basic spices and special ingredients so fundamental to Indian food, then explains the techniques employed in using them. So brilliant a teacher is Julie Sahni that it is immediately obvious that Indian food, while rich and varied, is not difficult to prepare - the cooking principles are basic and well-known and the utensils needed are few and simple and Julie Sahni is not averse to short cuts using a food processor. Julie Sahni was born in India and now lives in New York where she has established herself as America's premier authority on Indian cooking.

384 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1980

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Julie Sahni

15 books11 followers

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5 stars
562 (47%)
4 stars
384 (32%)
3 stars
181 (15%)
2 stars
47 (3%)
1 star
15 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for Greta.
214 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2008
This book is one of my favorites. Great recipes, easy to follow instructions. Delicious. Food in not greasy. Favorite recipes include: string beans with coconut, potato samosas, cauliflower ginger bread, lamb and raison patties, stuffed tomatoes, potato salad....too numerous to name all. This book is the staple of my Indian cooking.
Profile Image for Alice Cascorbi.
1 review1 follower
March 4, 2016
If I could have only one Indian cookbook, it would certainly be this one. The best book teaching Indian cooking in English that I know of, and I've read most of them. Clear and enjoyable to read, full of great history and information--and, most importantly, every recipe I've ever tried out of it has worked wonderfully well.
Profile Image for Yaaresse.
2,160 reviews16 followers
April 6, 2016
You will never go wrong with a Julie Sahni cookbook. She makes cooking Indian food very doable.

Note: there are no pictures in her cookbooks. Get over it. Beans look like beans. Rice looks like rice.
Profile Image for Nick.
7 reviews
October 26, 2012
Best Indian cookbook on my shelf. I've worn it out and would love to find a special copy to keep pristine. Every time I try something new from it, I am richly rewarded.
134 reviews2 followers
August 20, 2013
This cookbook and Julie Sahni's "Classic Indian Vegetarian and Grain Cooking" are the bibles of Indian cooking. You will prepare heavenly dishes from either book. Don't miss making her garam masala.
Profile Image for Pavithra Mouli.
28 reviews17 followers
May 22, 2021
Can you fall in love with a cookbook? It feels like I did with this. I spent many a happy hours this month reading through every section(I skipped over just the non-vegetarian parts).

This is exactly what I expect any basic cookbook to be when introducing new cuisines to the masses. Most cookbooks in the charts these days are just a collection of recipes with the odd reasoning/facts strewn about - but not this book. It introduces the common techniques used in the Indian kitchens, a lot of details on how to handle each ingredient in the dish and how to store/reuse/upgrade the dishes. It is purely about teaching a cuisine to a population that doesn't necessarily cook it regularly (book is directed at the American kitchens but works for anyone I think). It is in no way an exhaustive recipe list of the Indian cuisine but this will equip anyone willing to read through, learn and practise the art of cooking Indian cuisine at home.

Am not exactly new to Indian cooking (duh, an Indian in India) - but I had quite a few takeaways indeed. I also absolutely relished the fact that this book is 40 years old (my copy says 1980 & 1st edition) - it felt like a time capsule into how a typical Indian kitchen cooked up back then and how so much has passed onto the current day. I caught myself smiling many a times as well, when reading through the explanations and the recipes.

I will be judging, with this as THE benchmark, all other cookbooks claiming to teach a cuisine.
Profile Image for Jana.
425 reviews6 followers
December 22, 2011
I've really enjoyed this book so far. I like that it has beef recipes from Northern India, too. I would not buy it if you do not have very close access to an Indian or World Grocery or a LOT of money to spend on buying and grinding spices.

I have been adapting some of the recipes for my pressure cooker and would highly recommend that.

Her directions and illustrations are absolutely spot on and I really enjoy learning about Indian culture.

However, like most classic cookbooks, this stuff is HARD! The recipes are involved, take a long time to prepare and require you to read the introduction and the full recipe well before you begin cooking. They are definitely worth it, though. I haven't had a single one that I didn't like so far.
35 reviews7 followers
July 9, 2007
This is my bedrock for Indian cooking. Spices you need to know about, how to roast or fry them in the ghee, how to make ghee, what ghee is... it's good stuff.
5 reviews
July 27, 2010
Julie does a wonderful job explaining the culture, preparation and techniques needed to make many iconic Indian dishes.
Profile Image for Roxy Iconoclast.
8 reviews5 followers
August 12, 2016
This is a delightful cookbook, with many easy recipes suitable for potlucks.

I bought this cookbook more than 10 years ago and have found it to be a reliable favorite. I think it was my first Indian cookbook, and it still beats the others I have hands down. I'm not a particularly skilled or patient cook, yet every recipe I have tried turned out well.

There is a down side, though: Sahni's recipes are far better than anything you encounter in restaurants (in the U.S., at least). Now Indian restaurant food just seems so anemic and stingy (sigh).

Full disclosure: I omit a few spices that don't appeal to me, such as asafetida and black salt.

I wish this were available on Kindle too, so I could use that version for shopping reference.
825 reviews
November 13, 2020
Such precision in Indian cookery has never been this accurate ! I wish this book gets an revised update with colored photos since a such a vibrant cuisine needs to show it in pictures as well . What an amazing fit to the American kitchen !
Profile Image for Vera.
51 reviews
March 27, 2013
My treasure trove for Indian cooking. Love both this and the vegetarian edition. A wealth of information, cover to cover - no photos as space fillers.
Profile Image for Grace.
121 reviews
December 10, 2014
A rather bland and clinical approach to Indian cooking!

It lacked the passion and fieriness that I am accustomed to , in my own cooking.
Profile Image for Claire DeVore.
10 reviews2 followers
January 22, 2021
35 years ago as a college undergraduate a boyfriend wanted to spend Way too long hunting around (I'm a sucker for used bookstores this was all new)
I sat down in front of a long shelf of Indian Cookbooks. Having spent time in England and being stuck with Madhuri Jaffri who a found too precious I sought someone more idk authentic? Comprehensive? Finally I picked up a book with only line drawings no photographs but oh I knew I was looking for the right thing!
True Northern India but I only knew restaurant cooking including Nairobi a wonderful spot for Indian food. (The Black cat long gone now best tandoori ever dripping with yogurt)
I have never looked back. I have another 8 or so with pretty pictures found of course in used bookstores but I've given away Jaffrey, movie star, ones.
Highly recommend. Not fiddly and hard. The how to drawings are what you really need. And hand holding in a sense as you can lose yourself on YouTube.
225 reviews3 followers
July 15, 2024
Of all the Indian cookbooks I have cooked from (about a dozen) or perused (many more), this is by far the best for the beginning cook, because Sahni goes into great detail as to how to accomplish such basic procedures as properly browning onions, roasting and grinding spices, preparing and cooking rice. The prose is precise, clear and well-edited. The recipes are varied geographically and stylistically, and Sahni often provides background as to who cooks what, where and when. She suggests possible combinations for meals, and variations. Published in 1980, I hope that it will one day be updated to include more vegetables and other ingredients which are now more commonly available. However, some of these can be found in the sequel, Classic Indian Vegetarian and Grain Cooking. Once you have mastered the techniques in this book, you can hunt down any interesting regional cookbooks you please, which often assume basic knowledge and skill.
Profile Image for Annie.
226 reviews2 followers
November 7, 2019
It’s cheating a bit for me to say I “read” this cookbook. I haven’t read every page, nor have I cooked every dish in it. But it’s such a good Indian cookbook that I don’t want to forget about it (I got it out of the library). I first saw it on the counter at Bollywood Theater restaurant in Portland, and so when I saw it on the library shelf, I had to give it a try. I’m so glad I did.
Profile Image for Adam Robitaille.
4 reviews1 follower
April 24, 2020
Excellent cookbook with very helpfully written steps. Besides how to cook the recipes, she includes useful information and advice such as whether the leftovers will freeze well and background information about the regional origin of the food and so forth. This is currently my favorite cookbook.
Profile Image for George Marshall.
108 reviews3 followers
July 4, 2020
This cookbook is one of favorites. Always something tasty to make!
Profile Image for Tim.
396 reviews9 followers
August 29, 2015
I'm assuming this is the same book I have although mine is ' cookery ' not ' cooking ' and was originally published in 1997 and reprinted 2005.
I will be honest, I don't often, and never have, cooked Indian dishes regularly, but I collect cook books.
Therefore my review is based more on a comparison of other cuisines and their associated cookery books.
As such, I was impressed.
It is laid out in a manner that would make it easy for anyone to to learn perhaps all they need to know in order to produce good quality Indian cuisine from standard every day meals to more elaborate dishes.
There are a number, few only, of line drawings showing various prepping, but no photos. This, no doubt to cut the cost of production, but when serving a dish of which you are not familiar are helpful.
I would place this in the category of a standard cookery book that deals with a specific cuisine and to my mind fills this admirably.

Just realised I have a hardback copy of this book by Dorling Kindersley pub 1986 referring to the original 1980 date and has ' cooking ' not ' cookery ' in the title.
This also has no photos, so although I assumed my other paperback copy left out photos to cut costs, it obviously never had any.
Profile Image for Heather Gibbons.
Author 2 books17 followers
November 11, 2008
What a wonderful guide to cooking and eating Indian food! I love the introductory material that walks us through spices and how they combine, traditional cooking techniques, food as ritual and religious observance, and how the cuisine reflects and compliments the distinct cultures and climates of different regions. She does a good job, too, of adapting traditional recipes for the modern Western kitchen without oversimplifying them, I think. (But how would I know?)
Profile Image for Alex.
71 reviews16 followers
Read
November 8, 2008
One thing I must emphasize about this book: if you keep vegetarian, DO NOT get the Sahni's vegetarian cookbook as a substitute for this one. Sahni's vegetarian cookbook is great, but it's a supplement to the vegetarian recipes in this book, not a replacement. Ignore the meat recipes and make things like cauliflower with scallions and black mustard seeds...
47 reviews5 followers
December 26, 2007
A very nice collection of recipes from all over India - there are a few in here that I come back to again and again. Her commentary does a good job contextualizing each dish.
Profile Image for Foxthyme.
332 reviews34 followers
July 22, 2008
A great East Indian Cookbook. I'd also highly recommend those by Madhur Jaffrey.
9 reviews
September 1, 2008

Well, I haven't gotten that far into this cookbook, but so far Ms. Sahni is three for three. She has forever changed the way I look at broccoli, and I will never look back.
Profile Image for Meg.
71 reviews
March 16, 2010
i didn't have a chance to try more recipes in this book, but it is a classic and I think has a lot of great information. I liked it, but would look at others before I would buy it.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews