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10 palak dishes from different countries

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 30, 2025, 15:28 IST
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1/11

10 palak dishes from different countries

Spinach is a quiet traveller. In India, it’s palak; elsewhere, it takes on new names and accents. What doesn’t change is its ability to slip into whatever pot or pan it meets. Packed with iron, fibre, and vitamins A and C, it feeds strength as easily as it feeds flavour, which is why generations have trusted it as much for health as for taste. Sometimes it melts into pastry, sometimes it floats in broth, and sometimes it anchors a curry. Scroll down to find some of its many avatars across the world.

2/11

Palak Paneer, India

Here at home, spinach is pureed silky, stirred with garlic and spice, then wrapped around soft cubes of paneer. Its colour is as inviting as its flavour, a deep green that signals both nourishment and comfort. It is both an everyday food and a festival dish. Easy to eat with rice and comforting with roti. Palak paneer proves greens don’t have to whisper; they can hold the centre of the table.

3/11

Saag, Punjab/Pakistan

In Punjab’s winter kitchens, spinach often joins mustard leaves in a slow, rustic simmer. This blend is not the same as pure sarson ka saag, which relies almost entirely on mustard greens, but a softer variation where palak balances the bite of sarson. Garlic, onion and green chillies give it backbone, and a spoon of ghee rounds it out. Served with makki di roti - it is less about presentation and more about patience, a dish that tastes of fields and firewood.

4/11

Espinacas Con Garbanzos, Spain

From Andalusia comes a tapas bowl that pairs spinach with chickpeas, olive oil and smoked paprika. It is humble, hearty, and eaten with bread between sips of wine. The paprika adds a subtle smoke, turning what could be plain into something layered and memorable.

5/11

Spanakopita, Greece

Golden filo pastry breaks into shards, revealing spinach tangled with feta and herbs. Spanakopita is baked as big pies for families or cut into triangles for parties. Crisp outside, soft inside, it feels festive yet rooted - a reminder that greens can wear glamour without ever losing their warmth.

6/11

Quiche Florentine, Florence

A custard pie of eggs and cream, brightened with spinach, Quiche Florentine moves easily from cafés to home kitchens. It is rich without weight, elegant without fuss. Each slice carries the comfort of indulgence softened by greens, a balance that makes it welcome at brunch, at lunch, or wherever generosity is best served.

7/11

Ricotta E Spinaci Ravioli, Italy

Italian kitchens tuck spinach into delicate pasta parcels, softened with ricotta and sometimes nutmeg. Served with butter and sage or a light tomato sauce, the dish is elegant in its restraint. Nothing clamours; everything balances, and spinach does the steady work of quiet depth.

8/11

Borani-E Esfenaj, Iran

Cool and savoury, this dish folds spinach into strained yoghurt with garlic and dried mint. It is a side that sits comfortably with rice, bread or kebabs. Simple to make, refreshing to eat, Borani-e Esfenaj shows spinach at its most mellow and diplomatic.

9/11

Sayur Bening Bayam, Indonesia

A clear broth where spinach drifts with corn kernels and garlic, sometimes deepened by small anchovies. Sayur bening is weekday food, quick, clean, and calming. It carries the freshness of greens in their simplest form, light enough for everyday meals yet satisfying enough to linger on the palate.

10/11

Fatayer Sabanekh, Lebanon

These small triangular pastries, often sold by the dozen, carry a filling of spinach brightened with lemon, onions and sumac. They are tangy, portable, and best with strong tea. Bite into one and the sourness surprises, reminding you that spinach need not always be creamy to feel rich.

11/11

Pkhali, Georgia​

Here, spinach is chopped fine, bound with ground walnuts, vinegar and herbs, and shaped into patties. Pomegranate seeds often scatter on top, adding colour and tang. The taste is nutty, earthy and bright all at once - giving spinach a surprisingly complex voice.

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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 05.18PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service