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7 foods in your kitchen that actually came from Persia

etimes.in | Last updated on - Apr 18, 2026, 19:00 IST
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7 foods in your kitchen that actually came from Persia

Open almost any kitchen cupboard and you will find quiet traces of Persia. Long before borders hardened and cuisines were labeled, ingredients and techniques travelled along trade routes that linked Iran with Central Asia, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent. Rice dishes, fragrant drinks, skewered meats and jewel-like fruits moved with merchants and cooks, slowly settling into everyday cooking across regions. Many foods we now consider familiar staples carry that distant influence. Here are seven foods in your kitchen that actually came from Persia.

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Pilaf

Pilaf is one of the clearest Persian exports in the kitchen. The word itself is Persian, and in Persian cooking it is more than a side dish; it is a full, respectable meal, often built around rice that is seasoned and cooked with other ingredients. To make a basic version, rinse basmati rice until the water runs clear, sauté onion in butter or oil, add the rice, and stir in stock, salt and a pinch of cumin. Cover tightly and cook low and slow until the grains are fluffy. Finish with toasted almonds or herbs.

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Kebab

Kebab comes through Persian, too; Britannica says the term derives from a Persian word for the dish. The idea traveled widely, but the Persian connection stayed embedded in the name. For a simple home version, mix cubes of chicken or lamb with yogurt, lemon juice, garlic, paprika, black pepper and salt. Let it sit for at least an hour, then grill, broil or pan-sear until browned and juicy. Serve with onions, flatbread and a squeeze of lime.

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Tandoor bread

Tandoori cooking is believed to have originated in Persia, and the tandoor oven remains central to the style. That helps explain why so many flatbreads and char-kissed breads across the region feel like cousins. At home, make a soft dough with flour, yeast, yogurt, salt, sugar and warm water. Let it rise, roll it out, then bake it on a hot tray or cast-iron pan until puffed and spotted. Brush with butter and garlic while still warm.

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Sharbat

The word sherbet comes from the Persian sharbat, an iced fruit drink. In the Persian world, it was never just a dessert or a refreshment; it was part of the daily rhythm of heat, hospitality and recovery. A quick version is easy: simmer sugar and water with lemon peel, then add lemon juice, rose water, mint or pomegranate juice. Chill well and pour over ice. If you want it richer, add basil seeds or chia after soaking them separately.

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Biryani

Biryani is another dish often traced back to Persian culinary traditions before it evolved into the richly layered versions loved across India today. The name itself is believed to come from the Persian word biryan, referring to rice that is fried or roasted before cooking. Over centuries, the dish travelled with Persian influences into the royal kitchens of the subcontinent, where local spices, regional ingredients and cooking styles transformed it into the aromatic, celebratory meal now associated with cities like Hyderabad, Lucknow and Kolkata.

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Saffron rice

Saffron is one of the oldest Persian signatures. Encyclopaedia Iranica notes that saffron may have been first cultivated on the Iranian plateau, which helps explain why Persian rice dishes wear that gold color so naturally.

The spice is treasured not only for its luminous colour but also for its subtle aroma, which adds warmth, floral sweetness and quiet complexity to even the simplest rice preparations.

To make it, crush a few saffron threads between your fingers, steep them in hot water or warm milk for 10 minutes, then stir the liquid into cooked rice. Use it with butter, a little salt, and maybe a handful of raisins or fried onions for a fuller dish.

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Pistachios and pomegranate

Pistachios and pomegranates both carry deep Persian roots. The pistachio tree is widely believed to be native to Iran, where the nut has been cultivated and prized for centuries. Pomegranates, too, are closely tied to the region’s agricultural history and appear frequently in Persian cooking, symbolism and poetry. In traditional Persian cuisine, both ingredients are valued for their vivid colour and balanced flavour, often used to add brightness, richness and a subtle sweet-tart contrast to a wide range of dishes.

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Copyright © Jun 3, 2026, 11.36AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service