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Have You Tasted Yummy Ambur Biryani?

December 04, 2025
By SONA BAHADUR
7 Minutes Read

The biryani, happily, was the very definition of simple.
Light-textured, with a subtle tomato-ey twang, it reminded me a lot of a North Indian pulao.
The flavour whack came from the sweet-sour Khatta Baingan simmered in a gravy of tamarind, jaggery, fried mustard seeds, and spices, served with it.

Photograph: Kind courtesy Yasmin Khambatta

Sona Bahadur, a journalist with a deep passion for food, married her two loves to become a gastronomic travel expert.

The former editor of BBC Good Food India, Sona set off travelling to write a book that is an ode to India's many food landmarks, in the north, south, west, east.

For An Invitation to Feast, she heads out to investigate the secret of Butter Chicken, the magic of dosa-making, why the rosogulla is the king of sweets, the intricate art of making Shammi Kebabs, the dance of rice that is biryani and many more culinary secrets that surround the origin and creation of our spectacular signature foods.

After discovering what Kolkatan and Lucknowi biryani is and the notable biryanis of Mumbai, she wanders through South India digging up the formulas of the famous Southie biryanis -- Hyderabad, Dindigul, Thalassery.

In this fascinating excerpt from An Invitation To Feast, we join Sona on her exploration of the story behind Ambur Biryani:

In Ambur, you might step out to buy shoes and return with a box of biryani.

I learnt this startling fact while hanging out with Zeeshan Anees at The Ambur Canteen in Chennai.

The genial owner of the restaurant was telling me about his hometown. The mecca for stock-lot footwear became renowned for its biryani, thanks to the large Muslim population employed in the city's tanneries. "Many shops sell both," he said, laughing as I tried to picture the surreal scenario.

Growing up, this sleepy Tamil Nadu town is where Zeeshan and his restaurant partners, Mohamed Samee and Mohammed Faraaz, spent their summer holidays. The cousins, who were schooled at Chennai's Don Bosco, would eagerly look forward to the sumptuous Muslim-style Ambur dishes made by their family cook Mohideen at their ancestral home.

Mohideen would feed them chawal rotis, ghee rice and kurma (coconut-based chicken gravy), a peppery curry known as phaal, and of course, biryani.

As elsewhere in India, biryani is staple wedding fare in Ambur. What sets it apart, Mohammed pointed out, is its minimalism. "The greatest taste comes from humble ingredients. The base of the biryani is a light yakhni of tomatoes and meat with the barest hint of masalas. It's milder in terms of spices and oil. There are no strong flavours, just the juices of the meat soaking into the rice."

The desire to take these culinary heirlooms outside their native city led the trio to launch The Ambur Canteen in Chennai in 2023. It was my friend Ashwin Rajagopalan, a seasoned food and travel writer,who told me about this gem in the heart of T Nagar. "You have to go there. The owners are my ex-classmates. They serve kickass Ambur biryani," he raved, promising to join in.

Ashwin was late. The authentic aromas wafting in from the kitchen had caused the rumble in my stomach to rise to a crescendo. Having swiped off way too much chicken 65, I was afraid I wouldn't do justice to the main course. 

The biryani, happily, was the very definition of simple. Light-textured, with a subtle tomato-ey twang, it reminded me a lot of a North Indian pulao. The flavour whack came from the sweet-sour Khatta Baingan, or mashed eggplants simmered in a gravy of tamarind, jaggery, fried mustard seeds, and spices, served with it.

The buddy reunion was a boisterous affair, with Don Bosco stories, jokes, and gossip being exchanged. Ashwin had an interesting biryani story from school. Growing up in a staunchly vegetarian TamBrahm (Tamil Brahmin) family, his introduction to biryani was through his Muslim classmates' tiffins.

"When these three would open their lunchboxes, the entire classroom would fill up with that amazing smell. I fell hard for Ambur biryani," he reminisced.

Those early flavours and aromas got lodged in his memory, making the 'tiffin biryani' of his childhood the benchmark against which all others must be measured.

"That's the thing about first tastes, right? They always win," he said.

Photograph: Kind courtesy Sreenorainee/Wikimedia Commons

Ambur Mutton Biryani With Khatta Baingan

Serves: 4

Time Taken: 1 Hour 30 Minutes Plus Overnight
Marination

Ingredients

For the Khatta Baingan:

Photograph: Kind courtesy ShashiBellamkonda/Wikimedia Commons

Method

For the Khatta Baingan:

Sona's Tip: You could add 1 cup fresh tomato purée along with water and tamarind paste to give more body to the gravy.

Excerpted and published from An Invitation To Feast, by Sona Bahadur, with the kind permission of the publishers, Aleph Book Company.

 
SONA BAHADUR

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