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10 non-onion-garlic subzees that taste straight out of a restaurant

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 25, 2025, 15:00 IST
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1/11

10 non-onion-garlic subzees that taste straight out of a restaurant

Cooking without onion and garlic does not mean food has to be bland. For generations, Indian cooks have built depth with techniques like roasting, tempered spices, nut pastes, hing and coconut, turning simple ingredients into layered flavours. Those methods make satvik food feel as rich and composed as any restaurant dish. Scroll down for 10 such restaurant-style subzees made without onion or garlic.

2/11

Palak Paneer

Blanch the spinach until it wilts, then puree it with a green chilli and a faint pinch of nutmeg. Warm ghee, temper with cumin and a hint of hing, stir in the spinach puree with a splash of cream, and fold through seared paneer cubes. The curry turns glossy and green; the paneer stays soft yet firm, and the spinach reads rounded and balanced rather than sharp.

3/11

Methi Malai Matar

Sweat fresh fenugreek leaves with a touch of oil and green chilli, then add a cashew cream and tomato base made without onions. Stir in blanched peas and simmer briefly so the malai coats each leaf and pod. The curry comes out fragrant and slightly sweet - the bitterness of methi tempered into something plush and comforting.

4/11

Kashmiri Dum Aloo

Prick small potatoes, shallow fry until golden, then simmer them in yogurt spiced with fennel, dry ginger and Kashmiri chilli. A temper of mustard oil and asafoetida lifts the aroma. The potatoes soak up the creamy, mildly tangy sauce - the kind of dish that looks royal on the plate but is surprisingly simple to make.

5/11

Baingan Bharta (no onion version)

Char an eggplant until the skin blackens, scoop the flesh and mash it with roasted tomatoes, green chillies, coriander and roasted cumin. Finish with a drizzle of mustard oil and fresh coriander. The smoke and the tomato sweetness do the heavy lifting here, giving a rustic, restaurant-level depth even without onion or garlic.

6/11

Navratan Korma

Cook mixed garden vegetables in a silky sauce made from ground cashews, poppy seeds and a little saffron. Toss in caramelised raisins for bursts of sweetness and toasted nuts for texture. The sauce is rich without being heavy, the flavours balanced so each vegetable keeps its identity while contributing to a single, indulgent mouthfeel.

7/11

Pumpkin-Coconut Curry

Sauté cubes of pumpkin with mustard seeds and curry leaves, add coconut milk, turmeric and a touch of jaggery. Simmer until the pumpkin is tender and the coconut rounds out the spice. The result is curry that's warm and comforting, the sweetness and cream counterpointing the earthiness of the squash, simple, South-Indian comfort with a restaurant polish.

8/11

Bharwa Bhindi (peanut-coconut stuffed okra)

Halve okra lengthwise and stuff with a dry masala of roasted peanuts, desiccated coconut, coriander powder and amchur. Shallow fry until the skin crisps and the filling browns. The inside stays soft while the skin gains a delightful chew - a humble vegetable turned showstopper by a crunchy, nutty core.

9/11

Malai Kofta (satvik)

Make small koftas from grated paneer and steamed mashed vegetables, lightly pan-fry, and bathe them in a cashew-tomato gravy finished with cream and a hint of saffron. The dumplings remain pillowy while the sauce is velvet-smooth, an effortless way to get a restaurant feel at home without onion or garlic.

10/11

Phool Gobi Makhani

Roast cauliflower florets until laced with colour, then simmer them in a makhani sauce made from roasted tomatoes and cashews, spiced with fenugreek and Kashmiri chilli. The cauliflower stays firm at the edges and tender inside; the sauce is sweet, slightly smoky, and a true comfort that tastes rich, not heavy.

11/11

Lauki Chana Dal

Cook diced bottle gourd with pre-cooked chana dal, turmeric and a temper of mustard seeds and curry leaves, then finish with fresh coriander. The lauki soaks the dal’s body, turning into a gentle, everyday curry that is light on the stomach yet satisfying on the plate - quietly elegant and very doable any night.

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Copyright © Jun 7, 2026, 03.33AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service