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6 ancient Indian cooking techniques that modern chefs are reviving

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 20, 2025, 10:00 IST
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​6 ancient Indian cooking techniques that modern chefs are reviving

In India, the kitchen has always been more than a place to cook. It’s where families exchanged stories, where medicine and food blurred, and where a handful of soil or a curl of smoke carried meaning. Yet, in the rush of pressure cookers, microwaves, and delivery apps, many of the techniques that once defined Indian cooking slipped quietly into the background. Now, they are staging a comeback, not in dusty archives but in restaurant menus and chefs' experiments. Across Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, and beyond, modern chefs are reaching back for the tools of their grandmothers and the secrets of royal courts, proving that “old” doesn’t mean irrelevant. It means resilient. Scroll down to discover the hands, hearts, and heritage reviving India’s lost kitchen traditions.

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Clay pots - flavour that breathes

A curry simmered in a clay pot has a taste memory that stainless steel can’t match. Clay is porous; it allows slow evaporation and a gentle thickening of gravies, while adding a subtle earthy note. But it’s not just nostalgia - clay has alkaline properties that balance acidity, making food lighter on the stomach. Today, restaurants from Kochi to Gurgaon are returning to mitti ke bartan for biryanis, curries, even desserts. Chefs say diners don’t just taste the difference, they feel it as well.

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Dum pukht - the art of patience

The Mughal courts gave India dum pukht, food sealed in a pot and left to slow cook, sometimes overnight. The technique almost disappeared outside of Awadh and Hyderabad, edged out by faster stoves. But patience is back in fashion. In fine-dining kitchens, chefs are once again sealing meats, vegetables, or even seafood in dough-lined pots, letting the ingredients melt into one another. The result isn’t just tender food; it’s layered aroma, the kind that makes opening the lid feel like unwrapping a story.

4/7

The fire of memory

Cooking directly over fire was once the norm. Chapatis pressed against clay walls, eggplants roasted over embers, meat skewered above the flame. Gas and induction dulled that ritual, but open fire is staging a stylish return. Wood-fired grills and tandoors are not only flavour engines, they’re cultural callbacks. A smoky baingan bharta or charred roti carries the rawness of a village kitchen, and chefs are betting that in a sanitized world, that primal edge is what people crave.

5/7

Grinding stone, not mixer

The sil batta, that flat slab of stone with a heavy roller, was once every kitchen’s heartbeat. Spices crushed this way release oils differently than in electric mixers, creating a fresher, rounder flavour. It’s laborious, yes, but chefs argue the taste justifies the sweat. Some restaurants even bring the stone to the table, letting diners watch chutneys or spice pastes ground live. What was once a daily chore is now performance art and a sensory connection to the past.

6/7

Fermentation - India’s quiet science

Long before probiotics became a wellness buzzword, Indian kitchens were quietly fermenting. From dosa batter in Tamil Nadu to kanji in Punjab, fermentation preserved food, improved digestion, and built complex flavours. Chefs are now reframing these traditions for modern palates: serving house-fermented rice beers, experimenting with wild yeast pickles, and putting probiotic broths on tasting menus. Science may be catching up, but Indian kitchens had it right centuries ago.

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Wrapped in banana leaves

Banana leaves were once practical; they were plates, steamers, and flavour enhancers rolled into one. In coastal kitchens, fish steamed inside them still carries that grassy, aromatic note. For a long time, though, banana leaves were dismissed as rustic. Now, they’re back on fine-dining tables, valued for their eco-friendliness as much as their taste. From tamale-like rice parcels to leaf-wrapped puddings, chefs are proving that sustainability doesn’t always come in steel straws - sometimes it’s a leaf, waiting to be unwrapped.

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Copyright © May 27, 2026, 12.24PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service