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6 types of vitamin D-rich mushroom curries to try at home this winter

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 1, 2025, 17:00 IST
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6 types of vitamin D-rich mushroom curries to try at home this winter

When sunlight turns soft and the air begins to bite, our body quietly slows down its natural vitamin D production. It’s one of winter’s lesser-known trade-offs, less warmth, less light, and often, less of the sunshine vitamin. But there’s an unexpected saviour sitting right in the vegetable basket: mushrooms. These humble fungi are among the very few plant-based sources of vitamin D, capable of absorbing it from sunlight or UV exposure, just like human skin. In Indian kitchens, they slip beautifully into curries, soaking up spice, cream, or coconut with equal grace. Scroll down for six kinds that don’t just warm your hands but feed your bones, too.

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Creamy kasuri methi mushroom curry

This one tastes like comfort dressed in restaurant polish. Button mushrooms soften into a lush tomato-cashew gravy, perfumed with kasuri methi - those faintly bitter, sun-dried fenugreek leaves that add instant depth. The sauce clings, the cream melts, and every bite feels like homecoming.

To make it, take sliced mushrooms, onions, tomatoes, cashews, kasuri methi, and cream. Sauté, blend, simmer - let the fenugreek whisper through the richness. Serve with phulkas or a bowl of jeera rice.

A quiet tip - let the mushrooms sunbathe for half an hour before cooking. Their vitamin D levels can rise severalfold with that simple ritual.

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Chettinad-style mushroom curry

Peppery, fiery, and unapologetically bold - this South Indian classic doesn’t hold back. Roasted coconut and fennel create the base, curry leaves snap in hot oil, and mushrooms soak up the masala like sponges of spice. It’s the kind of curry that makes cold mornings feel alive again.

To make it, take mushrooms, grated coconut, dried red chillies, black pepper, and curry leaves. Roast, grind, cook, and breathe in that irresistible aroma. Pair with flaky parottas or appams. The coconut’s natural fats help your body absorb fat-soluble vitamin D more efficiently - a rare case where indulgence is actually smart.

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Mushroom palak curry

Think of it as palak paneer’s quieter, greener cousin. Silky spinach purée, a hint of garlic, a temper of cumin - and mushrooms sliding in like they were meant to be there all along. It’s mellow, iron-rich, and somehow both earthy and fresh.

To make it, take blanched spinach, garlic, cumin, and mushrooms. Blend, simmer, and let the greens cook with the mushrooms till they turn tender. Serve with millet rotis or plain steamed rice. Spinach brings iron, mushrooms bring vitamin D - together, they build strength that feels subtle but sure.

5/7

Goan coconut mushroom xacuti

Goa knows how to make warmth taste like celebration. This xacuti uses roasted spices, coconut, and tamarind to create a curry that’s both complex and light. With mushrooms, it becomes coastal yet comforting, sharp, nutty, tangy - all at once.

To make it, take mushrooms, coconut, coriander seeds, poppy seeds, tamarind, cloves, and cinnamon. Roast till golden, grind to a paste, and cook till the oil peeks through. If you can, use UV-exposed oyster mushrooms - they’re naturally richer in vitamin D than the usual button ones.

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Himachali chha mushroom curry

In the mountain kitchens of Himachal, winters mean slow-cooked comfort. Chha curry - traditionally made with meat, turns wonderfully earthy when mushrooms take the lead. It’s tangy from yogurt, thickened with roasted gram flour, and lightly smoky from mustard oil.

To make it, take mushrooms, curd, besan, ginger, garlic, and mustard oil. Toast the besan till nutty, whisk in curd and spices -and let everything simmer down into a rich, golden gravy.

It’s a bowl that tastes like warmth layered with quiet discipline, probiotics from curd, vitamin D from mushrooms, and calm from the hills.

7/7

Mushroom masala with green peas

Every North Indian home has its version of this - a tomato-onion masala, a tumble of mushrooms, a handful of winter peas. It’s weekday food at its best: familiar, fragrant, fast. The mushrooms soak up the tang, the peas add pop, and a final dash of garam masala brings everything together.

To make it, take mushrooms, fresh peas, onions, tomatoes, and ginger-garlic paste. Saute till glossy, stir in the spices, and serve hot with rotis or parathas. Here, protein, fibre, and vitamin D come together quietly - nourishment disguised as something delicious.

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