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7 simple green vegetable dishes from Bihar that are gourmet delights

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 1, 2025, 10:44 IST
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1/8

7 simple green vegetable dishes from Bihar that are gourmet delights

Bihar’s food has always been earthy, seasonal, and quietly inventive. Villages cook with what’s grown around them; gourds, greens, pulses, seeds, transforming everyday vegetables into deeply flavored dishes. The cooking is humble, yet it carries a kind of wisdom shaped by frugality and patience. What makes them special is restraint: no heavy cream, no over-spicing, just careful balance. For anyone who believes ‘gourmet’ must mean elaborate, Bihar’s green vegetable repertoire proves otherwise. Here are seven dishes that carry the soul of the region and deserve a place on any refined table.

2/8

Nenua Posta (Sponge gourd in poppy seed paste)

This dish is silken in texture and luxurious in taste, though the ingredients are modest. Tender sponge gourd (nenua) is sliced and simmered in a paste of soaked poppy seeds ground with green chillies and garlic. A slow cook in mustard oil coaxes out a nutty creaminess, making the gourd taste almost buttery. Served with steamed rice, it proves elegance doesn’t need excess.

Recipe - Soak 3 tbsp poppy seeds for 2–3 hours, grind with 2 green chillies and 2 garlic cloves. Heat mustard oil, splutter a pinch of kalonji, add sliced nenua, and sauté. Stir in the paste, salt, and a splash of water. Cover and cook until the gourd is tender and the gravy clings.

3/8

Karela Sarson (Bitter gourd in mustard sauce)

Bitter gourd softens into something refined when matched with mustard’s bite. Thin slices of karela simmer in a paste of soaked mustard seeds, garlic, and chilli. The harsh edges fade, the mustard takes the lead - and what’s left on the tongue is bold, complex, and deeply satisfying. It is rich in vitamin C and antioxidants that strengthen the immune system. And the high fiber content aids digestion and relieves constipation.

Recipe - Soak 2 tbsp yellow mustard seeds, grind with 2 green chillies and garlic. Fry karela slices in mustard oil until half done. Add the paste, turmeric, and salt. Simmer with a little water until karela softens but still has bite. Best had with roti - or as the punchy edge to simple dal and rice.

4/8

Aloo Parwal (Potato and pointed gourd stir-fry)

This classic summer dish is what every Bihari household leans on when parwal floods the markets. Potatoes and pointed gourd are cooked together with little more than turmeric, cumin seeds, and mustard oil. What you get is sweet, earthy comfort with surprising depth.

Recipe - Heat mustard oil, crackle cumin seeds. Add sliced parwal and potato wedges, turmeric, salt, and green chilli. Cook covered on low flame until tender - stirring occasionally. Finish with a sprinkle of fresh coriander.

5/8

Green Baigan ka Jhuka (Green brinjals with garlic tempering)

Jhuka is about minimalism. Small green brinjals are slit and sautéed with garlic, chillies, and a touch of mustard oil. No onion, no tomato, just smoky, garlicky brinjal that tastes like fire and earth.

Recipe - Heat mustard oil, add whole garlic cloves and dried red chillies. Toss in slit green brinjals, turmeric, and salt. Cover and cook until soft, stirring occasionally so they char slightly.

6/8

Kaddu Tisi (Pumpkin with roasted flaxseed)

This dish showcases Bihar’s love for seeds. Sweet pumpkin is balanced by a roasted flaxseed (tisi) powder that adds nuttiness and depth. It’s light, nourishing, and a brilliant example of how locals use what grows around them.

Recipe - Dry-roast three spoonfuls of flaxseeds and grind them to a nutty powder. In mustard oil, sizzle cumin with a green chilli, then add pumpkin cubes with a pinch of turmeric. Let them soften gently, and just before turning off the heat, stir in the flaxseed powder. The result is a thick, earthy dish with a warm, grounded flavour.

7/8

Nenua Chana (Sponge gourd with Bengal gram)

Protein meets vegetables in this rustic favourite. Soaked chana dal is slow-cooked with sponge gourd until the dal softens but still holds shape. The gourd melts into the dal, creating a dish that’s hearty but not heavy. Recipe - Pressure cook soaked chana dal (½ cup) until half done. In mustard oil, sauté cumin, garlic, and sliced nenua. Add turmeric, salt, and the parboiled dal. Simmer until both merge into a thick stew. Serve it warm with rice for a meal that feels rustic and complete.

8/8

Bathua Raita (Winter greens in yogurt)

Every winter, bathua (Chenopodium leaves) flood the fields. Villagers blanch and fold it into thick dahi with a sprinkle of roasted cumin and black salt. It’s cooling, fibrous, and balances out heavy rice meals. Packed with iron, calcium, antioxidants, vitamin C, magnesium, and other trace minerals, this humble green quietly nourishes, supports digestion, boosts immunity, promotes bone health, and elevates even the simplest meals with rustic elegance. What could be more “gourmet” than taking weeds and turning them into a delicacy?

Recipe - Blanch 1 cup bathua leaves, squeeze dry, and chop. Whisk 2 cups yogurt until smooth, fold in bathua, roasted cumin powder, black salt, and green chilli. Chill before serving.

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