Author Topic: What is the "Bhoona" (or "Bhuna", or "Bhunao") Technique used in Indian Cooking?  (Read 36121 times)

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Offline Cory Ander

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Can those, that allude to knowing, please elaborate on what they understand to be the "bhoona" (or "bhuna", or bhunao" technique that is used in BIR (and traditional) Indian cooking?

To my mind, it's a term generally applied to the technique whereby some powdered spices (sometimes in a liquid medium,) are fried in oil (or ghee), at the start of cooking a main dish, to release their flavours.

What other views are there please? 

I think it would be very useful, to many members, to be aware of this as a "cooking technique" used in BIR (and traditional) Indian cooking.

I reckon is would be very helpful to many members if we could specify:

  • what it is?
  • why it is used?
  • when it is used?
  • how it is used?

Offline ELW

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I think its stir fry or saute, not necessarily using spices. Could be peppers/ onion / tomato / garlic .before the meat is added

elw

Offline spiceyokooko

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Cory, I agree with your definition.

The term 'Bhoona' there are various ways of spelling the word loosely translates from Hindi as 'frying spices or spice paste in hot oil'. It should therefore be considered a 'process'.

What is it?
A process of frying spices in either powdered or paste form in hot oil.

Why is it used?
To extract natural oils and flavours and to cook out any rawness from the spices themselves.

When is it used?
Usually at the start of the cooking process and before any other ingredients are added.

How is it used?
Usually in one of two ways -

1/ By adding the spices or spice paste to hot oil and frying till the spices become fragrant and lose their rawness but without burning. This is one of the reasons spice masalas or spice mixes are mixed with water into a paste before being added to hot oil - to stop the spices burning.

2/ By adding the spices or spice paste to an onion/garlic/ginger puree that has already been prefried in hot oil and frying in the same way to release the spice flavours.

Both 'bhoona' techniques can be used, the main differences between them is the margin of error between burning the spices is less with the second method than the first.

The second method is therefore easier for new cooks to start with until experience tells them when the spices are cooked correctly through texture, feel and smell when they can graduate on to the more difficult first method.

That's my definition of the term Bhoona process.

Offline ELW

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glad thats been cleared up then

 ;D

Offline spiceyokooko

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glad thats been cleared up then

That's just my definition of it, no doubt someone will come along and disagree with me like they usually do  ::)

Offline loveitspicy

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glad thats been cleared up then

That's just my definition of it, no doubt someone will come along and disagree with me like they usually do  ::)

I wont disagree - you got it about right there i reckon

best, Rich

Offline Razor

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That's just my definition of it, no doubt someone will come along and disagree with me like they usually do  ::)

Sorry to disappoint you Spicey, but one can't disagree with absolute fact, as you have comprehensively outlined in your understanding of the processes of "bhuning"

Offline DalPuri

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Here's an strange one (slightly off track) but interesting.
i was talking to a friend of mine last night, a girl from kuwait.
i finally got her mothers recipe for Machboos Laham with Haashoo and Dacoos.(her english isnt too good, so forgive the spellings)
Part of the process of the meal (haashoo) is they add chopped onions to a dry pan with no oil or water. ???
They partly burn the onions into the pan for a few mins before deglazing with tiny amounts of stock from the meat. then continued with the spices and oil.
I asked why, but shes only a kid and doesnt cook herself. She didn't know and will ask her mum today.
Has anyone seen or heard of this dry fry technique before?

Frank.  ;)

Offline ELW

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Cory, I agree with your definition.

The term 'Bhoona' there are various ways of spelling the word loosely translates from Hindi as 'frying spices or spice paste in hot oil'. It should therefore be considered a 'process'.

What is it?
A process of frying spices in either powdered or paste form in hot oil.

Why is it used?
To extract natural oils and flavours and to cook out any rawness from the spices themselves.

When is it used?
Usually at the start of the cooking process and before any other ingredients are added.

How is it used?
Usually in one of two ways -

1/ By adding the spices or spice paste to hot oil and frying till the spices become fragrant and lose their rawness but without burning. This is one of the reasons spice masalas or spice mixes are mixed with water into a paste before being added to hot oil - to stop the spices burning.

2/ By adding the spices or spice paste to an onion/garlic/ginger puree that has already been prefried in hot oil and frying in the same way to release the spice flavours.

Both 'bhoona' techniques can be used, the main differences between them is the margin of error between burning the spices is less with the second method than the first.

The second method is therefore easier for new cooks to start with until experience tells them when the spices are cooked correctly through texture, feel and smell when they can graduate on to the more difficult first method.

That's my definition of the term Bhoona process.

The lack of the proper use of techniques such as this, in lower quality bir's, may go some way to explaining the dishes all tasting very similar. Bhoona/bhuna dishes all seem to be 'wet'  nowadays, the dry intense flavoured ones seem to have almost disappeared.

Offline spiceyokooko

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The lack of the proper use of techniques such as this, in lower quality bir's, may go some way to explaining the dishes all tasting very similar. Bhoona/bhuna dishes all seem to be 'wet'  nowadays, the dry intense flavoured ones seem to have almost disappeared.

 

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