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Hyderabad, Telangana — Nizami court cuisine, Mughal-Deccani tradition Techniques

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Hyderabad, Telangana — Nizami court cuisine, Mughal-Deccani tradition
Hyderabadi Double Ka Meetha
Hyderabad, Telangana — Nizami court cuisine, Mughal-Deccani tradition
Double Ka Meetha is Hyderabad's definitive dessert — a bread pudding made from deep-fried bread (locally known as 'double roti', hence the name) soaked in reduced milk and perfumed with saffron, cardamom, and rose water. It is the Mughal-Deccani synthesis in sweet form: the richness of Mughal court cooking meeting the local Hyderabadi love for fried bread. The process begins by frying thick slices of white bread in ghee until golden and crisp throughout — not just on the surface. The fried slices are then immersed in a thick, sweetened, reduced milk (rabri), flavoured with saffron steeped in warm milk, green cardamom, and a little rose water. The result sits and absorbs, transforming the crisp bread into something simultaneously dense and yielding. The dish is garnished with fried nuts — cashews, pistachios, and almonds — and often a scatter of silver leaf (vark). It is served at room temperature or chilled, and is a staple of Eid celebrations, weddings, and royal feasts in Hyderabad. Double Ka Meetha sits in a tradition of bread-based desserts that extends from Umm Ali in Egypt to bread and butter pudding in Britain — but the Hyderabadi version is distinguished by its use of ghee-fried bread (which absorbs without becoming soggy), its saffron-rose perfume, and its reduced milk sauce which is thicker and more intensely flavoured than any custard.
Provenance 1000 — Indian