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Sindh, now Pakistan — Sindhi Hindu community; spread throughout India post-Partition 1947 Techniques

1 technique from Sindh, now Pakistan — Sindhi Hindu community; spread throughout India post-Partition 1947 cuisine

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Sindh, now Pakistan — Sindhi Hindu community; spread throughout India post-Partition 1947
Sindhi Sai Bhaji
Sindh, now Pakistan — Sindhi Hindu community; spread throughout India post-Partition 1947
Sindhi Sai Bhaji is one of the great slow-cooked vegetable preparations of the Sindhi community — a diaspora cuisine that emerged from what is now Pakistan and spread across India after Partition. The name translates simply to 'green vegetable dish', but the preparation is a deeply complex amalgam of spinach, dal, and a rotating cast of seasonal vegetables pressure-cooked together until they collapse into a unified whole. The base is always spinach and chana dal (split Bengal gram), but the surrounding vegetables change with season and household tradition: dill, cluster beans (gavar), tomatoes, aubergine, raw banana, or colocasia. The genius of the dish is that nothing is sautéed separately — everything goes into the pot together with turmeric, a little oil, and water, then cooks under pressure until it becomes almost a unified purée. What gives Sai Bhaji its character is restraint: the absence of the heavy tadka (tempering) that dominates most Indian vegetable dishes means the vegetable flavours speak directly. A finishing drizzle of ghee is the one indulgence. The dish is almost always served with Sindhi-style potal (rice) or bhugha chawal (fried rice). Among Sindhi communities, this is the definitive comfort food — nutritionally complete, simple to make in bulk, and deeply evocative of home. Its flavour is earthy, slightly bitter from dill and spinach, rounded by the dal, and brightened by tomato.
Provenance 1000 — Indian