Incredible tonight. Onions were especially good, cooked exactly the right amount before they start to burn
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Incredible tonight. Onions were especially good, cooked exactly the right amount before they start to burn
I made chicken biryani a couple nights ago. I don't do it often and actually hadn't really tried it until about a year ago, but I do enjoy it at restaurants so got interested in seeing if I could make it well at home. My previous, say, three attempts were middling. Just OK. Yesterday's was mind blowingly good. Like, it was so good I was thinking about it all day and excited to eat it again for dinner. This doesn't happen often, one of the best feelings. I don't know if I can replicate it, but I at least tried to write it down.

I started using this biryani recipe and have been tweaking it slightly each time. What I've written below incorporates my tweaks.
This does sort of assume you've got the whole gamut of regular Indian spices handy. Sorry, I don't know the substitutions. Hopefully you have access to an Indian grocery somewhere.
For all tsp/tbsp measurements feel free to use heaping measurements. It'll be fiiiiiiine. (worked fine for me)
Mix all the marinade stuff well in a large bowl, big enough to hold your chicken. Try not to make the bowl too much larger, so you get more contact between marinade and chicken. After I've mixed in the chicken, I use a fork to poke lots of holes in it. I imagine the marinade soaks in a bit better. Marinate for up to like 12 hours maybe? I did 6 hours and it turned out great.

Halve and thin slice the onions. Deep fry them until about to be crispy. You don't want them bitter. I used a big cast iron skillet, canola oil, and high heat. I did em in two batches. Keep a careful eye on them towards the end. It'll take 10-15 minutes for a batch of them to get fried enough. Then keep them aside on a paper towel on a plate.
Boil enough water to easily cover the rice, in a big pot. Once it's boiling, add rice and all the other rice stuff like whole spices, cashews, and raisins. Boil for about 4 minutes until the rice is firm but not crunchy. Not fully cooked but on its way there. Drain immediately and set aside.
Cook the chicken and all the marinade on medium-high heat in a big pot. I used a big enamel cast iron dutch oven. Cook for 5-10 minutes. The marinade might get liquidy but that's OK. The chicken will be only partially cooked but that's OK too.

Take it off the heat and add crispy onions generously. Save a bit of crispy onions for garnish later. Add a layer of peas.
Add all the rice and whole spices in a thick layer. Pat it down gently until it's satisfyingly flat but not compact.

Cover and put on low/med heat. When you see steam (either seeping out or lifting lid to check), cover and put it on low heat for 25 minutes. Don't stir it. I used a simmer/sauce burner for this stage to prevent the chicken and marinade from burning to the bottom. I used level 4/10 on my gas range. Worked especially well with the cast iron pot.
When you serve it, you gotta scoop all the way from the top to the bottom so you get all the layers in one serving.