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Kebab Science — Binding, Fat, and Texture
Level 3 — Mastery · Technique

Kebab Science — Binding, Fat, and Texture

Why galouti melts and seekh holds its shape — the protein and fat science of kebabs.

🥬 Veg🥩 Non-Veg🌱 Vegan🟡 Jain🔴 Sattvic
Level 3 — Mastery

Kebab Science — Binding, Fat, and Texture

Indian kebabs span the full spectrum from melt-in-mouth galouti to firm seekh, from the crispy outer of shammi to the juicy interior of kakori. Each texture is engineered through specific combinations of fat content, binding agent, cooking temperature, and protein structure. Understanding the variables means you can control the outcome.

All kebabs work through the same basic mechanism: proteins denature and set when heated, trapping fat and moisture inside. The texture differences come from: how much fat is present, how finely the meat is processed (fine grinding destroys protein structure more), what binding agents hold the mixture together, and the cooking method.

The Method
Step by step
1
Control fat content precisely
Galouti: very high fat (25-30% fat content). Seekh: moderate fat (15-20%). Shami: lower fat. The fat melts during cooking — creating the characteristic juicy interior.
🔬 Fat trapped in the protein network melts during cooking. High fat kebabs (galouti) are moister because more fat melts into the texture. Low fat kebabs become drier but hold shape better.
⚠ Too little fat: tough, dry kebab. Too much fat: falls apart during cooking.
2
Use correct binding for each type
Shammi and galouti: chana dal (cooked with meat) provides starch binding. Seekh: the protein itself + fat binding. Shami: egg or chana dal.
🔬 Cooked chana dal provides starch that gelatinises and holds the mixture — it is the traditional binding agent for delicate soft kebabs.
3
Rest mixture before shaping
Refrigerate shaped kebabs 30-60 minutes before cooking.
🔬 Chilling firms the fat and allows moisture to distribute evenly — kebabs hold shape better during the initial cooking contact.
4
Cook correctly for each type
Seekh: medium heat tawa or grill — needs time for interior to cook while exterior browns. Galouti: medium-high tawa with ghee — quick sear both sides only. Shami: medium oil fry.

Works for every diet

🥬
Vegetarian
Vegetarian kebabs: raw banana (kachche kele ke kebab), rajma seekh, paneer tikka — same binding principles
🥩
Non-Veg
Classic application — chicken, lamb, beef
🌱
Vegan
Raw banana, jackfruit, or legume-based kebabs — chana dal binding still applies
🟡
Jain
Vegetable kebabs with Jain-permitted ingredients — no root vegetables as binders. Use raw banana, peas, paneer.
🔴
Sattvic
Paneer or vegetable kebabs — no onion/garlic in mixture. Use hing and ginger.

What this unlocks

Level 3
Galouti Kebab
Level 3
Seekh Kebab
Level 2
Shami Kebab
Level 2
Paneer Tikka
Learn more
Common Questions
Why does galouti kebab melt in the mouth?
Very high fat content (25-30%), extremely fine grinding (almost a paste), tenderising with raw papaya enzyme, and minimal cooking time — just a quick sear. The fat melts on contact with heat and lubricates the protein network, producing the characteristic melt.
What makes seekh kebab stick together on the skewer?
The protein myosin in minced meat acts as a natural binder when kneaded — extended hand mixing develops a sticky protein paste that adheres to the skewer. Insufficient mixing produces seekh that falls off. Mix for 5-8 minutes minimum.
Can I make kebabs without a tandoor?
Yes — a very hot cast iron tawa or griddle pan produces excellent results. The tawa should be as hot as possible (light smoking) for the initial sear. Seeking tandoor char in a home kitchen: brush kebabs with ghee and use a blowtorch after cooking.
Why do my kebabs stick to the pan?
Either pan not hot enough or kebabs moved too soon. Meat sticks to pan initially but releases naturally when a crust forms — approximately 2-3 minutes. Moving too early before crust forms tears the kebab.
What is chana dal's role as kebab binder?
Chana dal cooked with the meat until soft then mashed provides starch that gelatinises and binds the mixture — similar to how flour binds a dumpling. It is the traditional binding agent for galouti and shammi kebab. It also adds body and reduces the meat-only richness.