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Reducing and Concentrating — Khoya and Rabri
Level 3 — Mastery · Technique

Reducing and Concentrating — Khoya and Rabri

How slow milk reduction creates India's most important dessert ingredient.

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

Reducing and Concentrating — Khoya and Rabri

Khoya (mawa) is the foundation ingredient of most North Indian sweets — gulab jamun, burfi, peda, kalakand. It is simply whole milk reduced by 75-80% through gentle simmering until it becomes a dense, fudgy solid. The process takes 45-90 minutes and requires constant attention, but the result is an ingredient with extraordinary concentrated dairy flavour impossible to replicate with any substitute.

The science of milk reduction: as water evaporates, the remaining milk solids (proteins, fat, lactose) concentrate. The Maillard reaction between milk proteins and lactose (milk sugar) begins to occur, producing the characteristic cooked milk flavour. The lactose also caramelises at high temperatures, adding sweetness complexity. The final texture depends on how far the reduction goes — soft khoya for gulab jamun, hard khoya for burfi.

The Method
Step by step
1
Use full-fat whole milk only
3.5% fat minimum. Ultra-processed or UHT milk reduces to a flat, flavourless khoya — the heat treatment has already damaged the delicate proteins and volatile compounds.
🔬 Fresh whole milk contains intact casein micelles and whey proteins that produce complex Maillard reactions during reduction. UHT milk has irreversibly denatured proteins — the Maillard potential is already spent.
2
Wide pan, medium-low heat
Use a wide, heavy-bottomed pan. Medium-low heat — the milk should simmer steadily, not boil vigorously.
🔬 Wide pan: maximum surface area for evaporation. Medium-low: prevents burning at the base before the top evaporates.
⚠ Vigorous boiling causes proteins to scorch at the base — producing bitter, grainy khoya.
3
Stir regularly, scrape sides
Stir every 2-3 minutes. Scrape the sides of the pan — the dried milk solids on the sides contain the most Maillard-developed flavour.
🔬 The sides of the pan where milk dries and re-moistens have higher Maillard development — scraping them back in adds colour and flavour complexity.
4
Know when it's done by texture
Soft khoya: pulls away from sides, still slightly sticky, paste-like. Hard khoya: completely pulls away, not sticky, can be crumbled.

Works for every diet

🥬
Vegetarian
Dairy product — vegetarian
🥩
Non-Veg
Identical
🌱
Vegan
No direct vegan equivalent for khoya. Cashew-based milk reduced in same way produces a different but acceptable substitute.
🟡
Jain
Dairy is Jain-permitted — identical
🔴
Sattvic
Dairy is sattvic — khoya is sattvic-permitted

What this unlocks

Level 3
Gulab Jamun — khoya based
Level 3
Burfi — hard khoya
Level 3
Rabri — semi-reduced milk dessert
Learn more
Common Questions
How long does making khoya take?
45-90 minutes depending on milk quantity and pan size. 1 litre whole milk produces approximately 200-250g khoya. Using a wide pan reduces time significantly — more surface area means faster evaporation.
Can I buy khoya instead of making it?
Yes — Indian grocery stores sell fresh and frozen khoya (also called mawa). For serious sweet making, fresh khoya produces noticeably better results than frozen. Avoid tinned or powdered khoya.
Why is my khoya grainy?
Either milk scorched at the base (heat too high, insufficient stirring) or the milk was not full-fat (low-fat milk proteins behave differently under heat — they break down rather than concentrate). Use full-fat milk and stir every 2-3 minutes.
What is the difference between khoya and condensed milk?
Condensed milk: reduced with added sugar, smooth, pourable. Khoya: reduced without sugar, dense, fudgy, crumbly. They are not interchangeable in Indian sweet recipes — condensed milk produces sweeter, less complex results.
What is rabri and how does it differ from khoya?
Rabri is a semi-reduced milk dessert — milk reduced to approximately 50-60% with sugar and cardamom, with the skin that forms on the surface deliberately stirred back in, creating a layered, clotted-cream-like texture. It is served warm or cold and is not reduced as far as khoya.