India's scrambled paneer — coarsely crumbled, quickly cooked with onion, tomato, green chilli and spices. Ready in 15 minutes. Breakfast, lunch, snack or main.
Bhurji means scrambled — paneer bhurji is India's vegetarian answer to scrambled eggs. It takes 15 minutes from start to finish, uses no complex masala, and requires no special technique. Its success depends entirely on the texture of the paneer — coarsely crumbled (not finely grated, not cubed) — and not overcooking. Paneer bhurji cooked past 3 minutes becomes rubbery and dry. It should be just set, moist and flowing.
Heat oil/butter. Pop cumin seeds. Add onion — cook 5 minutes until golden. Add green chilli and ginger. Add tomatoes, turmeric, chilli powder — cook on high until tomatoes soften and oil separates — about 5 minutes.
The quick bhurji masala builds flavour faster than a curry masala because the smaller quantities and finer chop allow faster moisture evaporation. Tomatoes finely chopped rather than pureed release their juice more rapidly, reaching the oil-separation stage in 5 minutes rather than 12. The masala does not need the deep complexity of a curry — it is a background flavour base for the fresh paneer.
Add crumbled paneer to the masala. Toss gently to coat. Cook on medium heat for 3 minutes, stirring gently. Add garam masala, salt, lemon juice and fresh coriander. Serve immediately.
Paneer's whey proteins denature progressively above 65°C. At 3 minutes in a hot pan, the outer surface proteins set while the interior remains moist — producing the characteristic just-set texture. Beyond 5 minutes, the proteins continue cross-linking, squeezing out moisture and producing dry, rubbery bhurji. The lemon juice added at the end provides volatile citric acid brightness that lifts the rich, creamy paneer flavour.