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Paneer Hara Pyaaza
🍛 Curry · Level 1

Paneer Hara Pyaaza

Paneer with spring onion — hara pyaaza means green onion. A lighter, fresher paneer curry where the spring onion replaces the conventional deeply-cooked onion base, producing a more delicate result.

Prep15 min
Cook25 min
Serves4
Level1 — Beginner
🥬 Vegetarian🟡 Jain (omit regular onion/garlic)

Hara pyaaza — why spring onion produces a different curry

Spring onion (hara pyaaza) behaves completely differently from regular onion in a curry context. Regular onion cooked 12–20 minutes caramelises into a deep, sweet, Maillard-rich base. Spring onion cooked briefly retains its fresh, slightly sulphurous character — producing a lighter, more delicate masala base that allows the paneer and spice flavours to come forward more cleanly. The spring onion greens added at the end provide a fresh counterpoint to the cooked base.

⚠️Common mistakes to avoid
  • Overcooking spring onions — They should be lightly cooked — 4 minutes maximum before adding tomatoes.
  • Using only the white parts — The green tops provide fresh flavour and visual colour. Use both.
  • Making the masala as heavy as regular onion curry — This dish should be lighter than a regular paneer masala.
  • Boiling paneer — 3 minutes gentle heat maximum.
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Ingredients

Paneer Hara Pyaaza
Servings4
Main
  • 350gpaneer, cubed
  • 3 bunchesspring onions (hara pyaaza)— whites chopped, greens reserved
  • 1capsicum, cubed
  • 3 tbspoil
  • 1 tspginger-garlic paste
  • 2tomatoes, pureed
  • 1 tspcoriander powder
  • 1 tspKashmiri chilli powder
  • ½ tspturmeric
  • ½ tspgaram masala
  • Saltto taste
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How to make it — step by step

Step 1
Cook spring onion whites lightly
⏱ 6 min🔥 Medium

Heat oil. Add spring onion whites — cook only 4 minutes until softened but not deeply coloured. Add ginger-garlic paste, 1 minute. Add tomatoes, coriander, chilli, turmeric. Bhuno until oil separates — 8 minutes.

🔬The Science

Spring onion whites contain allicin and organosulphur compounds similar to regular onion but in lower concentrations. 4 minutes of cooking converts the sharp raw compounds to mellower, sweeter thiols without the extensive caramelisation of a long-cooked onion. The resulting masala base is sweeter and lighter than a regular onion masala — it provides a subtle aromatic foundation rather than a heavy caramelised body.

Step 2
Add capsicum, paneer, spring onion greens
⏱ 6 min🔥 Medium

Add capsicum, cook 3 minutes. Add paneer, simmer 3 minutes on low. Add garam masala, salt. Add spring onion greens off heat as both garnish and flavour layer.

🔬The Science

Spring onion greens added off heat retain their volatile organosulphur compounds and chlorophyll. These fresh-green aromatics provide a sharp, clean top note that contrasts with the cooked, mellow bottom notes from the cooked spring onion whites — creating the layered flavour profile that distinguishes hara pyaaza from other paneer dishes.

Paneer Hara Pyaaza — answered
What makes hara pyaaza different from regular paneer masala?
The shorter cooking time of spring onions produces a lighter, less caramelised base. The fresh green tops add brightness. The result is more delicate and fresh-tasting than the deep, sweet base of regular onion curry.
How many spring onion bunches is this?
3 small bunches — approximately 300g total. Spring onion is the volume ingredient here, not a garnish.
Can I use leeks instead of spring onions?
Yes — leeks provide a similar mild allium character. Cook for 6 minutes instead of 4 (leeks are denser).
What do I serve this with?
Roti or paratha. The lighter character of hara pyaaza also works well over steamed basmati — less heavy than the richer paneer curries.
Why is the capsicum added after the spring onions?
Capsicum has a more delicate cell wall than spring onion and becomes mushy faster. Adding after the masala base is built ensures only 3 minutes of cooking — maintaining its crunch.