Vegetables in a creamy coconut-cashew-yogurt sauce — South India's version of korma. No tomato, fragrant whole spices, bright with coconut. Milder than curry, richer than plain dal.
The South Indian kurma (from the Tamil 'korma' via Persian) differs from its North Indian counterpart in one key ingredient: coconut. North Indian korma uses cashews and cream for richness. South Indian kurma uses coconut and cashews — producing a lighter, more fragrant sauce with a distinct coconut character. Both are built on the same no-tomato Mughal flavour architecture, but the coconut in the South Indian version connects it to the larger Deccani culinary tradition that blends Mughal techniques with indigenous South Indian ingredients.
Blend coconut, cashews, soaked poppy seeds, green chilli, ginger and garlic with water to a very smooth, creamy paste.
Soaked poppy seeds (khus khus) contain fat-soluble alkaloids and are used in South Indian and Mughal cooking as both a thickener and flavour compound. The tiny seeds must be soaked before blending to soften their hard outer shell — unsoaked they remain as gritty particles regardless of blending time. Poppy seed paste provides a subtle nutty richness distinct from cashew.
Heat oil. Fry whole spices 1 minute. Add onion, cook 12 minutes golden. Add ginger-garlic from paste. Add coriander powder. Add kurma paste — fry in the masala 4 minutes until fragrant and slightly darkened.
Frying the kurma paste in the hot masala extracts the fat-soluble aromatic compounds from the coconut and poppy seeds into the oil phase. The coconut fat releases and integrates with the cooking oil — coconut's medium-chain triglycerides (lauric acid) blend particularly well with the cooking oil, creating a unified fat phase that carries all the spice aromatics.
Reduce heat to low. Add beaten yogurt tablespoon by tablespoon, stirring between each addition. Add par-cooked vegetables and salt. Simmer gently 8 minutes. Add garam masala and fresh coriander.
The kurma paste's coconut proteins and cashew proteins stabilise the yogurt addition — acting as emulsifiers that coat the yogurt protein micelles and prevent them from aggregating when heated. This is why South Indian kurma rarely splits despite using yogurt — the coconut-cashew paste provides natural emulsification that North Indian korma achieves with just cashew.