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Ghugni
🌿 Regional Bengal · Level 1

Ghugni

Bengal's favourite street food — dried yellow peas cooked in a spiced gravy, topped with tamarind and raw onion. Morning street food and festival staple.

Prep20 min
Cook35 min
Serves4
🥬 Vegetarian🌱 Vegan

Ghugni — what you need to know

Ghugni is Bengal's most democratic street food — sold from stalls outside schools, at railway stations and during every festival. It is made from dried yellow peas (motor or white peas) cooked in a spiced gravy and topped with chopped raw onion, fresh coriander, green chilli and tamarind water. The combination of the warm, spiced peas against the sharp raw onion and sour tamarind is the dish. Ghugni is also a morning food — in many parts of Bengal it is eaten at breakfast with luchi or puri. It is simultaneously street food, festival food and everyday home food.

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Ingredients

Ghugni
Main ingredients
  • 1.5 cupsdried white/yellow peas (motor dal) soaked overnight
  • 2 tbspoil or mustard oil
  • 1 mediumonion finely chopped
  • 2tomatoes chopped
  • 1 tspginger paste
  • 1 tspgarlic paste
Spices
  • 1 tspcumin seeds
  • 1 tspturmeric
  • 1 tspred chilli powder
  • 1 tspcoriander powder
  • ½ tspcumin powder
  • ½ tspgaram masala
  • 1 tspsugar
  • Saltto taste
For serving (essential)
  • 1 mediumonion finely chopped, raw
  • 2 tbsptamarind water concentrated, sour
  • Fresh corianderroughly chopped
  • 1–2green chillies finely chopped
  • 1lemon cut into wedges
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How to make it — step by step

Step 1
Pressure cook soaked peas
⏱ 25 min⚡ Fully soft

Drain soaked peas. Pressure cook with 3 cups water and salt for 4–5 whistles (18–22 minutes at pressure) until completely soft. The peas must be fully cooked — not al dente. Reserve the cooking water.

🔬The Science

Dried white peas contain resistant starch and complex oligosaccharides. Overnight soaking hydrates the seed coat and activates phytase, reducing phytic acid and improving digestibility. Full pressure cooking breaks down the complex carbohydrates to simple sugars — undercooked peas retain a chalky, starchy mouthfeel that ruins the final dish.

Step 2
Build the spiced gravy
⏱ 20 min⚡ Oil must separate

Heat oil in a pan. Add cumin seeds. Add onion and cook until golden — 8 minutes. Add ginger-garlic paste and cook 2 minutes. Add tomatoes and all dry spices. Cook until tomatoes break down and oil separates — 10 minutes.

🔬The Science

The bhuno stage — oil separation — is critical for ghugni. The tomato-onion masala must be fully cooked before adding the peas, otherwise the raw masala flavour persists in the final dish. The sugar added at this stage begins caramelising in the hot masala, adding depth.

Step 3
Add peas and simmer
⏱ 10 min

Add cooked peas to the masala with enough reserved cooking water to make a medium-thick gravy. Add sugar and garam masala. Simmer 10 minutes until the flavours integrate. The consistency should be thicker than dal but not dry.

🔬The Science

The pea cooking water contains dissolved starch and protein — adding it rather than plain water naturally thickens the gravy while adding body. Garam masala is added late to preserve its volatile aromatic compounds, which would diminish with prolonged cooking.

Step 4
Assemble for serving — street food style
⚡ Raw toppings at serving

Ladle ghugni into bowls. Top with generous raw onion, a drizzle of concentrated tamarind water, fresh coriander, green chilli and a squeeze of lemon. The raw toppings go on at serving, never in advance.

🔬The Science

The layered assembly creates distinct flavour experiences as each spoonful picks up different proportions of components. The tamarind's citric and tartaric acid contrasts with the sweet-spiced peas. Raw onion's sharp quercetin compounds provide chemical contrast to the rich cooked gravy. Mixing in advance eliminates these contrasts — everything tastes the same.

⚠️Common mistakes to avoid
  • Overnight soaking essential — Ghugni made from inadequately soaked peas requires much longer cooking and tastes chalky.
  • Reserve cooking water — It thickens and flavours the gravy naturally.
  • Toppings at serving only — Mixing tamarind and raw onion in advance produces a flat, undifferentiated result.
Ghugni — answered
Where do I find dried white peas?
Indian grocery stores — labelled white peas, motor dal or dried marrowfat peas. Sometimes in Caribbean or Latin grocery stores too.
Can I use canned chickpeas?
Chickpeas produce a similar but different dish. The flavour profile changes. White peas are correct for ghugni.