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Mor Kuzhambu
🌿 Regional South India · Level 1

Mor Kuzhambu

Tamil Nadu's yogurt-coconut curry — thinner than kadhi, more complex, with a coconut-cumin base. Served over rice. The South Indian answer to a yogurt curry.

Prep10 min
Cook20 min
Serves4
🥬 Vegetarian

Mor Kuzhambu — what you need to know

Mor kuzhambu is Tamil Nadu's yogurt-based curry — similar in concept to the North Indian kadhi but built on a coconut and cumin paste base rather than besan alone. It is thinner than kadhi, more aromatic, with a yellow-gold colour from turmeric and a mild sourness from the yogurt. It is always served poured over rice, never eaten as a side dish. Like all yogurt-based curries, it requires careful heat management to prevent curdling. The coconut paste provides both flavour and additional stabilisation.

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Ingredients

Mor Kuzhambu
For the curry
  • 1.5 cupsyogurt full-fat, whisked
  • 1 cupwater
  • ½ tspturmeric
  • Saltto taste
For the coconut paste (stabiliser and flavour)
  • 4 tbspfresh coconut grated
  • 1 tspcumin seeds
  • 2green chillies
  • ½ tspturmeric
  • 1 tsprice soaked — acts as thickener
For the tadka
  • 2 tbspcoconut oil
  • 1 tspmustard seeds
  • ½ tspfenugreek seeds
  • 2dried red chillies
  • 1 sprigcurry leaves
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How to make it — step by step

Step 1
Make the coconut-cumin paste
⚡ Include soaked rice

Grind coconut, cumin seeds, green chillies, turmeric and soaked rice to a very smooth paste with a little water.

🔬The Science

The soaked rice acts as a secondary thickener and stabiliser alongside the coconut — its starch forms a protective film around the yogurt proteins during cooking, supplementing the protection that coconut fat already provides. This double-stabilisation is what allows mor kuzhambu to be cooked longer than simple yogurt curry without curdling.

Step 2
Whisk yogurt with paste and water
⚡ Incorporate before heating

Whisk the coconut paste into the yogurt gradually until completely incorporated. Add water and turmeric. Whisk until uniform — no separation visible.

🔬The Science

Incorporating the coconut paste into cold yogurt before heating allows the coconut fat to begin forming a protective coating around yogurt proteins at room temperature — before any heat stress is applied. This pre-coating significantly reduces the risk of curdling during the subsequent heating.

Step 3
Cook on low heat only
🔥 Lowest heat⚡ Never boil⏱ 15 min

Pour the mixture into a pan. Cook on the lowest possible heat, stirring constantly with a whisk, until it just begins to simmer — about 12–15 minutes. Do not boil. Remove from heat immediately when it reaches a gentle simmer.

🔬The Science

Mor kuzhambu should never boil — above 90°C the yogurt proteins denature even with the coconut fat protection. The gentle simmer at approximately 82–85°C is sufficient to cook out the raw coconut and cumin flavours while keeping the yogurt stable. A low simmer also produces a thinner consistency than kadhi — correct for this dish.

Step 4
Add tadka and serve
⚡ Fenugreek — 10 sec only

Heat coconut oil in a small pan. Pop mustard seeds. Add fenugreek seeds — fry until just starting to colour (10 seconds — they burn quickly). Add dried red chillies and curry leaves. Pour over the mor kuzhambu immediately. Serve over rice.

🔬The Science

Fenugreek seeds in the tadka add a slight bitterness that counterbalances the mild sweetness of the coconut paste — a classic South Indian flavour contrast. The coconut oil carries the tadka aromatic compounds and blends naturally with the coconut-based curry beneath.

⚠️Common mistakes to avoid
  • Never boil mor kuzhambu — Boiling causes irreversible curdling. Gentle simmer only.
  • Include soaked rice in paste — It provides additional starch stabilisation alongside coconut.
  • Use coconut oil for tadka — Matches the coconut character of the curry. Other oils produce a less cohesive flavour.
Mor Kuzhambu — answered
What is the difference between mor kuzhambu and kadhi?
Mor kuzhambu uses coconut-cumin paste as its base, is thinner, and is served over rice. Kadhi uses besan, is thicker, and is served with rice or alongside.