📅 May 22, 2025⏱ 8 min read🏷️ World Cuisine

Indian cooking gets a reputation for being complicated or requiring dozens of ingredients — but at its core, it's built on a small number of learned techniques that unlock extraordinary flavor. Once you understand bloom, build, and finish, an enormous range of dishes becomes accessible.

The Essential Indian Spices

Start with these twelve — they cover the vast majority of Indian cooking:

The Blooming Technique

The most important technique in Indian cooking: blooming (also called "tempering" or "tadka") is the process of adding whole spices and aromatics to hot oil at the start of cooking. The fat extracts fat-soluble flavor compounds that would otherwise stay locked in the spice.

Order of operations: Heat oil or ghee in the pan. Add whole spices (mustard seeds will pop, cumin will sizzle). Add onion, cook until golden. Add ginger-garlic paste. Add ground spices — stir and cook for 1-2 minutes in the fat. Add other ingredients.

This "blooming" step is why Indian restaurant food tastes different from home cooking that simply adds spices with the liquid — the flavor compounds are carried throughout the fat and then throughout the dish.

Building the Masala Base

Most Indian dishes begin with a masala — a cooked paste of onion, tomato, ginger, garlic, and spices. Building it properly takes patience:

  1. Finely dice or grate onion. Cook in oil over medium heat — stir frequently — until deep golden brown, about 15-20 minutes. This sweet, caramelized base is essential.
  2. Add ginger-garlic paste (fresh ground in equal parts). Cook 2-3 minutes until raw smell disappears.
  3. Add ground spices — turmeric, chili, coriander, cumin. Stir and cook 1-2 minutes.
  4. Add blended tomatoes. Cook stirring until oil separates — about 8-10 minutes. This "oil separation" indicates the masala is properly cooked.

The Tadka Finish

A second tempering at the end, poured over finished dishes like dal: heat ghee in a small pan until very hot. Add whole spices and dried chilies — they'll sizzle instantly. Pour the sizzling ghee over the finished dish. The burst of aromatics bloomed fresh in hot fat transforms the dish.

Essential Dishes to Learn First

💡 Indian Cooking Tips

  • Don't rush the onions — deep golden color is essential, not optional
  • Add yogurt or cream at the very end with heat off — it will curdle if boiled
  • Garam masala is added at the end — it's a finishing spice, not a cooking spice
  • Ghee makes better tadka than butter — its high smoke point allows proper blooming
  • Taste and adjust salt at the end — salt amounts vary significantly with the spice level
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Written by Elena

Elena studied Indian cooking techniques intensively and believes it is among the most sophisticated culinary traditions in the world.