Chicken Angara (North Indian Smoky Creamy Curry)



This is a vegan version of rich, smoky Indian chicken angara. This restaurant-style curry has an aromatic chili sauce with amazing, fiery flavors! Serve with naan, flatbread, or rice or over a baked potato for a delicious meal. It is gluten-free with nut-free and soy-free options.




chicken angara in the pan after cooking and adding garnish


Chicken angara is a popular dish in some North Indian restaurants. It has a thick sauce made with fried onion, yogurt, lots of spices, and either dried whole Kashmiri chilis, regular Indian chilies, or Kashmiri chili powder. The chilis add to the fiery red color of the sauce as well as to the heat.




hand scooping up chicken angara with a piece of naan


Angar means fire, and you’re incorporating fire into this dish by adding a lot of heat and color from the Kashmiri chilis and smoking it with some live fire at the end. The signature smoky flavor is incorporated using a smoking food-safe charcoal. But We smoke it using a cinnamon stick. Just heat the cinnamon stick (or charcoal) until it’s red hot, then put it in a heat-safe ramekin, drizzle with a little bit of oil. The ramekin actually goes into the pan of finished chicken angara, and you cover the pan with the lid, so the smoke infuses the dish.




close-up of flatbread with chicken angara on top on a plate


This is another recipe in my series where I veganize traditionally meat-heavy Indian dishes. Check out my recipes for Salli Boti (western Indian curry with potato sticks), Rara Chicken (North Indian onion cardamom curry), Goan Peri peri Chikin tofu, and Pahadi curry (Mountain onion pepper curry), for more from this series.



As with lots of Indian curries, the flavor is in the sauce, so you can use your plant-based protein of choice and it will still taste absolutely delicious. If you don’t want to use tofu, you can use chickpea tofu, chickpeas or other white beans, veggies, vegan chicken, or seitan. And as with many restaurant-style curries, it’s about patience in letting everything toast and toast really well at each step and letting the flavors develop! Let’s make this fantastic tofu Angara!




close-up of flatbread with chicken angara on top on a plate


This vegan version of rich, smoky Indian chicken angara features a restaurant-style curry with aromatic chili sauce and fiery flavors. Serve it with naan, flatbread, rice, or even over a baked potato for a delicious meal. It's gluten-free and offers nut-free and soy-free options, making it a versatile and flavorful dish to enjoy. Add more heat by incorporating cayenne or Indian chili powder to your liking. If you prefer a spicier flavor, adjust the amount accordingly. To infuse the sauce with a smoky flavor, use a cinnamon stick or food-safe charcoal.

Both chopped tomato and tomato puree add moisture, umami, and a fiery red color to the sauce.

Non-dairy yogurt makes the sauce creamy.

Tips:

- Add splashes of water to the pan if it dries out while cooking the onion or adding spices.
- Use a heat-safe ramekin for the cinnamon stick.
- Taste the sauce after smoking to adjust the smokiness.
- Drizzle smoked oil over the sauce for extra flavor.

To make Chicken Angara:

- Mix the spice mix ingredients in a bowl and set aside.
- Coat tofu with the spice mix, salt, Kashmiri chili powder, and cornstarch.
- Cook tofu in a skillet until golden brown.
- Cook onion, black cardamom pod, bay leaf, and clove until golden brown.
- Add spice mix, ginger garlic paste, fenugreek, tomatoes, tomato puree, Kashmiri chili powder, yogurt, salt, and water.
- Simmer with tofu and adjust seasoning.
- Sprinkle smoked paprika on top and let simmer.
- Smoke the sauce with a cinnamon stick in a ramekin with oil.
- Garnish with cilantro and lemon juice before serving.

What to Serve with Vegan Chicken Angara



Enjoy this flavorful vegan version of rich, smoky Indian chicken angara with your choice of rice, quinoa, naan, or flatbread.




Frequently Asked Questions





Is this vegan recipe allergy-friendly?

Yes, this recipe is naturally gluten-free.


To make it soy-free, substitute with chickpea tofu, pumpkin seed tofu, seitan, chickpeas, or your preferred soy-free vegan chicken alternative, and use soy-free non-dairy yogurt.


To make it nut-free, use nut-free non-dairy yogurt and skip the almond flour in the recipe.




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