Andhra Style Veg Pulao

Servings: 4 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Beginner
andhra veg pulao pinit

Ever open your fridge at 6 pm and wish a restaurant-style pulao would just appear? 

This Andhra Style Veg Pulao does that for you: bold, aromatic whole spices, a green-coconut masala paste, and seasonal vegetables folded into perfectly cooked basmati. It’s lunch-box friendly, great for weeknights, and carries the tang and heat Andhra cuisine is famous for — without being fussy.

What this pulao tastes like
Imagine warm basmati fragrant with star anise and cinnamon, pockets of tender potato and cauliflower, pops of sweet peas and carrots, and a coconut-tomato paste that brings depth and a subtle tang. 

Finish it with a tempering of ghee and cashews and you have a layered, satisfying rice dish — both light and richly spiced.

A little background 

Andhra cuisine uses bold whole spices and bright, tangy masalas. This veg pulao borrows those characteristics: a freshly ground masala paste (cinnamon, cloves, marathi moggu, stone flower, coconut, herbs) gives it that distinctive Andhra aroma. 

Instead of a plain pulao, here the rice steams with a cooked vegetable-masala base so every grain picks up flavor.

Why you should make it

  • One-pot, minimal cleanup — perfect for busy days.
  • Balanced nutrition — rice + mixed vegetables for carbs, fiber and vitamins.
  • Scalable — feeds a family or a party with small adjustments.
  • Great for lunchboxes — holds well and reheats nicely.

Ingredients — what each part does

  • Whole spice mix (cinnamon, cloves, star anise, peppercorns, stone flower, nutmeg, mace): builds the warm, lasting aroma.
  • Coconut + tomato + herbs (masala paste): gives body, natural sweetness and acidity so you don’t need heavy cream.
  • Mixed vegetables (potato, cauliflower, carrot, beans, peas): texture, color and nutrients — also act as tiny flavor reservoirs.
  • Basmati rice: long grains that stay separate and soak up masala without going mushy if soaked briefly.
  • Ghee & cashews: finish with richness and crunch; you can use oil for a lighter or vegan version.
  • Green chillies, coriander & mint: brightness and the characteristic South Indian punch.
Vegan Swap 🌿: Replace ghee with neutral oil (or coconut oil for extra aroma) and skip the cashew garnish or use roasted peanuts for crunch — the masala paste already gives deep flavor, so the dish stays satisfying.

How the dish comes together — think like a cook

First, you make a fresh masala paste — that’s your flavor engine. It combines warm roasted spices with coconut, ginger, garlic, tomato and fresh herbs; blend it smooth so it melts into the rice later.

Heat a mix of ghee and oil in your pot, brown the cashews and sauté onions and green chiles until the edges caramelize — that caramelization is key for depth. Add the veggies and steam them briefly so they’re just shy of done; you want them to finish cooking with the rice, not turn to mush.

Now the smart bit: add the masala paste and sauté until the raw smell goes away and the paste releases oil. That step builds a roasted, integrated flavor rather than a one-note tomato taste. Add the soaked basmati, gently fold so each grain is coated, then pour in measured water and simmer covered until the rice is done. Rest for 5–10 minutes, fluff with a fork, drizzle a little ghee, and you’re set.

This is not a dump-and-cook rice pilaf — you’re layering flavors (roast → steam → blend → cook) so the result is complex and fragrant.

Pro Tip 💡: Soak your basmati for 20–30 minutes and drain well. That short soak shortens cooking time and keeps grains distinct. Also, always sauté the masala paste until the oil separates slightly — that’s when the rawness is gone and the flavor is concentrated.

What goes along

How to serve & present

Spoon the pulao into a wide serving dish, fluff gently with a fork so the grains separate. Garnish with chopped coriander, fried cashews, and a drizzle of warm ghee. Serve hot with raita and a wedge of lemon — the squeeze of lemon wakes up the spices.

Packing & lunchbox tips

  • Pack pulao and raita separately. If you must pack together, add raita in a leakproof container to prevent sogginess.
  • To reheat: sprinkle a tablespoon of water per serving and microwave, or steam briefly to revive fluffiness. Avoid dry reheating — it toughens the rice.

Party & bulk-prep strategy

  • Make the masala paste ahead and refrigerate for 3–4 days or freeze in ice-cube trays for quick weeknight pulaos.
  • Par-cook veggies and store; on the day, assemble and finish in one big pot.
  • Scale rice and water ratio carefully (1 cup rice : ~2 cups water as a starting point for this masala-rich pulao) and always rest the cooked rice 5–10 minutes before fluffing.

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Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 35 mins
Servings: 4 Calories: 412
Best Season: Suitable throughout the year

Description

This Andhra Style Veg Pulao is a fragrant, one-pot rice dish bursting with flavor and color. Made with basmati rice, fresh vegetables, and a freshly ground masala paste of whole spices, coconut, herbs, and tomato, it delivers the authentic aroma and taste of Andhra cuisine. Lightly sauteed veggies blend perfectly with the spiced rice, making it a wholesome and satisfying meal on its own, or paired with raita, mirchi ka salan, or a simple curry. Quick to prepare, visually appealing, and full of flavor, it’s perfect for lunch boxes, family dinners, or any day you crave comforting South Indian-style pulao.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

To make masala paste

To make andhra-style veg pulao

Instructions

Prep Work

  1. Soak rice

    Wash the basmati rice until the water runs clear and soak it for some time so the grains cook evenly

  2. Grind masala paste

    Add the whole spices, ginger, garlic, coconut, tomato, coriander and mint to a mixer and grind to a smooth paste using a little water
  3. Slice and chop onions

    Peel and thinly slice the onions
  4. Slit chillies

    Slit the green chillies lengthwise
  5. Chop vegetables

    Chop potato, carrot, beans and break cauliflower into florets
  6. Measure ghee and oil

    Keep ghee and oil ready in serving spoons
  7. Keep cashews ready

    Separate cashews to roast later

Method

  1. Heat fats

    Take a deep pot. add ghee and oil and warm until ghee melts

  2. Roast cashews and bay leaf

    Once the ghee is fully melted, add bay leaf and cashew nuts and saute until they are slightly golden brown in color
  3. Sauté onions and chillies

    Add chopped onions and slit green chillies and saute until the onions are golden brown in color
  4. Add root and dense veggies

    Add chopped potatoes and saute briefly, then add cauliflower florets and saute for a short time
  5. Add remaining vegetables

    Add chopped carrots, beans and green peas and saute them together
  6. Steam the vegetables

    Add rock salt and mix, pour a little water, mix and cover the pot with a lid to steam cook the veggies for about 5 minutes on low flame.
  7. Add ground paste

    Add the ground masala paste, mix well and saute so the raw smell goes off
  8. Add soaked rice

    Add the soaked basmati rice and gently mix well with the vegetables and masala
  9. Cook the pulao

    Pour water, mix, cover the pot with a lid and cook the pulao on a low flame for 15 minutes until the rice is done. Turn off the stove and let it rest for a few minutes
  10. Finish and serve

    Fluff the pulao gently and serve hot with raita or a gravy like mirchi ka salan or baingan masala

Equipment

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Nutrition Facts

Servings 4


Amount Per Serving
Calories 412kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 15.4g24%
Saturated Fat 7.5g38%
Sodium 42mg2%
Potassium 350mg10%
Total Carbohydrate 62.5g21%
Dietary Fiber 6.5g26%
Sugars 6g
Protein 8.4g17%

Vitamin A 2600 IU
Vitamin C 8 mg
Calcium 20 mg
Iron 0.8 mg

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Keywords: Andhra Style Veg Pulao, veg pulao, vegetable pulao, vegetable rice, pulao
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Do I need to soak basmati rice?

Yes — soaking helps the grains cook evenly and stay separate; a short soak while you prep the masala is enough.

Can I skip the masala paste and use store-bought paste?

You can, but the homemade masala paste gives the signature andhra aroma. a mild store paste will work in a pinch.

Can I make the masala paste ahead?

 Yes — you can make and refrigerate it for 1–2 days or freeze small portions for later.

Should I par-cook the potatoes and cauliflower?

The recipe steams them briefly in the pot before adding the paste; that’s enough so they finish cooking when rice cooks.

Can I use oil instead of ghee?

Yes — oil will work but ghee adds depth and aroma typical of this pulao

My onions didn’t brown — will that affect the pulao?

Lightly caramelized onions add sweetness and color, but if they are pale it’s still fine — just saute a bit longer to deepen flavor.

How do I avoid mushy rice?

Rinse until water runs clear, soak briefly, use medium-low heat and don’t over-stir after adding water; rest covered after cooking

Can I use frozen mixed vegetables?

Yes — thaw or add directly and adjust steaming so excess water evaporates before adding the paste.

How to make it less spicy?

 Reduce the number of green chillies in the recipe or remove seeds before chopping

Can this be made in a rice cooker?

You can transfer the vegetable-masala mix and soaked rice to a rice cooker and cook with the same water ratio; follow your cooker’s settings.

Hema Subramanian
Hema Subramanian Food and Lifestyle Blogger

I love to cook! And through Home Cooking Show, I hope to make cooking fun, easy, and approachable for everyone.

My way of sharing recipes is all about keeping it simple and delicious—no complicated steps, no fancy ingredients, just real home-cooked food that anyone can make. Cooking should be a joy, not a chore! Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned cook, you’ll find something here to inspire you. If you love good food made with love, then you’re in the right place!

- Hema Subramanian

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