Palak Paneer

A classic North Indian spinach and paneer curry made by folding soft cubes of paneer into a smooth, spiced spinach gravy. This version is balanced for home cooks, with a bright green sauce, controlled bitterness, gentle heat, and a creamy finish without becoming heavy.

Quick Recipe Card

Prep Time
20 minutes
Cook Time
25 minutes
Total Time
45 minutes
Resting Time
5 minutes
Servings
4
Recipe Yield
About 900 g to 1 kg curry, serving 4 as a main
Portion Size
About 220 g to 250 g per serving
Calories
About 290 kcal per serving
Difficulty
Easy to moderate
Best Occasion
Family lunch, dinner, vegetarian entertaining
Seasonality
All year, especially good in cooler months when spinach is sweet and abundant

What This Recipe Is

Palak Paneer is a vegetarian curry in which spinach is cooked, pureed, and simmered with aromatics, spices, and paneer. The dish is known for its vivid green colour, soft cheese cubes, and mildly spiced, comforting character. It is commonly served with roti, naan, paratha, jeera rice, or plain basmati rice.

Ingredients

  • 300 g fresh spinach leaves, stems trimmed (about 10 oz packed, about 12 cups loosely packed)
  • 200 g paneer, cut into medium cubes (7 oz)
  • 15 ml ghee or neutral oil (1 tbsp)
  • 5 ml ghee, optional for lightly pan-searing paneer (1 tsp)
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds
  • 150 g onion, finely chopped (1 medium, about 1 cup)
  • 10 g ginger, roughly chopped (1 tbsp)
  • 12 g garlic, roughly chopped (4 cloves)
  • 1 to 2 green chillies, chopped
  • 120 g tomato, chopped (1 medium, about 3/4 cup)
  • 1/4 tsp ground turmeric
  • 1/2 tsp Kashmiri chilli powder or mild red chilli powder
  • 1/2 tsp ground coriander
  • 1/4 tsp garam masala
  • 60 ml water, plus more as needed (1/4 cup)
  • 30 ml cream (2 tbsp)
  • 3 g salt, or to taste (1/2 tsp, plus more as needed)
  • 1/2 tsp kasuri methi, crushed, optional
  • 5 ml lemon juice, optional, only if needed for balance (1 tsp)

Equipment

  • Large pot for blanching
  • Bowl of iced water
  • Colander or strainer
  • Blender or immersion blender
  • Frying pan or saute pan
  • Spatula or spoon
  • Knife and chopping board
  • Measuring spoons and cups

Instructions

Step 1:

Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the spinach and blanch for 1 to 2 minutes, just until wilted and bright green.

Step 2:

Drain the spinach immediately and transfer it to iced water for 2 minutes. Drain again well.

Step 3:

Blend the drained spinach with the ginger, garlic, and green chillies into a smooth puree. Add a small splash of water only if needed to help blending.

Step 4:

If the paneer feels firm, soak it in warm water for 10 minutes, then drain. For a lightly seared finish, heat 5 ml (1 tsp) ghee in a pan and gently pan-sear the paneer for 30 to 45 seconds per side. Do not brown heavily. Remove and set aside.

Step 5:

Heat 15 ml (1 tbsp) ghee or oil in a saute pan over medium heat. Add the cumin seeds and let them sizzle for a few seconds.

Step 6:

Add the chopped onion and cook for 6 to 8 minutes until soft and light golden.

Step 7:

Add the chopped tomato, turmeric, Kashmiri chilli powder, and ground coriander. Cook for 4 to 6 minutes, stirring regularly, until the tomato breaks down and the raw smell disappears.

Step 8:

Add 60 ml (1/4 cup) water and cook for 1 minute, scraping up any flavourful bits from the pan.

Step 9:

Add the spinach puree and salt. Stir well and simmer over medium-low heat for 4 to 6 minutes until the gravy thickens slightly and smells rounded rather than raw.

Step 10:

Stir in the cream, garam masala, and crushed kasuri methi if using.

Step 11:

Add the paneer and simmer gently for 2 to 3 minutes until heated through. Do not boil hard.

Step 12:

Taste and adjust salt. Add the lemon juice only if the dish needs a little brightness.

Step 13:

Rest for 5 minutes before serving so the flavours settle.

Visual Cooking Cues

The spinach should stay vibrant green, not olive brown. The onion should be soft and pale golden, not dark brown. The tomato masala should look cohesive rather than watery. The finished gravy should coat a spoon lightly. Paneer should look soft and plump, not tight or dry.

Chef Tips

Use iced water after blanching for the brightest colour. Avoid over-frying paneer; lightly warmed paneer is softer and more pleasant. If the spinach tastes too earthy, add a little extra cream or a few drops of lemon at the end. If you want restaurant-style smoothness, strain the blended puree before simmering.

Common Mistakes

Overcooking the spinach turns the curry dark and dull. Browning the onion too much makes the sauce taste heavier and changes the colour. Boiling paneer in the curry for too long makes it rubbery. Adding too much tomato can overpower the spinach. Skipping enough salt can make the whole dish taste flat.

Troubleshooting

If the curry is bitter, add a little cream and check the salt; bitterness often feels stronger in under-seasoned food. If it is too thick, add a small splash of hot water and simmer briefly. If it is too thin, simmer uncovered for a few minutes over low heat. If the paneer is tough, soak it in hot water before adding and shorten the final simmer.

Ingredient Pairings

  • Flatbreads: Roti, naan, tandoori roti, paratha
  • Rice: Jeera rice, plain basmati rice, peas pulao
  • Cooling sides: Plain yoghurt, cucumber raita
  • Accompaniments: Sliced onion, lemon wedges, pickle in small amounts

Substitutions

  • Paneer: Halloumi is firmer and saltier; extra-firm tofu works for a dairy-free adaptation but changes the identity
  • Cream: Use malai, cashew cream, or a small spoon of yoghurt added carefully off high heat
  • Fresh spinach: Frozen spinach can work; thaw and drain well before blending
  • Ghee: Neutral oil is acceptable
  • Green chilli: Use less for a milder version or omit entirely

Recipe Family Variations

  • Saag Paneer: Uses mixed leafy greens rather than spinach alone, giving a deeper, broader green flavour and a more rustic character.
  • Dhaba Style Palak Paneer: A bolder, more robust version with a heavier masala profile and a slightly smokier, more rustic finish.
  • Restaurant-Style Palak Paneer: Typically smoother, richer, and creamier, with a silkier puree and a more polished gravy texture.

Serving Suggestions

Serve hot with roti or naan for a classic meal. For a fuller spread, pair it with jeera rice, dal, onion salad, and plain yoghurt. It also works well as part of a vegetarian thali.

Dietary Classification

  • Vegetarian: Yes
  • Gluten-Free: Yes, if all packaged ingredients are certified gluten-free
  • Nut-Free: Yes in the base version
  • Low-Carb: Relatively moderate in carbohydrates
  • High-Protein vegetarian dish: Moderately high due to paneer

Nutrition Information

Approximate per serving:

  • Calories: 290 kcal
  • Protein: 13 g
  • Fat: 22 g
  • Carbohydrates: 10 g
  • Fiber: 3 g
  • Sodium: 430 mg

Storage / Reheating

Storage

Cool the curry before refrigerating. Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. For longer storage, freeze for up to 1 month, though the texture of paneer may firm slightly after thawing.

Reheating

Reheat gently over low heat in a pan, adding a splash of water if the gravy has thickened. Avoid vigorous boiling. Microwave reheating also works in short bursts, stirring between intervals to prevent overheating the paneer.

FAQ

Can I use frozen spinach?

Yes. Thaw it fully, squeeze out excess water, and then blend it. The flavour will be slightly less fresh than with just-blanched spinach, but it still works well.

Should I fry the paneer first?

Only lightly if you want a firmer exterior. Heavy frying can make paneer chewy, so many home cooks add it without frying.

Why did my Palak Paneer turn dark?

Usually because the spinach was overcooked, not shocked in cold water, or simmered too long after blending.

Why is my curry bitter?

Spinach can become bitter if overcooked, and under-seasoning can make that bitterness stand out more. Balance it with proper salt, a little cream, and gentle cooking.

Can I make it without onion and garlic?

Yes. The result will be different but still good. Use more ginger and a little extra tomato for body.

Is Palak Paneer the same as Saag Paneer?

Not exactly. Palak Paneer uses spinach specifically, while Saag Paneer usually uses mixed greens.

Why This Recipe Works

Blanching the spinach briefly helps preserve its green colour while reducing raw harshness. Ice-cooling stops carryover cooking and keeps the puree fresh tasting. Cooking the onion-tomato masala well prevents a raw or watery gravy. Paneer is added late so it warms through without toughening. A small amount of cream rounds out the sauce without hiding the spinach.

Recipe Identity

Palak Paneer is best understood as a spinach-based paneer curry from the broader North Indian curry tradition. The defining identity is not just spinach plus paneer, but a smooth or lightly textured spinach masala that coats the paneer and tastes savoury, fresh, and gently creamy.

Dish Classification

  • Dish type: Spinach and paneer curry
  • Course: Main course
  • Meal type: Lunch or dinner
  • Traditional or modern dish: Traditional dish with modern restaurant-style variations
  • Street food or home cooking: Primarily home cooking and restaurant cooking
  • Festival or everyday food: Everyday food that also appears on festive tables

Recipe History

Palak Paneer belongs to the North Indian tradition of leafy green curries and paneer-based gravies. It is especially associated with Punjabi-style cooking and later became a staple of Indian restaurant menus across India and internationally. While spinach-based curries have older roots, the modern widely recognised form of Palak Paneer reflects the popularity of paneer in North Indian home and dhaba-style cooking.

Cultural Notes

Palak Paneer is one of the most widely recognised vegetarian dishes from North Indian cuisine. Home versions are often lighter and more spinach-forward, while restaurant versions tend to be richer and smoother. Some cooks prefer a coarse puree, while others prefer a fully blended, velvety gravy.

Advanced Cooking Knowledge Open detailed cooking science and reference notes

Flavor, Texture, and Aroma Profile

Palak Paneer has a fresh, earthy spinach base with soft dairy richness from paneer. The texture should be silky or gently coarse depending on preference, while the paneer should remain tender rather than rubbery. The aroma comes from ghee, cumin, ginger, garlic, green chilli, and finishing spices.

Flavor Balance

The best version balances the natural minerality of spinach with sweetness from cooked onion, acidity from tomato, warmth from spices, and richness from paneer and cream. The dish should not taste overly bitter, overly garlicky, or flat.

Flavor Components

  • Sweet: Mild natural sweetness from onion and cream
  • Salt: Essential for opening up the spinach flavour
  • Acid: Tomato and a small finishing squeeze of lemon if needed
  • Bitter: Gentle spinach bitterness, controlled not dominant
  • Umami: Developed through onion, tomato, ginger, garlic, and slow sauteing
  • Aromatic elements: Cumin, ginger, garlic, green chilli, garam masala, kasuri methi if used

Ingredient Notes

Spinach should be fresh and deep green. Baby spinach gives a milder result, while mature spinach gives a more traditional earthy taste. Paneer should be firm but tender; very hard paneer benefits from soaking in warm water for 10 minutes. Tomato should add balance, not dominate. Cream is optional for a lighter finish, but a small amount improves mouthfeel.

Ingredient Science

Spinach contains chlorophyll, which stays brighter when cooked briefly and cooled quickly. Overcooking dulls the colour and deepens bitterness. Paneer is a fresh acid-set cheese that does not melt, so it holds shape in curry but can turn chewy if fried too hard or simmered too long. Onion and tomato create the body of the masala, while fat helps carry the aromatic compounds from cumin, ginger, garlic, and garam masala.

Ingredient Roles

  • Spinach: Main flavour base, colour, body
  • Paneer: Protein, richness, soft contrast
  • Onion: Sweetness and savoury backbone
  • Tomato: Acidity and balance
  • Ginger and garlic: Warmth and depth
  • Green chilli: Fresh heat
  • Cumin seeds: Nutty aromatic opening note
  • Cream: Softens edges and adds smoothness
  • Garam masala: Final aromatic lift
  • Ghee or oil: Carries flavour and supports sauteing

Ingredient Classification

  • Primary vegetable: Spinach
  • Primary dairy ingredient: Paneer
  • Aromatics: Onion, ginger, garlic, green chilli
  • Spices: Cumin, turmeric, chilli powder, coriander, garam masala
  • Fat: Ghee or oil
  • Finishing ingredients: Cream, kasuri methi, lemon juice

Preparation Techniques

Wash the spinach thoroughly to remove grit. Blanch only until wilted, then chill immediately. Chop onions evenly for consistent sauteing. Cut paneer into medium cubes so it stays intact in the curry. Crush kasuri methi between your palms before adding to release its aroma.

Cooking Techniques

The recipe uses blanching, pureeing, sauteing, reduction, and gentle simmering. The spinach is handled separately to protect colour and flavour. The masala is cooked until the raw smell fades and the fat begins to separate lightly. Paneer is folded in near the end.

Heat Management

Low heat stages

Use low heat when finishing the gravy after adding cream and paneer. This prevents splitting, scorching, and over-firm paneer.

Medium heat stages

Use medium heat for cooking the onion-tomato masala. This gives enough energy for browning and moisture reduction without burning the aromatics.

High heat stages

Use high heat only for bringing blanching water to a boil and briefly blanching the spinach.

Temperature cues

  • Blanching water should be at a full boil before spinach goes in
  • Onion masala should sizzle steadily, not smoke
  • The finished curry should simmer gently, not boil hard
  • If the pan spits aggressively after adding spinach puree, lower the heat immediately

Texture Development

A silky Palak Paneer comes from smooth spinach puree and properly cooked masala. For a more rustic version, blend the spinach less. The paneer should be warmed through and coated, not deeply fried or boiled for long. Over-reduction makes the dish pasty; too much water makes it thin and separated.

Cooking Time Control

Brief blanching keeps the spinach fresh. Saute the onions until soft and lightly golden, not deeply browned, or the gravy can turn muddy in colour. Simmer the puree only long enough to marry the flavours, usually 4 to 6 minutes before paneer goes in and 2 to 3 minutes after.

Flavor Pairing Logic

Palak Paneer pairs well with mild breads and rice because they absorb the creamy spinach gravy without competing with it. Acidic sides should stay restrained. Strong smoky or very sour accompaniments can dominate the delicate spinach-paneer balance.

Leftover Ideas

Use leftovers as a filling for wraps with flatbread. Spoon it over cooked rice for a quick bowl meal. Blend leftover gravy separately and use it as a sauce base for lightly cooked vegetables, then add the paneer back in at the end.

Cooking Safety Notes

Wash spinach thoroughly because grit often hides in the leaves. Do not leave cooked dairy-based curry at room temperature for extended periods. Reheat only the portion you plan to eat. If using homemade paneer, ensure it has been stored safely under refrigeration.

Sustainability Notes

Spinach is a relatively accessible leafy green and can be bought seasonally for better value and freshness. Use mature spinach stems for stock or blended soups instead of discarding them. Homemade paneer can reduce packaging waste if prepared efficiently.

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