Cauliflower manchurian
- Published: 8 May 25
- Updated: 26 May 25
Learn how to make perfectly crispy cauliflower Manchurian (gobi Manchurian) with this recipe from London Indo-Chinese restaurant group Fatt Pundit.
- Authentic flavours: Supposedly invented in the 1970s by a Chinese chef working in Mumbai, Manchurian is a classic example of Indo-Chinese food – soy sauce used with garlic, chilli and ginger. It’s often made with chicken, but cauliflower is popular too.
- Vegan starter: With just 12 minutes cooking time, this crispy cauliflower makes the perfect easy, budget-friendly vegan starter. Try it as part of a vegan fakeaway spread.
- Scale it up: You can easily double this recipe – cook the cauliflower in batches so you don’t overcrowd the wok (it gets reheated when it’s returned to the wok later anyway).
Try Fatt Pundit’s lollipop chicken next.
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Serves 2 as a starter or side -
Prep time 10 min. Cook time 12 min
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Recipe from April 2025 Issue
Nutrition
Nutrition: per serving
- Calories
- 465kcals
- Fat
- 14g (1.1g saturated)
- Protein
- 6.5g
- Carbohydrates
- 77g (6.3g sugars)
- Fibre
- 3.5g
- Salt
- 2.9g
delicious. tips
Not to be confused with the former Southeast Asian region known as Indochina, Indo-Chinese food is a unique fusion of Indian and Chinese cooking techniques and flavours. It came about via Chinese immigrants who settled in Kolkata when it was under British rule (and known as Calcutta). Many started restaurants, with the Chinese chefs including the local vegetables and spices in their cooking. It quickly spread throughout the country and evolved into a sort of Indian version of the UK’s Chinese takeaways.
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