Mutton Nalli: The Cut Your Local Butcher Never Has

  • May 26, 2026
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There’s a reason Nalli Nihari has its own cult following.

It’s not the spices — those are achievable in most good gravies. It’s the cut. Mutton nalli, also called marrow bones or shank, is the one cut that transforms a dish from very good to deeply, bone-shakingly great. And most home cooks have never worked with it.

Here’s everything you need to know.

WHAT IS MUTTON NALLI?

Nalli refers to the shank of the goat — specifically the lower leg, where the bone runs through a cylinder of meat. Inside that bone is the real prize: bone marrow. When slow-cooked, the marrow turns into a rich, gelatinous liquid that dissolves into the gravy and creates a body and depth that no amount of butter or cream can replicate.

The meat around the bone is also tightly grained and collagen-rich. This collagen, when cooked slowly, breaks down into gelatin — which is what gives nalli curries their characteristic thick, almost sticky consistency.

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WHY DON’T MORE PEOPLE COOK IT AT HOME?

Two reasons. One: it’s rarely available at local butchers, who typically sell curry cut as a catch-all. Two: the reputation for being difficult to cook. Neither is entirely fair.

Yes, nalli takes time. You’re not cooking this on a Tuesday night with 30 minutes to spare. But the technique is not complicated — it just requires patience and the right heat.

If you can get fresh, properly cleaned nalli delivered to your door, half the challenge is already solved.

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HOW TO COOK MUTTON NALLI AT HOME

The method is simple: low heat, long time, and a good seal on your pot.

Sear the nalli pieces in hot oil until browned on all sides. This builds the flavour base. Then build your gravy — fried onions, whole spices, ginger-garlic paste, tomatoes — and nestle the nalli pieces in. Add enough water to cover halfway, lid on, and cook on a low flame for 90 minutes to 2 hours.

Check occasionally. The meat should be pulling away from the bone, and the marrow should be visible and soft inside. A final 10 minutes uncovered reduces the gravy to the right consistency.

Serve with sheermal, naan, or steamed rice. The marrow is best eaten directly from the bone with a thin spoon — don’t leave it behind.

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WHAT MAKES THE CUT WORTH SEEKING OUT

Nalli isn’t just a flavour upgrade — it’s a different category of eating. Dishes made with marrow bones have a richness that’s almost impossible to replicate with any other ingredient. Once you’ve had a proper nalli curry, the absence of marrow in a regular mutton dish becomes noticeable.

It’s also one of the cuts where quality sourcing makes a visible difference. Properly cleaned, fresh nalli cooks predictably and delivers that marrow intact. Old or poorly handled cuts lose the marrow before it even reaches your pot.

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