One-Pan Chicken Curry With Jeera Rice and Cucumber Raita: Food for Dinner Indian, Made Practical

July 11, 2026 | Eat Drink Asia Team | Last Updated July 12, 2026
Chicken curry over fluffy jeera rice with fresh cucumber salad and lime

The first time we cooked a full Indian dinner on a weeknight, the curry, rice, and raita felt like three separate tasks—three pans, three timers, and a kitchen full of wonderful smells but chaos. The curry was good, the rice sticky, and the raita watery from being made too early.

That night taught us a key lesson: an Indian dinner is one coordinated system. The curry brings warmth and spice, the jeera rice offers a fragrant base, and the cucumber raita cools and balances the meal, much like Japanese curry featured on Eat Drink Asia.

Once we treated it as a single dinner with a clear workflow, everything became easier. Now, we can have this meal ready in 45 to 60 minutes, even after a long day. Here’s how we do it, including mistakes to avoid.

What You’ll Need for Food for Dinner Indian: Chicken Curry, Jeera Rice, and Raita

Fresh ingredients for one-pan chicken curry with jeera rice and cucumber raita

Before you turn on the stove, gather everything. Many indian recipes move quickly once indian spices hit hot oil, and you do not want to be chopping onions while your garlic starts to burn.

This meal has three parts: a mildly spiced chicken curry, fluffy jeera rice, and cool cucumber raita. Together, they make the kind of food for dinner indian home cooks need on busy nights — practical, fragrant, and deeply comforting.

For the Chicken Curry

  • 500g boneless chicken thigh, cut into bite-sized pieces
  • 2 tablespoons oil or ghee
  • 2 medium onions, finely chopped
  • 1 tablespoon ginger, grated
  • 1 tablespoon garlic, minced
  • 2 medium tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 teaspoon cumin powder
  • 1 teaspoon coriander powder
  • ½ teaspoon turmeric
  • ½ to 1 teaspoon chilli powder
  • 1 teaspoon garam masala
  • Salt to taste
  • Fresh coriander
  • Around 150ml water or stock

This is not as rich as butter chicken, paneer butter masala, or dal makhani, which rely more on dairy, butter, or slow cooking. It is closer to a practical home-style indian curry — aromatic, balanced, and achievable for weeknight dinners.

For the Jeera Rice

Jeera rice ingredients with basmati rice, cumin seeds, butter and cardamom
  • 1.5 cups basmati rice
  • 1 tablespoon ghee or oil
  • 1 teaspoon cumin seeds
  • 3 cups water
  • Salt to taste

Among Indian rice dishes, jeera rice is one of the most useful. It is simpler than ghee rice or coconut rice, but still fragrant enough to make plain white rice feel special.

For the Cucumber Raita

Cucumber raita ingredients with yogurt, cucumber, mint and spices
  • 1 cup plain yogurt
  • 1 small cucumber, grated
  • ¼ teaspoon roasted cumin powder
  • Salt to taste
  • Chopped coriander or mint

The raita cools the meal down. Its tangy creaminess softens the heat of the curry sauce, turning the plate into a balanced comforting meal rather than something heavy.

In Singapore, sourcing these pantry staples is easy. FairPrice and Cold Storage cover the basics, while Mustafa Centre, Tekka Market, and Little India shops are excellent for ground spices, fresh curry leaves, toor dal, urad dal, chana dal, and sambar powder.

Insider tip: Buy spices in smaller quantities. Fresh cumin, turmeric, chilli powder, and garam masala smell warm and alive. Stale spice powder is the quiet reason many home curries taste flat.

The 45–60 Minute Indian Dinner Workflow

The rhythm is simple: start the curry first, cook the rice while it simmers, then make the raita last.

Time

Task

0:00

Rinse and soak the rice. Chop onion, tomato, chicken, cucumber, and herbs.

0:10

Start the curry sauce with oil, onion, ginger, garlic, and spices.

0:20

Add tomato and cook into a thick, golden brown masala.

0:25

Add chicken and simmer until tender.

0:30

Start the jeera rice in a pot, rice cooker, pressure cooker, or Instant Pot.

0:40

Make cucumber raita.

0:50

Rest the rice, adjust the curry, garnish, and serve.

This sequence keeps the meal calm. The curry takes the longest, the rice cooks quietly, and the raita stays fresh because it comes together at the end.

Step One: Prep the Rice First

Rinse 1.5 cups of basmati rice until the water runs mostly clear, then soak it for about 20 minutes. This removes excess starch and helps the grains cook long, separate, and fluffy.

Skipping this step is the easiest way to end up with mushy rice. Done properly, jeera rice holds the curry beautifully without turning sticky.

For a shortcut, toast cumin seeds in ghee, then add them to rinsed rice with water and salt in a rice cooker or Instant Pot. It gives you restaurant style jeera rice with minimal effort — a genuinely easy recipe technique worth keeping.

Step Two: Build the Chicken Curry Sauce

Heat oil or ghee in a wide pan over medium flame. Add onions and cook patiently until softened and turning golden brown. This slow caramelisation builds sweetness and gives the curry its base.

Add ginger and garlic, then stir in cumin, coriander, turmeric, chilli powder, and garam masala. Let the aromatic spices bloom in fat for about 30 seconds. This matters because spices need oil and heat to release their full fragrance.

Add tomatoes and cook until they collapse into a thick masala. The sharp tomato smell should soften into something rounder and richer.

Add the chicken, coat it well, then pour in water or stock. Simmer until the chicken is tender and the sauce clings to each bite. Finish with fresh coriander and a little more garam masala.

You’ll know it is ready when the oil lightly separates at the edges and the sauce smells cooked, not raw. The result should be mildly spiced, super flavorful, and satisfying — lighter than a rich north indian curry, but still full enough for indian dinner.

Step Three: Cook the Jeera Rice

Fluffy homemade jeera rice garnished with cumin seeds and fresh cilantro

Drain the soaked rice. Heat ghee in a pot, add cumin seeds, and let them sizzle until fragrant. Add the rice and stir gently so the grains are coated in the cumin-scented fat.

Pour in water, add salt, bring to a boil, then cover and lower the heat. Let it cook undisturbed. Once done, rest for 5–10 minutes before fluffing with a fork.

Serve the curry with hot rice, or spoon it alongside the jeera rice so everyone can mix their own plate. The cumin aroma makes the whole meal feel like a warm hug after a long day.

Step Four: Make the Cucumber Raita Last

Grate the cucumber and squeeze out excess liquid if needed. Mix it into yogurt with roasted cumin powder, salt, and chopped coriander or mint.

Make this last. If cucumber sits too long in yogurt, it releases water and turns the raita thin. Fresh raita should be creamy, cool, and gently tangy — the quiet counterpoint to the warmth of the curry.

Build a Bigger Indian Dinner Menu

Once you master chicken curry and jeera rice, the same pantry can lead you into amazing recipes across north indian and south indian cooking.

For vegetarian recipes, try creamy palak paneer, matar paneer, butter paneer, paneer butter masala, chana masala, or rajma made with kidney beans. These indian dishes show how legumes, dairy, and spices can create a delicious dish without meat.

For south indian recipes, add coconut chutney, curd rice, or sambar made with toor dal, curry leaves, and sambar powder. A popular south indian breakfast like dosa with potato masala can also become a light dinner when served with chutney and dal. Many of these options are naturally vegan or gluten free, depending on the ingredients used.

If you want something outside traditional Indian food, hakka noodles or Indian-style fried rice can work well with leftover vegetables and spices. These quick dinner recipes borrow from other cuisine influences while still feeling familiar to many indian restaurants.

Why This Recipe Works for Weeknight Dinners

One-pan chicken curry with jeera rice and cucumber raita served in a bowl

The strength of this meal is flexibility. It does not ask you to master all the recipes in the whole world of Indian cooking. It teaches a reliable base: onions, tomatoes, fat, spice, rice, and patience.

From there, you can build. Add coconut milk for a softer curry, use chicken tikka for a smokier version, or make a one pot variation when time is tight. You can even review recipe notes after each cook: more chilli next time, less water, longer onion browning, extra garam masala at the end.

That is how a great recipe becomes your own. The goal is not perfection. It is a delicious home dinner that tastes delicious, feels balanced, and gives you confidence to cook more Indian food at home, much like the relaxed yet refined experience you find at an izakaya Singapore.

A Few Honest Final Thoughts

This dinner is forgiving once you get its rhythm. The first time, you might feel behind; by the third, it’s second nature, and delivery seems unnecessary.

Remember this: cook the base well. Patiently soften onions, ginger, garlic, bloom the spices, and cook tomatoes until no rawness remains. Get this right, and the rest falls into place.

Treat it as one system, not three recipes, and you’ll have a satisfying Indian dinner in under an hour. Try it, adjust spices to taste, and make it your own. You’ll be proud of the result.

Posted in
  • In Luang Prabang, Or Lam Carries the Taste of Sakhan

    Eda Wong | June 12, 2026

    The damp morning mist still clings to the teakwood houses of Luang Prabang as an elderly cook tends to a glowing charcoal brazier. Sparks jump lightly into the cool air, illuminating the blackened belly of an aluminium pot. Inside, a thick, dark liquid bubbles rhythmically, releasing an incredibly aromatic cloud of charred lemongrass, sweet Thai…

  • The Malayan Council, Reviewed: Local Food in Malaysia, Plated Like a Memory

    Eat Drink Asia Team | June 11, 2026

    Our Eat Drink Asia team spends a lot of time debating what makes a truly unforgettable meal. The team has previously published articles exploring the redefinition of comfort food. That is exactly what led me to The Malayan Council at 71 Bussorah Street. I visited on a Friday around 7:30 pm, just as the weekend…

  • Sushi in Singapore: Why There Is a Style for Every Budget

    Eda Wong | June 11, 2026

    Few Japanese dishes have travelled as successfully across Asia as sushi. What began as a culinary tradition deeply rooted in Japan has evolved into something remarkably diverse in Singapore. Today, sushi in Singapore can mean many different things. It can be a quick lunch grabbed from a conveyor belt restaurant, a carefully curated omakase meal…

  • The Quiet Pull of Lahpet in Myanmar’s Tea Leaf Salad

    Dio Asahi | June 10, 2026

    The afternoon humidity presses against the open-air teahouse in downtown Yangon, where the sharp clatter of a silver spoon against ceramic cuts through the low hum of conversation. A small plate sits in the centre of a low plastic table, holding a dense, dark green cluster that smells faintly of damp earth and sharp lime….

  • Dining at Suntec: The Restaurants That Feel Like Different Cities in One Mall

    Eda Wong | June 9, 2026

    Over the past six months, I’ve navigated the sprawling, sometimes disorientating corridors of Suntec City more times than I can count. What started as a simple quest to find decent spots for post-meeting lunches quickly turned into a genuine culinary journey. I have tried over a dozen venues within this massive complex, and I’ve found…

  • PappaRich SG and the Comfort of Malaysian Staple Food: A Restaurant Review in Familiar Flavours

    Dio Asahi | June 6, 2026

    There is a very specific kind of exhaustion that hits you right before a flight or just after you land. You are dragging your suitcase, staring blankly at the departure boards, and suddenly, you realize you are starving. But you don’t want just any food. You want something warm, familiar, and deeply comforting. I felt…

  • Sri Lanka’s Ambul Thiyal and the Sourness of Goraka

    Eda Wong | June 5, 2026

    In the open-air kitchen of a coastal home in southern Sri Lanka, a low fire crackles under a wide, unglazed clay pot. The air is thick with the scent of roasted black pepper and something deeply, aggressively tart. A wooden spoon scrapes the bottom of the pot, turning cubes of firm yellowfin tuna until they…

  • Traditional Malaysian Foods Aren’t a Museum: They’re a Living Argument at the Table

    Eda Wong | June 4, 2026

    When I first really started digging into traditional Malaysian food, I made a classic rookie mistake. I was sitting at a crowded kopitiam in Kuala Lumpur, looking at a plate of nasi lemak, and I thought I understood exactly what it was supposed to be. I thought it was a fixed, rigid recipe, a museum…

  • In Gifu, Hoba Miso Warms Slowly Over Magnolia Leaves

    Dio Asahi | June 3, 2026

    Frost clings to the wooden window frames in the highlands of Gifu. Inside, the air is thick with the scent of woodsmoke and fermented soybeans. On the table, a small ceramic charcoal grill known as a shichirin radiates a gentle, localized heat. Resting directly above the glowing embers is a large, brittle brown leaf holding…

  • The Stir Fried Egg Plant That Taught Me Restraint at Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant

    Eat Drink Asia Team | June 2, 2026

    I’ve always had a love-hate relationship with Sichuan food. Usually, you walk into a spot, order your food, and spend the rest of the night sweating through your shirt, chugging ice water, and wondering why you did this to yourself. But when I visited Si Chuan Dou Hua Restaurant on a Tuesday around 7 pm,…