This is my take on a classic shrimp aglio e olio — rooted in Italian technique, with subtle flavours from Nepal layered in with restraint.
Aglio e olio is one of those dishes that looks simple on paper, but completely depends on technique, timing, and balance. Olive oil, garlic, pasta water — nothing to hide behind. That’s exactly why I love it.
Instead of regular chili flakes, I use dalle khursani to bring a clean, gentle heat from the Himalayas of Nepal, while keeping the soul of the dish unmistakably Italian. Timur (Nepal’s mountain pepper) steps in where black pepper usually sits, adding citrusy, lightly numbing aromatics without changing the structure of the dish. And at the very end, just a few drops of mustard oil — smoky, pungent, fleeting — added purely for aroma, not dominance.
This is my first Italian dish on the channel, and it’s special to me. I’ve worked in Italian restaurants for years, and Italian cuisine is one of my favourite culinary worlds — right after Nepali food. This plate is my way of showing respect to both: letting technique stay classic, and flavours speak softly.
At the end of the day, this dish is about balance.
Not fusion for shock value — just two cuisines I love, sitting comfortably on the same plate.
If you enjoyed this video, let me know in the comments:
👉 Where do you draw the line between fusion and restraint?
🧾 What’s in the dish
• Spaghetti
• Olive oil
• Garlic
• Shrimp (shell-on for colour & aroma)
• Dalle khursani
• Cherry tomatoes
• Pasta water
• Timur (Nepalese Sichuan pepper)
• Basil & parsley
• Mustard oil (aroma finish)
🔔 If you’re new here
I share food rooted in technique, culture, and quiet storytelling — often inspired by Nepali flavours, with respect for the cuisines they touch.
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