Beef Shina 1kg (Fresh)
¥1675
| Country | Bangladeshi |
|---|
Zaman Halal Food’s fresh beef shina is a premium delicacy from the shank region, celebrated for its rich, robust flavor and unique gelatinous texture. Perfect for slow-cooked masterpieces, it’s the heart of traditional culinary delights.

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100% Halal
100% Halal
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Beef Shina 1kg (Fresh)
Premium fresh beef shina for authentic traditional cooking. This 1kg pack of high-quality beef shina delivers the authentic taste and texture essential for South Asian and Middle Eastern cuisines. Perfect for rich curries, hearty stews, and grilled preparations that demand bold flavors and satisfying substance.
What is Beef Shina?
Beef shina, also known as beef shin or shank, comes from the lower leg portion of the cow. This well-exercised muscle contains generous marbling of connective tissue and a central marrow bone that releases incredible flavor and natural gelatin during slow cooking.
Popular in Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi, and Middle Eastern kitchens, shina transforms into melt-in-your-mouth tender meat when prepared with patience and proper technique.
Key Features & Benefits
Fresh, Never Frozen Quality — Maintains natural texture, moisture, and full flavor integrity from butcher to your kitchen
Bone-In for Maximum Flavor — Marrow-rich center bone adds depth, richness, and body to broths and gravies
Generous 1kg Portion — Perfect for family meals, special occasions, or traditional feast preparations
Rich in Natural Collagen — Breaks down during cooking to create silky, luxurious sauce consistency
Intensely Flavorful Cut — Delivers robust, beefy taste that stands up to bold spices and aromatics
Excellent Value — Economical cut that yields restaurant-quality results when cooked properly
Nutritional Benefits
Beef shina provides high-quality protein essential for muscle maintenance and tissue repair. It's naturally rich in iron for healthy blood production, zinc for immune support, and B vitamins that fuel energy metabolism.
The bone marrow contains healthy fats, fat-soluble vitamins, and minerals. When slow-cooked, the released collagen may support joint health, gut lining integrity, and skin elasticity.
Popular Traditional Dishes
Beloved recipes featuring beef shina:
Nihari — Legendary Pakistani slow-cooked curry with aromatic spices, traditionally enjoyed for breakfast
Paya — Rich, gelatinous stew where shina creates thick, flavorful gravy perfect with naan
Haleem — Hearty lentil and wheat porridge with shredded shina, a Ramadan favorite
Shina Korma — Creamy, yogurt-based curry with cashews, saffron, and warming spices
Middle Eastern Maraq — Fragrant soup with vegetables, turmeric, and tender shank meat
Pressure Cooker Curry — Modern quick-cook method that still delivers fall-apart tenderness
Signature quality: Properly cooked shina becomes so tender the meat literally falls off the bone with the gentlest touch.
How to Prepare Beef Shina
Step-by-step cooking guidance:
Clean and prepare — Rinse under cold water and pat dry; trim excess fat if desired
Sear for depth — Brown pieces on all sides in hot oil to develop rich, caramelized flavors
Build your base — Sauté onions, garlic, ginger, and whole spices until fragrant
Low and slow cooking — Simmer in liquid for 2.5-3 hours until meat is fork-tender, or pressure cook for 45-60 minutes
Rest before serving — Let the dish sit for 10-15 minutes so flavors can settle and marry
Pro tip: Cooking shina a day ahead allows flavors to deepen overnight, making it taste even better when reheated.
Why This Cut Deserves Your Attention
While beef shina requires patience, the results are absolutely worth the wait. The transformation from tough, sinewy meat to tender, succulent perfection is nothing short of magical.
The bone marrow enriches the cooking liquid with unctuousness that boneless cuts simply cannot provide. This is the cut that grandmothers use for their most celebrated dishes — the ones that make everyone ask for seconds.
Cooking Methods & Techniques
Traditional stovetop: Low heat, covered pot, checking occasionally for 2.5-3 hours until tender.
Pressure cooker: High pressure for 45-60 minutes, then natural release for fall-off-the-bone results in a fraction of the time.
Slow cooker: Set on low for 6-8 hours for hands-off convenience that fills your home with mouthwatering aromas.
Flavor builders: Shina pairs beautifully with garam masala, cumin, coriander, black cardamom, cinnamon, star anise, fresh ginger, and fried onions.
Cultural & Culinary Significance
In South Asian communities, beef shina dishes represent celebration and hospitality. Nihari is the breakfast of champions, traditionally served at weddings and special gatherings. Paya is comfort food for cold winter nights when families gather around steaming bowls. These aren't everyday meals — they're the dishes reserved for when you want to show love through cooking.
Perfect For
Traditional Pakistani, Indian, and Bangladeshi curries and stews
Middle Eastern soups and braised preparations
Special occasion meals and family celebrations
Meal preppers seeking make-ahead comfort food
Cold weather cooking when you crave warming, substantial dishes
Restaurants specializing in authentic South Asian cuisine
Bone broth enthusiasts seeking flavor-rich marrow bones
Storage & Planning
Refrigeration: Store at 0-4°C and use within 2-3 days of purchase for optimal freshness.
Freezing: Wrap tightly in portions and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in refrigerator before cooking.
Time management: Since shina requires extended cooking, plan accordingly. Many cooks prepare it on weekends when they can monitor the pot leisurely, or use a pressure cooker for weeknight convenience.
The Secret to Perfect Shina
The key to exceptional beef shina lies in not rushing the process. The connective tissue needs time to break down, the marrow needs heat to release its richness, and the spices need hours to penetrate deeply. When you see the meat pulling away from the bone and the gravy thickening into glossy perfection, you'll know you've achieved success.
Why Fresh Makes a Difference
Fresh beef shina maintains its natural moisture and structure better than frozen alternatives. The meat responds better to marinades, browns more effectively, and develops superior texture during cooking. For dishes where shina is the star ingredient, starting with fresh quality ensures your final result matches authentic traditional standards.
When you choose this fresh beef shina, you're selecting an ingredient that has anchored beloved family recipes for generations. Each piece represents the potential for meals that create memories — the kind of cooking that makes your home smell amazing and brings everyone eagerly to the table.













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