This is a fragrant, golden Saffron Rice Bake that’s stuffed with a layer of baharat spiced meat. It’s big (serves 10), easy to assemble and will make your kitchen smell incredible. I’ve been describing it to people as a Middle Eastern rice lasagna. I know, I know, I’m so basic! 😂

Golden Saffron Rice Bake with Baharat Spiced Meat
If you love Middle Eastern flavours, you’re going to adore today’s recipe! It’s an easy Thursday-night version of the famous Persian dish Tachin, where saffron rice is layered with spiced meat or vegetables, baked, then inverted to reveal a crispy golden base.
We’re skipping the flip (it’s always a bit nerve wracking), baking it in a big pan instead of a fiddling with a pie dish, and taking an express pass to flavour by using baharat (Lebanese 7-spice) for the meat filling, a store bought spice blend that packs a flavour punch (or make it yourself with pantry spices!)
Out of the oven you get a crispy top you’ll want to peel off immediately, bright yellow fragrant rice that’s delicious on its own, and a juicy warmly spiced meat filling that smells incredible.
Enticed?? 😉


Ingredients for Golden Saffron Rice Bake
Here’s what you need to make this big layered rice bake. There’s 3 parts – the Saffron Rice, the spiced meat filling and a yogurt sauce (essential!).
1. For the saffron rice
The rice gets its vibrant yellow colour from saffron, moistness from yogurt and olive oil, and is held together by eggs. Basmati is the traditional rice used for Tachin, and though long grain rice will work, you will miss the subtle fragrant smell of basmati rice.

Saffron – The world’s most expensive spice by weight is what gives the rice that gorgeous bright yellow colour! Sold widely these days in the spice section of regular grocery stores, it adds a uniquely delicate earthy floral flavour using just a small amount – we only use 1/2 teaspoon.
Substitute – If real saffron is out of reach, feel free to use imitation saffron powder which will give the rice a similar bright yellow flavour. However, it doesn’t add flavour so to compensate, I would add some melted butter into the rice (around 50g / 3 tablespoons).
Basmati rice – As noted above, basmati rice is traditional for Persian dishes though you can substitute with long grain rice. Jasmine, medium grain and short grain rice (like sushi rice) doesn’t work as well as they are softer. I found they got a little too mushy for my taste once baked long enough to make the surface crispy.
Yogurt – Use any plain unsweetened yogurt. Full fat is best, though if you only have low fat you can add a little extra olive oil to compensate.
Olive oil – This is what keeps the rice layer from drying out. So don’t skimp on it! In fact, feel free to add extra. 🙂
Eggs keep the rice layer from falling apart when you cut it. Use large eggs, around 55g/2oz each sol in cartons labelled “large eggs” (see here for more on egg sizes for cooking – it’s a thing!).
Salt – We use some for par boiling as well as mixing some into the rice.
2. spiced filling
I love making this with lamb which is used widely in Middle Eastern cooking and goes so beautifully with Arabic spices. However, I’ve also made this with beef and let’s just say plates were scraped clean. 🙂

Lamb or beef – As noted above, I especially love this with lamb but it is equally as good with beef. It can also be made with chicken or turkey though the filling may be a little drier as they are leaner.
Eggplant – I added this for two reasons: to increase the volume of filling so you have a thick distinct layer between the golden rice (rather than using quite a bit of extra meat), and to make the filling a bit juicy (eggplant are like sponges!). You could substitute with another vegetable that is juicy when cooked – zucchini and cauliflower come to mind.
Baharat – The key spice, an express pass to serious flavour in the lamb filling! Baharat is a Middle Eastern spice blend, made with warm spices like all spices, cinnamon and cumin. You can find it at some large grocery stores (I get mine from Harris Farms, I’m in Sydney), Arabic stores or make your own – Baharat recipe here (just uses common pantry spices!).
Cumin powder – Extra flavour boost, rounds out the Baharat flavour (using only Baharat was missing a little something, I felt).
Tomato paste – This kind of binds the mixture together, as well as adding a bit of flavour. Without, it’s a bit too crumbly.
Pine nuts – For sprinkling across the surface. It’s used widely in Middle Eastern cooking and I’m very happy about that because I adore pine nuts!! Substitute with slivered almonds or almond flakes.
Garlic and onion – Essential flavour bases!
Salt – I use cooking salt (kosher salt is the equivalent in the States). If you’ve only got table salt, halve the amount. For salt flakes, increase by 50%.


3. LEMON YOGURT SAUCE
You will want a good amount of yogurt sauce to serve with this. Not only does it add moisture but also the cooling tang of yogurt just finishes it off perfectly! Use my Lemon Yogurt Sauce – it’s my most used sauce for good reason – it’s a cinch to make, I always have what I need, and it goes with “everything”.
But honestly even just plain yogurt would suffice because there’s so much flavour in the dish already. 🙂

How to make Layered Golden Saffron Rice Bake
Here’s my workflow: get the lamb mixture started first then while it’s simmering, you can make the saffron rice. Both will be finished around the same time, ready to assemble your rice bake!
1. The baharat spiced meat filling
Use a large 30cm / 12″ pan here, we’re making quite a bit of filling!

Cook lamb – Sauté the onion and garlic first, then cook the lamb, breaking it up as you go.
Spices and eggplant – Once you no longer see red, add the spices (baharat, cumin and salt) and cook it for 1 minute to toast the spices which will enhance the flavour. Stir the tomato paste then the eggplant. Stir until all the eggplant cubes are coated in the flavours (ie you no longer see any white surface).

Simmer – Add the water then lower the heat slightly so it’s simmering energetically but not rapidly. Cook for 8 minutes, stirring regularly so the base doesn’t catch, until the eggplant is mostly cooked (it will cook more in the oven) and the water has mostly evaporated.
Thickness of filling – We want the filling to still be juicy but not so watery that it will stain the base layer of yellow rice. It should be thick enough that you can draw a path along the base of the pan. Once done, turn the stove off. The filling can be used hot or cool.
2. MAKE THE SAFFRON RICE
The step to grind the saffron threads into powder is to release more flavour and colour – remember, this is the world’s most expensive spice! If you don’t have a mortar and pestle, you can grind in a bowl using the back of a spoon, or if that doesn’t work (it depends how brittle the saffron is), just soak the whole threads.

Grind saffron with a mortar and pestle until it is mostly a powder.
Saffron water – Add boiling water into the mortar to dissolve the saffron powder.

Saffron yogurt mixture – Pour the saffron water into a bowl with the yogurt, olive oil, eggs and salt. Whisk until combined. It will be pale yellow at this stage – have faith! It becomes a vibrant yellow once baked.
Par boil rice – Bring a large pot of salted water to the boil. Add the rice and boil for just 5 minutes, then drain in a colander. The rice will finish cooking in the oven – it absorbs the liquid from the yogurt mixture.

Mix the rice with the yogurt mixture.
Yellow rice, ready to use!
3. assembling and baking
Don’t forget to use the pine nuts! I can’t tell you how many times I forgot. 🤯😂

Rice base – Spread half the rice in a 23 x 33cm pan (9 x 13″), or around that size. It can be metal, glass, ceramic – any material.
Lamb layer – Then spread all the lamb mixture on top and sprinkle with pine nuts.

Rice topping – Dollop the remaining rice across the surface then spread across the lamb.
Bake 50 minutes – Drizzle with oil (this helps the top go crispy). Bake for 50 minutes in a moderately hot oven – 200°C/400°F (180°C fan-forced).

Baked! It’s ready when the surface is quite crispy, with the edges a lovely golden colour.
Cutting – Let it rest for 10 minutes so it “sets” a bit so the pieces will hold together better. Then cut like lasagna and serve like lasagna! (NOW do you see why I’ve been describing it as an Middle Eastern Lasagna?? 😂)


How to serve this
As I mentioned above, don’t skip the Lemon Yogurt Sauce for serving, it really benefits from a sauce and the cool tang of yogurt goes with the flavours in this dish 1000% perfectly. You’ll want a good amount too, about 1/4 to 1/3 cup per slice (depending how large your slice is).
If you get to serving time and realise you forgot to make the sauce, even just plain yogurt will be fine.
Hope you enjoy! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Layered Golden Rice Bake with Spiced Meat
Ingredients
Persian spiced meat filling:
- 1 1/2 tbsp olive oil
- 4 garlic cloves , finely minced
- 1 onion , finely diced
- 750g / 1 1/2 lb lamb mince (first choice), or beef (Note 1)
- 2 1/2 tbsp baharat spice mix – store bought or make your own (Note 3)
- 2 tsp cumin powder
- 2 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp cayenne powder , optional, for very subtle warmth
- 3 tbsp tomato paste
- 1 small eggplant , skin on, cut into 1cm / 0.4″ cubes, ~2 heaped cups (Note 2)
- 1 1/2 cups water
Golden rice:
- 3 cups basmati rice , uncooked
- 1 tbsp cooking salt / kosher salt , for rice cooking water
- 1/2 tsp saffron threads (Note 4 for imitation powder, more cost effective)
- 2 tbsp boiling water
- 1 1/2 cups plain unsweetened yogurt , full fat (regular, Greek or Greek-style)
- 2 large eggs (~55g/2oz each in-shell)
- 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
- 1 tsp cooking salt / kosher salt
Layering:
- 1/4 cup pine nuts (slivered or flaked almonds also great)
- 2 – 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil , for drizzling
Serving:
- 3 batches Lemon Yogurt Sauce (YES 3 BATCHES!), or even plain yogurt or sour cream (Note 5)
- 2 tbsp coriander / cilantro roughly chopped , optional garnish
- 1 tbsp roughly chopped toasted pine nuts , optional garnish
Instructions
ABBREVIATED:
- Filling: sauté onion and garlic, then cook lamb. Add spices, tomato paste then eggplant and water. Simmer 8 min until filling thickens. Saffron rice: grind saffron, soak in hot water. Mix with yogurt, oil, eggs and salt, mix in par boiled rice. Layer in pan with lamb, drizzle, bake 50 min until top is crispy. Slice and serve!
FULL RECIPE:
- Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F (180°C fan-forced).
- Toast pine nuts – Heat a large non-stick pan (30cm/12") over medium heat. Add pine nuts and toast for 1 minute, stirring constantly, until they have golden brown spots. Remove into a bowl and set aside.
Spiced lamb filling:
- Cook meat – In the same pan, heat the oil over high heat. Cook the onion and garlic for 1 1/2 minutes. Add lamb and cook, breaking it up as you go, for 5 minutes until you no longer see red.
- Spices – Add the baharat, cumin and salt. Cook for 1 minute, then stir in tomato paste. Add the eggplant and stir to coat in the flavours until you no longer see any white eggplant flesh.
- Simmer – Add the water and bring it to a rapid simmer. Lower heat to medium high, then simmer for 8 minutes, stirring regularly, until the filling is thick enough that you can draw a path across the pan and it holds in place. The eggplant should be mostly cooked through (cooks more in oven). It's now ready for use (can use hot or or cool).
Golden rice:
- Soak saffron – Grind the saffron mostly into a powder in a mortar and pestle (Note 4). Add hot water and leave for 5 minutes+ to soak.
- Parboil rice – Bring a large pot of water to the boil with the 1 tablespoon of salt. Add rice and boil for 5 minutes, stirring every now and then. Drain well in a colander. (The rice is only partially cooked, it finishes cooking in the oven).
- Yogurt mixture – Whisk together the yogurt, saffron water, oil, eggs and salt in a large bowl (or used rice boiling pot). Add rice and mix to combine – it will be pale yellow (becomes brighter once baked).
Assemble and bake:
- Assemble – Spread half the rice in a 23 x 33cm / 9 x 13" dish. Spread over all the lamb mixture then sprinkle with pine nuts. Dollop remaining rice across the surface then spread.
- Bake – Drizzle over the extra virgin olive oil. Bake 50 minutes until the top is golden around the edges.
- Rest 10 minutes in the pan then cut. Serve with Lemon Yogurt Sauce.
Recipe Notes:
In memory of Dozer
Yesterday marked one month since Dozer left us and it felt like the right time to say goodbye to him at Bayview dog beach. I placed a magnolia flower from our garden on the water and watched it drift away, then scattered his ashes into the sea.


Bayview was his second favourite place in the whole world. It was where he truly got to be his happiest, most mischievous self. It’s where he played, had birthday parties, raced his friends, chased birds and drones, even fish!

But his first favourite place was wherever I was. We lived in eight different houses in the 13.9 years I had Dozer. Quite a nomadic existence! But he never had any trouble adjusting. As long as we were together, he was happy – and so was I.
Rest in peace, my beautiful Dozer. You were my once-in-a-lifetime soul dog, and I am so grateful that we found each other and got to spend the time we had together. I will honour your memory by continuing the work of RecipeTin Meals, the cause you were the heart and benefactor of.
And I will carry you in my heart forever. Love – your mum xx

the next chapter
And with that, this chapter feels like it’s drawn to a close. I’m holding tightly to the memory of everything that was Dozer, and I’m not ready to let him go from RecipeTin Eats yet. But the tide of tears is finally starting to ease, and sometimes I catch myself laughing free of tears (!!!) as I reminisce about Dozer.
So I think it’s time to start sharing some lighter stories about him, the moments that never made it into Life of Dozer on this website. Because there were so many to choose from!
It feels right to remember him with big smiles, plenty of laughter, lots of good food and a whole lot of love. 🐾 I look forward to sharing these stories with you. ~ Nagi x
PS Kicking things off with an up-close-and-personal of one of his greatest features. And a powerful one at that! He’d come tearing into the house from the very back of the yard at the faintest whiff of steak, but not even a flicker of a pause from bird-barking for a vegetable stir fry. That was my Dozer! 🥰

On a personal note – thank you.
Thank you for being here with me through this time. As Dozer grew older, I knew the day was coming, and I knew it would be hard, but nothing could ever prepare me for the reality of it and living through it. He was my once-in-a-lifetime soul dog, and losing him broke me completely.
I never in a million years imagined that baring my soul on my website would bring me so much comfort, or help give me the strength to slowly find my way forward again, one day at a time.
Thank you for the kindness you’ve shown, for the tears, for the supportive messages you’ve shared, emails and cards you’ve written, and for helping me find my way back to smiling when I think about our beautiful boy.
And most of all, thank you for sharing the joy of Dozer with me all these years. – Nagi x
You have such a wonderful way with words and pictures!!! Thanks SO VERY MUCH for sharing your sweet, soul-mate dog with all of us.
Thank you, Marca! I’m really glad you enjoyed the photos and stories of Dozer. He brought a lot of joy to my life, and I’m happy I got to share him with all of you too. – N x
Dozer 😭😭 you were greatly loved and will be missed.
He was very, very loved. Thank you for remembering him with me Carol ❤️ – N x
Dear Nagi… I wasn’t ready for the magnolia and you watching and spreading Dozer’s ashes… forever grateful you shared him with us all…. When I lost my own soul dog (Snoopy rescu d from a puppy mill) it shattered me too. You’ll always have Dozer in your heart and your memories…
I am behind as I have to make JBs banana loaf❤️
Denyse, that moment at the beach with the magnolia was really hard – I was crying the whole way driving there – but it felt right once I got there. Thank you for remembering Snoopy with me too – losing a soul dog leaves a huge hole. And I love that you’re behind because you’re making JB’s banana loaf!! ❤️ – N x
Salivating as this looks so good.
The bond between you and Dozer is unbreakable. The memories you share will live on forever.
Nancy, thank you. The bond really does feel unbreakable. I’m glad the memories of Dozer get to live on here with all of you too. And I hope you enjoy the recipe if you try it! 😊 – N x
Peace be with you, Nagi. Dozer will always be with you and ready to make you smile again when you call his name. Sending hugs.
Thank you for the hugs, Carole. Some days I still catch myself calling his name without thinking. I like to believe he hears it somewhere 🐾 – N x
What a beautiful way to still show Dozer how dearly he was and always will be loved! Never doubt that he is “always” with you 💖🕊️💫
Joanne, that’s a lovely way to put it. He was so loved, and always will be. Thank you for the kind words 💖 – N x
😭😭😭😭❤️❤️❤️❤️
Mary Ann, I think a lot of us are feeling exactly the same way. Emojis scan say it all! ❤️ – N x
Dear Nagi, it’s hard to lose a friend but your memories (now ours) help us become a community. Thank you for sharing Dozer with us. Keep those memories coming. All the best
I really like how you put that – that the memories are now shared with everyone here. It does feel a bit like a community remembering him together. Thank you for being part of that Gita! – N x
Dear Nagi, such a beautiful tribute to your beautiful Dozer, my eyes are damp again!
When I click on a previous recipe and I see the Dozer section, it makes me so happy, such lovely memories!
This recipe sounds delicious and I can’t wait to try it out. Thank you xx
Thank you, Ruth. I’m really glad the old Dozer sections still make you smile. It makes me happy knowing those memories live on whenever someone stumbles across them. And I hope you enjoy the recipe when you try it! – N x
Dear Nagi, you sure can see a common thread running through all of the comments! All of us are sending love, and thanking you for the love you send out and for sharing Dozer with us. I think that the photo above, with you hugging him in the water, has gotta be one of the happiest Dozer smiles I’ve seen! Like you said, no matter where you both were, just being together was his happy place. His spirit is alive and happy, and like another reader said, eating steak! xoxo
You’re right, Jcoffee – there really is a common thread through all the comments. The kindness people have shown me about Dozer has meant more than I can properly say. And that photo in the water is one of my favourites too. He was so happy any time we were together, especially near the beach 🐾 – N x
Dozer will never be forgotten, it will be a wound in your heart, I know by experience, but this is life, we have to live with it. Meanwhile start to live your own life Nagi, you deserve it. Love everything you do. Cheer up.
Thank you, Diana. I know the wound never really goes away, but I’m starting to find more smiles mixed in with the tears now. I appreciate the encouragement. – N x
So sorry about your loss of Dozer. Our 14 year old female cat passed away last week. I really miss her and will be sad for some time.
I’m really sorry to hear about your cat, Richard. A week is so very recent. It takes time to get used to the quiet and the missing presence. Sending a hug your way. – N x
I have followed you and Dozer for so long it’s hard to imagine that I only know you through your website. As a dog mom myself, I’ve had to say goodbye to fur family members and it’s always too soon. Sending hugs and really looking forward to making this recipe. 🤗
That’s such a nice thing to say, Marilyn. It is a bit funny when you think about it, people knowing Dozer and me through a website for so many years! I’m glad you’ve been along for the ride, and I hope you enjoy the recipe too 🤗 – N x
Nagi,
Thank you for sharing such a deeply personal piece of your heart with all of us. It takes incredible courage to be so open in the midst of grief, and please know that your words—and your beautiful boy Dozer—have touched far more people than you may ever realize.
You have given your readers so much—wonderful food, inspiration, warmth, and a sense of community. In return, please know that many of us are holding you in our thoughts and prayers as you navigate this loss. The bond you shared with Dozer was truly special, and that kind of love never fades.
With heartfelt sympathy and gratitude,
Stacey
Thank you for the very kind message, Stacey. I really appreciate the support and the warmth you’ve sent my way. ❤️ – N x
Great to hear your tears are subsiding Nagi, and I’m sure Dozer will be feeling the same……. Small steps 💜
Small steps is exactly right, Robyne. Thank you for the encouragement 💜 – N x
Nagi, thank you for sharing your everything about Dozer and your love for him. I saw this the other day and thought, that’s about right:
The price of a good dog is a broken heart.
We all know we have to say goodbye someday but they never leave us. No one loves us more than our dogs, just pure pure love.
Take care of your healing heart 💔
That quote really is about right, Lizz. They give us so much love, it’s worth the broken heart in the end. Thank you. 🐾 – N x
Nagi, Dozer is with you in spirit and you know he is fine where he is… …but he feels your sadness, and yea – remembers steak, and swimming with his mates but what he misses most is your touch, and what he desires most is to alleviate your sadness in longing for him. You maybe should expect him to return very soon… … he will be waiting for you to find him… somewhere… i don’t know where but keep your eyes wide open… and says don’t donate my favourite toy.
Thank you, Mare. I like the thought that he’s still around somewhere, keeping an eye on me. And don’t worry… his favourite toys aren’t going anywhere! 😊 – N x
Thank you for sharing your healing journey. We all knew, when you were ready, you’d come out of the dark and back into the light.
To every pet parent reading Nagi’s healing journey: if your eyes didn’t leak as you read her update, no matter how recent or long ago you experienced the same emotions, you’d best check your heart. Paw prints of a once-in-a-lifetime four-legged family member never go away. The scar will always be there and, as visible scars do, it will fade but never be truly gone. It will always there, reminding us of the unconditional love they shared with us.
Hi Cat. For the second part of your comment, thank you for making me feel normal, I’m sitting here with tears streaming, reliving my own heartbreak. It is comforting when we realise that others understand the terrible feeling the grief of our beloved pets brings. To Nagi and everyone be kind to yourselves ❤️
Suzie, you’re definitely not alone. So many of us carry the same heartbreak when we lose them. It’s strangely comforting knowing others understand 🐾 Thank you for the reminder to be kind to ourselves. – N x
Sending hugs to you …even though we have a new boy dog the loss of our blue cattle girl was devastating due to lymphoma aged 8 in late 2024 ……..its easier than it was but still hurts you are definitely not alone 🧡💛
Cat, thank you for such thoughtful words. Anyone who has loved a pet knows exactly what you mean about those paw prints never leaving our hearts. 🐾 – N x
I haven’t been on your site in awhile and when I saw this I was was devastated for you regarding Dozer. I love all your recipes, but I always felt the love you have for Dozer connected with your great recipes. I know losing Dozer must be like losing a child/best friend. I could always feel the love and Dozer was truly blessed to have you for his mom. I know he will always be in your heart and yiur love for him will live on through your recipes❤️🙏
Rebecca, that’s very kind of you to say. Dozer really was part of everything I did here, so it means a lot that people felt that connection too. ❤️ – N x
Thank you for sharing such a tender, intimate, and precious moment. It touched me deeply. It was a stark reminder of how little time we actually do have with our fur babies. Deep peace, Dozer! Much love, Nagi! Hugs from Kentucky
Thank you, Henri. Moments like that are hard to share, but I’m glad it meant something to you. Hugs right back to Kentucky. – N x