What on earth do Devil's Dung, Merde du Diable, and Satan's Weed have in common with something the Persian Empire once called Food of the Gods? They're all colorful historical nicknames that different cultures have given the powerful spice asafetida—known as hing across South Asia—in an effort to capture its famously pungent aroma. (Traditionally in parts of India, whole chunks of the resin were tucked into sacks of grain or flour to deter insects, as its strong aroma is said to be unpleasant to pests.)
I didn't grow up with asafetida. My father disliked its infamous sulfurous aroma, so my mother never cooked with it at home. But his family outside our home did use it regularly, and whenever we visited them, I loved the depth and savoriness in their food—even if I couldn't quite place it at that time. Only years later, while researching my first cookbook—Maharashtrian Cuisine: A Family Treasury—did I realize that the flavor I'd been tasting on those occasions was asafetida.
Asafetida is a resin that smells sharp and sulfurous in its raw form but transforms completely when it hits hot oil or warm liquid, turning mellow, savory, and deeply aromatic in cooking. A pinch is enough to bring an allium-like depth to lentils, vegetables, dals, and more, which is why it's central to many vegetarian traditions and seasoning techniques in India. Though still unfamiliar to many Western cooks, asafetida is one of the most powerful flavor builders you can keep in your pantry. Learn what it is, how it's used across India, and how to cook with and store it at home.
What Is Asafetida?
Native to Iran and Afghanistan, asafetida is a ground dried resin harvested from the roots of Ferula asafoetida, a plant in the carrot family that also includes fennel, parsley, and celery. A milky sap from the root hardens into an amber-like resin, which is ground into the pungent powder. In its raw form, its sulfurous aroma is so strong that that early European traders called it "devil's dung"—but the transformation it undergoes when cooked is remarkable. Because of that dramatic shift from raw to cooked, asafetida is almost always bloomed in fat or added directly to simmering liquid.
A Short History of Asafetida
Long before asafetida became a cornerstone of Indian vegetarian cooking, it played an important role in ancient Mediterranean cuisine. In Roman times, a now-extinct herb called silphium was prized as a flavoring, medicinal plant, and even an aphrodisiac, according to a 2022 article in National Geographic. When silphium went extinct around the 1st century CE, Greek and Roman cooks turned to a cheaper spice that served a similar culinary role. According to a 2020 paper titled The Curious Case of Asafoetida by Sharmila Vaidyanathan for the Oxford Food Symposium, that substitute was asafetida, which traders sourced from regions including modern-day Libya and Persia. Silphium's exact species has never been identified, so its relationship to asafetida is uncertain, though ancient writers described the two as having similar flavor qualities.
But asafetida's history in South Asia stretches back even further. India's food historian K. T. Achaya notes that meat dishes seasoned with asafetida appear in the Mahabharata, one of the two major Sanskrit epics of ancient India, pointing to its presence in the subcontinent as early as the first millennium BCE. Assyrian clay tablets and early Persian medical texts mention the resin’s culinary and medicinal uses long before it became essential to Indian seasoning.
Over time, trade routes carried asafetida from present-day Iran and Afghanistan to northern India, where it took firm root in regional cuisines. Today it remains a defining spice in many parts of the country—especially in communities that culturally avoid onions and garlic—and its influence has only grown as more cooks discover just how transformative a single pinch can be.
How Asafetida Is Traditionally Used Throughout India
My parents' coastal Maharashtra Brahmin communities share geography but not culinary rules. My mother's Brahmin community cooked with onions and garlic and traditionally ate fish, while my father's side came from a Konkanastha Brahmin sub-community whose priestly lineage shaped very strict dietary practices. They followed a fully vegetarian diet and avoided onions and garlic, ingredients considered overly "strong" or tempting. In their cooking, asafetida stepped in to provide the savoriness those ingredients would normally contribute.
That contrast shaped the food I grew up eating. My maternal grandmother cooked with ginger, garlic, and onions, layering gentle depth into vegetarian dishes such as lentils, as well as non-vegetarian dishes, both meat and fish. My father's side relied on a different set of techniques and flavors: quick, light cooking that kept vegetables crisp; a touch of jaggery to balance salt; cumin and coriander for warmth and aroma; and always a pinch of asafetida for a sharp backbone.
Across India, asafetida is widely used in seasoning techniques—known as vagar, tadka, or phodni, depending on the region—where spices are briefly bloomed in hot oil to build the base flavor of a dish. In northern India and West Bengal, asafetida is often paired with cumin in both vegetarian and meat dishes. In Gujarat, Maharashtra, and further south, it's more commonly paired with mustard seeds and turmeric. In all of these traditions, a little goes a very long way: A pinch is enough to permeate an entire pot, and you can often smell it as you walk past a home where someone is cooking with it.
It's interesting to note that India alone accounts for an estimated 40% of the world's asafetida consumption, according to a 2020 BBC article by Aparna Alluri, Outside India, it's used mostly in medicinal or pest-repelling contexts—particularly in parts of Iran and Afghanistan—rather than in everyday cooking.
Where to Buy Asafetida and How to Store It
Asafetida is easy to find once you know where to look. Most Indian grocery stores carry it under the name hing, usually sold in small jars near the spice section, and it's widely available online from South Asian brands. Asafetida is available as dried resin chunks or wet sap, but powdered asafetida—typically blended with starch or gum—is the most common and easiest form to use at home. A small jar is usually all you need.
Because the spice is so potent, proper storage is essential. Keep the container tightly sealed and tucked inside another airtight container or spice tin to prevent the aroma from escaping. Store it in a cool, dry place away from moisture. Since a small jar can last up to a year, it's worth taking a moment to store it well.
How to Cook With Asafetida in Everyday Cooking
While its history stretches back thousands of years, asafetida works beautifully in many everyday cooking applications. If you're new to it, start small—a pinch is all you need. Here are some easy ways to bring its savory flavor into your food:
- Bloom a pinch in hot oil or ghee before cooking lentils or vegetables. The sharpness softens instantly and adds the savoriness that onions and garlic usually provide.
- Add it to potato dishes—mashed, sautéed, or roasted—after blooming it in fat for a subtle savory backbone.
- Stir a pinch into simmering beans (black, kidney, white, or chickpeas) to round out their flavor.
- Bloom it with mustard seeds, cumin, turmeric, or curry leaves when making tadka, letting the spices sizzle briefly in hot oil to release their flavor. This works especially well as a seasoning base for Indian rice dishes like pohé (flattened rice) and as a pickling base for fruits and vegetables.
- Add it to simple vegetable sautés like cabbage, okra, zucchini, or green beans.
- Add a pinch to soups or stews as they cook to deepen their savory base.
- Use it to season ground meat. Mix about 1/8 teaspoon asafetida into one pound of ground meat to enhance savoriness. Use the seasoned meat mixture to make meatballs or hamburgers.
- Bloom a pinch in butter or oil before scrambling eggs to give them a subtle, allium-like depth.
How to Avoid Pitfalls When Using Asafetida
Asafetida is simple to use once you understand how it behaves, but there are a few things to keep in mind. Because it's so potent—and because its aroma clings easily—it helps to know the best ways to handle it. Here are the main tips to keep in mind:
- Don't consume asafetida raw. It needs heat to mellow out and will taste far too strong in its raw state.
- Don't leave the jar open. Its aroma will cling to wood, plastic, and even other ingredients nearby.
- Avoid refrigerating it, unless you want the smell to permeate everything inside the fridge.
Keep the container tightly sealed, ideally inside a second airtight container or spice tin, to prevent the smell from escaping.
The Takeaway
Asafetida may be bold in its raw form, but with a little heat and a restrained hand it opens up into one of the most reliable flavor builders I know. A single pinch adds savory depth and unmistakable character to everyday dishes, whether you're cooking lentils, vegetables, beans, or soups. If you're new to it, you'll be surprised by how quickly it becomes indispensable; if you already use it, consider this your nudge to reach for it even more. Keep a small jar on hand, and it will have a way of sneaking into your everyday cooking routine.
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