In a country where biryani debates can spark passionate arguments, Tinder has found a new way to decode modern romance through food.
With dating increasingly shaped by personality, values and everyday preferences, Tinder’s latest cultural insight taps into something close to every Indian heart: biryani. The platform has launched The Biryani Compatibility Test, a playful yet telling exploration of how food choices mirror dating styles.
Dating today doesn’t begin with candlelight, it begins with connection. According to Tinder’s Year in Swipe™ 2025, biryani ranks among the top five interests on Tinder in India. Even more telling, mentions of biryani and cooking in Tinder bios have surged 61% since the start of the year compared to the same time last year.
Clearly, food isn’t just a craving, it’s self-expression.
In fact, 73% of singles say they know they like someone when they can truly be themselves, while over a third believe shared values are essential in dating. Sometimes, that compatibility begins with agreeing on spice tolerance, street food loyalty, or whether potatoes belong in biryani.
Tinder calls this shift “Hot-Take Dating” where having an opinion is attractive. From dum vs. Awadhi to Team Raita vs. No Raita, flavour debates are becoming low-pressure ways for singles to express boundaries, personality and preferences before the first date even ends.
Taking the insight beyond the app, Tinder hosted a Blind Biryani Tasting experience. Guests were served five regional varieties Kolkata, Lucknowi (Awadhi), Hyderabadi, Chettinad, Thalassery (Kerala), and a vegetarian version without revealing which was which.
Each variant sparked strong reactions around spice, subtlety and personality. When preferences were revealed, Thalassery biryani ranked first, followed by Chettinad and Hyderabadi.
At the heart of the experience was a personality quiz led by Dr. Chandni Tugnait, Tinder’s Relationship Expert in India. The quiz translated biryani behaviours into four dating personality types:
- Extra spicy. Double fried onions. Zero tolerance for bad biryani. In dating, they bring that same unapologetic energy passionate, decisive, and crystal clear about what they want. If it’s not a “hell yes,” it’s a no.
- Medium spice. Always with raita. Harmony on the plate and in their love life. Emotionally aware and consistent, they prioritise empathy, mutual care and stable connection.
- Picks around the whole spices. Low-pressure and easygoing. They let things unfold organically, valuing chemistry over rigid labels.
- Extra spicy one day, mild the next. Craves intimacy but also space. Their changing preferences mirror a dynamic emotional style, constantly balancing closeness and independence.
The campaign reflects a broader shift in how young India approaches romance. Shared meals, remembering someone’s order, or planning food experiences together are emerging as modern gestures of affection.
“At Tinder, we see dating as more than matches and messages, it’s reflected in the everyday choices that signal who you are. From biryani preferences to shared food rituals, these small cues reveal identity, values and emotional expression in powerful ways. Our Year in Swipe™ insights show that modern attraction in India is increasingly rooted in authenticity and shared values. With Time Together and Thoughtful Gestures emerging as the top love styles in India, food and eating together is fast becoming a language of affection, whether it’s planning a new spot to try or remembering someone’s exact order. With the Biryani Blind Tasting, we’re turning flavour into a fresh lens on modern love, and helping singles connect beyond the surface,” said Aditi Shorewal, Communications Lead, Tinder India & Korea.
With The Biryani Compatibility Test, Tinder isn’t just talking about love it’s serving it, layered, spiced and deeply personal.




