A people's campaign for biryani justice

Half Biryani Deserves a Whole Egg.

Because half plate does not mean half respect.

A plate of biryani with warm spices
Whole egg. Whole heart.
Biryani served with rice, masala, and egg

The emotion

Biryani is Not Just Food. It is an Emotion.

Biryani is a plate of fragrant rice, deep masala, slow-cooked meat, careful spices, and that aroma that reaches the heart before the spoon reaches the mouth.

Across India and around the world, biryani has its own memories. Some regions add potato, some make the masala fiery, some keep it royal and soft, but every plate carries comfort, celebration, and hunger-level happiness.

For Indians, biryani is family orders on Sundays, birthday treats, office lunch plans, late-night cravings, hostel memories, street food plates, restaurant visits, and the quiet joy of opening the box and seeing the egg sitting proudly on top.

The issue

The Half Egg Problem

When people order half biryani, many restaurants give only half an egg. That small cut may look practical, but emotionally it feels painful and disappointing.

The customer has already accepted a smaller biryani portion. But the egg is not just a topping. It is part of the full biryani experience. A half-cut egg looks sad, incomplete, and honestly disrespectful to biryani lovers.

1

It looks incomplete

The plate feels like something important walked away.

2

It feels disrespectful

Half portion is fine. Half respect is not fine.

3

It breaks the biryani mood

One sad egg slice can ruin the first happy look.

Half egg served with half biryani

A respectful request

Dear Restaurants, Hotels and Biryani Makers...

We understand portion control. We understand food cost. We understand half biryani is smaller than full biryani. But one whole egg is not too much to ask.

A whole egg gives dignity to the plate. Customers remember small things. Giving a whole egg can create goodwill, repeat orders, and social media love.

Please stop serving half egg with half biryani. Give the whole egg. Win the whole heart.

Better customer satisfaction
Stronger brand love
Happier repeat customers
More social media goodwill
A biryani plate that looks complete

The petition

Petition: Stop Half Egg with Half Biryani

We, the biryani lovers, request restaurants, hotels, cloud kitchens, food stalls, and biryani makers to stop serving half egg with half biryani. We believe every half biryani plate deserves one whole egg. A smaller biryani portion is acceptable. A half egg is not.

I support the demand: Whole Egg with Half Biryani.

Your signature

Cast Your Egg Vote

Tap the egg and add one honest signature to the campaign.

Total Egg Signatures: 0

Each vote is counted as one petition signature in this static version.

The egg math

The Egg Economics: One Whole Egg is Not Too Much

Across India, egg prices usually stay around ₹5 to ₹6 per piece in wholesale and semi-wholesale markets. In many big cities, retail prices may be slightly higher. Even if we take a safe upper estimate, one egg usually costs around ₹8 to ₹9 for a regular customer in many places.

In Assam, retail egg prices can go around ₹8 per piece depending on the shop and location.

So the question is simple:

If one whole egg costs around ₹8 to ₹9, why should a half biryani customer receive only half an egg?

For restaurants, hotels, cloud kitchens, and biryani stalls, this small cost can create a big emotional impact. A whole egg makes the plate look complete. It makes the customer feel respected. It turns a normal order into a happy order.

Because sometimes, customer happiness is not about a big discount. Sometimes, it is just about one whole egg.

₹8–₹9 Approx. upper retail cost of one egg in many places
1 Whole Egg Small cost. Big emotion.
Extra rice? No.
Extra meat? No.
Extra meal? No.
One complete egg? Yes.

Whole egg. Whole respect. Whole biryani feeling.

The origin story

Why I Started This

Hi, I'm Dazz. And yes, this issue is personal. I love biryani, but I cannot always finish a full plate. Sometimes, half biryani is just the perfect amount for my small tummy. But here's the problem: ordering half biryani should not mean receiving half an egg. The biryani may be half, but the joy should not be.

This campaign is for every biryani lover who believes that even a half biryani deserves one whole egg.