“You don’t even like biryani, Mira. You like the idea of people thinking you’re the kind of woman who makes biryani.”
There is a specific, unspoken tension that exists between women who love the same man—not the romantic tension of a lover’s triangle, but the primal, territorial friction of a sautan (co-wife). For decades, Indian cinema has painted this relationship in broad, villainous strokes. The sauteli bahan (step-sister) was either a scheming vamp or a weepy victim. Sauteli Bahan -2025- Uncut NeonX Originals Shor...
The twist? The father is never home. He’s a "digital nomad" living in Goa. The two women are forced to share a 2BHK, a washing machine, and a social circle. “You don’t even like biryani, Mira
In an era of bloated OTT series, this 42-minute shot of pure, distilled sibling animosity is a perfect capsule of modern Indian womanhood—where the fight is no longer for a man’s attention, but for the right to be messy, or the right to be perfect, without apology. The sauteli bahan (step-sister) was either a scheming
Mira has spent four hours making a dum biryani for her book club (all Ivy League returnees). Raya, hungover and unapologetic, eats directly from the handi (cooking pot) with a wooden spoon at 2 PM. When Mira confronts her, Raya doesn't apologize. Instead, she says:
By the Lifestyle & Entertainment Desk