We get asked this question more than any other: should I serve both at once? Yes. With a few small caveats.
Make Mantu the headliner. Mantu is the heavier dish, beef, tomato, lentil. It draws the eye and fills the room with the smell of garlic and slow-simmered tomato. Plate it as your centerpiece on a wide platter, the way you would a roast at a holiday table.
Let Aushak be the counterweight. Plate Aushak smaller and lighter, off to one side. It’s the green dish that brightens the table, and it shouldn’t try to compete with Mantu’s gravitational pull. Slightly fewer dumplings. Lighter drizzle. Lemon wedge nearby.
Quantity. For four people, plan one full tray of Mantu and half a tray of Aushak, about a 2:1 ratio. Aushak is the garnish to Mantu’s main, even though both are beautiful enough to stand alone. Most people will start with Mantu and end with Aushak, and that’s the order the meal wants.
Plating geometry. On a long table, place Mantu in the center, Aushak just to its right. On a round table, Mantu in the middle, Aushak at the side closest to where you’re sitting (so you can serve it without reaching across the room). The visual contrast, burgundy yogurt-and-tomato beside green herb-and-mint, is part of the meal.
The bread. One basket, big enough to share. Warm naan or even a good pita, torn at the table. Bread is the connective tissue between the two dishes, people will alternate bites and the bread carries them across.
The pour. Cardamom green tea, after. Not during. Tea before the food and tea with the food are different rituals; you want the latter, and it should arrive when the dishes are halfway empty and the conversation is just hitting its stride.
That’s the whole secret.