Anglo-Indian cuisine

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Anglo-Indian cuisine is the often distinct cuisine of the Anglo-Indian community in both the United Kingdom and India, as well as in the United States, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.

Simple tomato chutney

Some Anglo-Indian dishes derive from traditional British cuisine, such as roast beef, modified by the addition of Indian-style spices, such as cumin and red chillies. Fish and meat are often cooked in curry form with Indian vegetables. Anglo-Indian food often involves use of coconut, yogurt, and almonds. Roasts and curries, rice dishes, and breads all have a distinctive flavour.

Some well-known Anglo-Indian dishes include:

The cuisine's sweetmeats include seasonal favourites like the "kulkuls" in Goa (similar to Portuguese cuisine filhoses enrolodas)[1] and "rose-cookies" traditionally made at Christmas time. There is also a great deal of innovation to be seen in their soups, entrees, side dishes, sauces, and salads.

Some early restaurants in England served Anglo-Indian food, such as Veeraswamy in Regent Street, London, and their sister restaurant, Chutney Mary. They have, however, largely reverted to the standard Indian dishes that are better known to the British public.

The term is also used for the Indian dishes adapted during the British Raj in India, some of which later became fashionable in Britain.

Chutney usually transmutes into a cooked or sweetened but not highly spiced preparation of fruit, nuts or vegetables. It borrows from a tradition of jam making where an equal amount of sour fruit and refined sugar reacts with the pectin in the fruit (typical are sour apples (e.g. Bramleys or rhubarb) the sour note being provided by malt or cider vinegar. Major Grey's Chutney is typical. Sour, sweet-and-sour, sweet chutneys, or chutneys with large amounts of garlic and chile freshly made (typically tomato based) or indian pickle (achār) are rarely served.

See also

References

  1. Kulkuls Goan food recipes

Further reading

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External links

  • "Food Stories" — Explore a century of revolutionary change in UK food culture on the British Library's Food Stories website
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