British balti chicken aiming to capture Indian taste buds
April 21st, 2010 - 2:46 pm ICT by ANILondon, April 21 (ANI): As Kolkata plays host to the Taste of Britain’s Curry Festival, organisers are confident that the “British Indian” fare will do very well in India despite there already being a vast range of indigenous cuisine on offer.
The dishes being showcased include the balti chicken, which originated in Birmingham in the 1970s, and chicken tikka masala, which are nowhere the same in taste as the ones being offered in the sub-continent.
“British curries are quite unique,” Times Online quoted Syed Ahmed, the festival director and editor of Curry Today magazine, as saying.
“They are milder and healthier. I predict that a flagship British Indian restaurant will soon open its doors in India,” he said.
Ahmed revealed that the festival has yielded one deal so far, with a five-star hotel having agreed to start importing balti, Urdu for bucket, sauces from Britain.
“Indians have shed their preconceptions and their reservations,” Nondon Bagchi, a Calcutta-based cookery writer, said.
“The impact of travelling and the telly mean it’s now the done thing to be experimental with your food,” he stated.
According to Sanjay Matta, a consulting chef who has designed menus for some of India’s smartest restaurants, chicken tikka masala, which was dubbed “a true British national dish” by Robin Cook in 2001, is among the recipes gaining in popularity.
And even though the dish’s origin is fiercely disputed, Matta believes that the British staple is merely a tweaked version of the classic Punjabi butter chicken.
According to Ahmed, it is such innovation that has given rise to a British curry industry that employs 100,000 people and is worth 4 billion pounds a year.
India’s elite is warming to older Anglo-Indian recipes that date back to the Raj, and more modern East-West fusions, such as chicken tikka masala.
“Some of the Indian food you’ll eat in the UK is the best you’ll find anywhere,” Matta added. (ANI)
- Britain's love affair with Indian curry hits 200-year landmark - Jun 25, 2010
- India, and its art of spices - Jun 20, 2011
- Indians boil over Scottish bid to patent chicken tikka masala (Lead) - Aug 05, 2009
- Indians get hot over Scottish bid to patent Chicken Tikka Masala - Aug 05, 2009
- Tandoori versus sorpotel: Goan cuisine on collision path (Eating Out With IANS) - Apr 15, 2011
- Indian platter goes casual; eateries reap bounty - Oct 23, 2011
- Spit roasts to kofta, tuck into festive feasts in Delhi - Dec 24, 2010
- Top Indian chefs warn Scottish MPs to keep their hands off chicken tikka masala rights - Aug 05, 2009
- Of history, curries and Mumbai soaps (IANS Books This Week) - Apr 07, 2011
- China chaat, pomfret roast rock Chittaranjan Park's food platter - Oct 04, 2011
- Indian cuisines coexist, promote tolerance: Australian restaurateur - Nov 16, 2011
- Indian Christmas with desi fusion fare - Dec 23, 2011
- Yummy Kannada cuisine at Dakshin food fest - Nov 02, 2009
- Forget Indian curry meals, Pizza is now Britain's favourite dish - Aug 09, 2010
- Indian restaurants-on-wheels becoming hip in USA - Dec 26, 2010
Tags: anglo indian recipes, balti, butter chicken, chicken tikka masala, cookery writer, curries, festival director, festival organisers, indian food, indian taste, indigenous cuisine, national dish, preconceptions, punjabi, robin cook, sanjay, taste buds, taste of britain, telly, tweaked version