Sunday, September 11, 2011

The Indian Food






Indian influence in Malaysian cuisine started in the 19th century when large arrivals of Indian migrants were brought into the country as contract laborers to work in rubber estates and on the railways. Some did take the opportunity to set up trade in the textile and food industry. Indian cuisine can be divided into two mainstreams, Northern and Southern Indian cuisine.

North Indian cuisine boasts of a diet rich in meat and uses spices and ingredients such as yogurt and ghee in dishes that are elaborate without being overly spicy. Here, bread and chapati (wheat-flour pancakes) replaces rice, which is the center of most South Indian meals. Coconut milk, mustard seeds, and chilies are also widely used in the Southern province.
Spices are the heart and soul of Indian cooking. But the quantity and proportions vary with the geographical boundaries. Curry powder is almost never used. Spices are freshly grounded and added in many different combinations. Spices commonly used are coriander, turmeric, cumin, chilies, fennel, and fenugreek. Other fragrant spices added are cardamom, clove, cinnamon and star aniseed.
In Malaysia, there is an abundant of Indian restaurants and food stalls to wet your appetite. They are traditionally served on a thali, a circular metal tray on which a number of small bowls called katori, also made from metal, are placed. Eaten with fingers, rice or bread are placed directly on the thali while curries and other dishes are served in the bowls. For South Indian cuisine, banana leaves are often used as plates where rice is served in the center, followed by various curries and accompaniments around it. These include dried fish, pappadams (lentil wafers), fresh chutneys made from herbs, coconut, and acid fruits among others.





Local Indian hawkers have created unique versions of local dishes, which are not found in India. For example, "mee goreng" is a combination of fresh Chinese yellow noodles, tofu, bean-sprouts, and dried shrimp paste. Malaysia also abounds with shops offering "Nasi Kandar", which is basically a combination of Malay and Indian cuisine - hence very Malaysian - although the taste is more robust. This concept came about when "nasi" (rice) hawkers would previously "kandar" (balance a pole on the shoulder with two huge containers on both ends) their wares.
Bread is the main item in most meals in North Indian cuisine. Therefore, a wide variety of bread is offered at these restaurants. Nann (leavened bread with poppy seeds) is a popular choice. The bread dough is rolled out and then slapped on the inside of the tandoori, near the top where it cooks very quickly in the fierce heat. It is then flavored with onion or garlic. Paratha or it's localized version of Roti Canai, meanwhile, is rich, flaky, and flavored with ghee. It can be eaten as an accompaniment or by itself, filled with potatoes and peas. Chapati is another leavened bread. It resembles flat discs and has a delightful flavor and chewy texture. Murtabak is stuffed Paratha based dough, which has a Meat, vegetables and egg in it. 
Tandoori dishes are the most popular main courses in North Indian restaurants. Tandoori chicken is always a favorite, where a whole baby chicken or chicken quarters are roasted in the clay oven for several hours in advance and then finished off on the barbecue.







                                         
Indian Food

Indian Food in Malaysia


                    Malay & Nyonya Food

The Chinese Food


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When people in the west speak of Chinese food, they probably mean Cantonese food.
It's the best known  and most popular variety of Chinese food. Cantonese food is noted
for the variety and the freshness of it's ingredients. The food are usually stir-fried with just
a touch of oil to ensure that the result is crisp and fresh. All those best known
'western Chinese' dishes fit into this category - sweet and sour dishes, won ton,
chow mein, spring rolls.With Cantonese food the more people you can muster for the
meal the better, because dishes are traditionally shared so everyone will manage to
sample the greatest variety. A corollary of this is that Cantonese food should be
balance: traditionally, all foods are said to be either Yin (cooling) - like vegetables, 
most fruits and clear soup; or Yang (heaty) -  like starchy foods and meat. A cooling
food should be balance with a heaty food and too much of one it would not be good for you.
Another Cantonese specialty is Dim Sum or 'little heart'. Dim sum is usually consumed during
lunch or as a Sunday brunch. Dim sum restaurant are usually large, noisy affair and the
dim sum, little snacks that come in small bowls, are whisked around the tables on individual
trolleys or carts. As they come by , you simply ask for a plate of this or a bowl of that. 
At the end the meal you are billed is the amount of empty containers on your table. 
Cantonese cuisine can also offer real extremes - shark's fin soup or bird's nest soup,
expensive delicacies from one end of the scale to  mee (noodles) and congee (rice porridge) 
on the other end.


















Far less familiar than the food from Canton are the cuisines from the north and the west of
China -  Szechuan, Shanghai and Peking. Szechuan food is the fiery food of China, where
pepper and chili really get into the act. Where as to food from Canton are delicate and 
understated,in Szechuan food the flavors are strong and dramatic - garlic and chilies
play their part in dishes like diced chicken and hot and sour soup.
Beijing (Peking) food is, of course best known for the famous 'Peking Duck'. Beijing food 
are less subtle than Cantonese food. Beijing food is usually eaten with hot steamed bun
or with noodles, because rice is not grown in cold region of the north. But in Malaysia, it
is more likely to come with rice.Shanghai food are not easily found in Malaysia.
Since most of Malaysia's Chinese are from the south, particularly from Hainan and
Hakka it is quite easy to find food from this region. Throughout Malaysia one of the 
most widespread economical meal is the Hainanese Chicken Rice which cost around 
the figure of RM3.00. The Hainanese also produced steamboat, sort of Oriental variation 
of the Swiss Fondue, where you have a boiling stockpot in the middle of the table into which
you deep pieces of meat, seafood and vegetable.
Although Hokkien's food is rated way down the Chinese gastronomic scale, it has
provided the Hokkien fried Mee (thick egg noodles cook with meat, seafood and vegetable 
and a rich soya sauce. Hokkien spring rolls (popiah) are also delicious. Teochew food from
the area around Swatow in China is another style noted for it's delicacy and natural favorite.
Teochew food is famous for it's seafood and another economical dish - Char Kwey Teow 
(fried flattened noodles) with clams, beansprout and prawns. 
Hakka dish is also easily found in food centers. The best know hakka dish is the
Yong Tau Foo (stuffed seafood beancurd) with soup or thick dark gravy.    

















Chinese Food and Drinks including Traditional Chinese Cuisine & Drink Recipe


Food Culture