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Monday, June 2, 2025

Back in Times

Indo-Trinidadian Cuisine and its struggle for acceptance

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20160528

"Coolie, coolie come for roti, all de roti done." This was the re­frain that haunt­ed many of the for­mer­ly in­den­tured In­di­an im­mi­grants in Trinidad and their de­scen­dants from their ar­rival al­most to and in­clud­ing the present day. It seems odd now in a so­ci­ety that counts dou­bles as a sta­ple food, and where roti has al­most epi­cure­an sta­tus in some places, that the de­ri­sion of the In­do-Trinida­di­ans and their food was once com­mon­place.

One of the first ar­ti­cles I wrote for this news­pa­per back in 2012 was on the roots of In­do-Trinida­di­an gas­tron­o­my which is an­chored firm­ly in the ra­tions which the labour­ers re­ceived dur­ing their con­tract­ed res­i­dences on the sug­ar plan­ta­tions of the is­land. Though the pro­vi­sions were some­times aug­ment­ed or dif­fered ac­cord­ing to the es­tate, the gen­er­al is­sue was as Charles Kings­ley de­scribed it in 1870:

"Till the last two years the new com­ers re­ceived their wages en­tire­ly in mon­ey. But it was found bet­ter to give them for the first year (and now for the two first years) part pay­ment in dai­ly ra­tions: a pound of rice, 4 oz of dholl, a kind of pea, an oz of co­co-nut oil, or ghee, and 2 oz of sug­ar to each adult; and half the same to each child be­tween five and ten years old."

The vari­a­tions would usu­al­ly be the ad­di­tion of a small quan­ti­ty of salt­fish, dried pep­per or pota­toes. Eked out by pro­vi­sion gar­dens, of­ten plant­ed with crops brought from In­dia as seeds in the 'ja­ha­ji' bun­dles of the labour­ers, it laid the foun­da­tion of a spicy food cul­ture which is as dif­fer­ent from any­thing pro­duced in In­dia to­day. Those who have dined on au­then­tic In­di­an dish­es will at­test to the im­mense dif­fer­ence from the de­li­cious­ly cre­olised cre­ations of Trinidad.

Di­ver­si­fi­ca­tion of the In­do-Trinida­di­an palate came about in the 1880s when many shop­keep­ers re­alised what was nec­es­sary to at­tract a clien­tele from this eth­nic group. Whole­salers be­gan to im­port a va­ri­ety of spices and cur­ry ground with a 'sil and loorha' be­came more com­mon­place. Large quan­ti­ties of ghee, chan­na (chick­peas). Es­sen­tials like mus­tard oil be­gan to make their ap­pear­ance at both rur­al and ur­ban gro­cers.

Nev­er­the­less, In­do-Trinida­di­an cook­ing re­mained an 'un­der­ground' scene, un­known to most oth­er eth­nic groups and rarely tast­ed out­side of the mud huts where it was pre­pared un­less one was in­vit­ed as a guest. Tempt­ing talka­rees, ro­tis and mee­tai (sweets) churned out in the aro­mat­ic smoke of an earth­en chul­ha (fire­place) were a well-kept se­cret, not by dint of cul­tur­al iso­la­tion alone, but al­so be­cause of a grow­ing sense of shame and self-loathing.

In­do-Trinida­di­an chil­dren who at­tend­ed gov­ern­ment schools or schools op­er­at­ed by de­nom­i­na­tions oth­er than the Cana­di­an Pres­by­ter­ian Mis­sion to the In­di­ans (CMI) were ridiculed for the lunch­es they car­ried, usu­al­ly sa­da roti and some sort of bha­gi or talka­ree. It in­cul­cat­ed a mas­sive in­fe­ri­or­i­ty com­plex which many car­ried in­to adult­hood.

This is well-re­mem­bered by peo­ple to­day and finds its way in­to Caribbean lit­er­a­ture such as the works of Sir V S Naipaul and Ismith Khan. Well through the 1930s, In­do-Trinida­di­an con­coc­tions was looked down up­on as 'hog food' or fit on­ly for the poor­est class­es. In a ca­lyp­so sung by the Roar­ing Li­on, he not­ed the cheap­ness of the di­et by the cho­rus:

"Though de­pres­sion is in Trinidad, main­tain­ing a wife isn't very hard. Well you need no ham nor bis­cuit or bread for there are ways they can be eas­i­ly fed, like the coolies on bargee, pelau­ri dhal-bat and dhal-pouri, chan­na, paratha and the aloo-ke-talka­ree."

Even dou­bles at its gen­e­sis in the hands of En­am­ool Deen in Princes Town was viewed as low­ly stuff, un­fit for con­sump­tion by all but rumshop drunks and hun­gry school­child­ren. In a mem­oir writ­ten by his son, Badru Deen, the strug­gle to in­tro­duce dou­bles to the ur­ban con­sumer in San Juan and Port-of-Spain is well doc­u­ment­ed. It would be many decades be­fore Trinidad's most cel­e­brat­ed street food found a place in the na­tion­al palate.

As a fast food, roti was al­most non-ex­is­tent in the towns like Port-of-Spain where it on­ly be­gan to ap­pear in the 1940s dur­ing World War II. Road­side roti stalls were set up with all the nec­es­sary uten­sils, in­clud­ing sev­er­al coal pots, churn­ing out dhalpouri with fill­ings of cur­ried beef (iron­ic and at once im­mense­ly pop­u­lar), goat, and cur­ried aloo. Chick­en was a more ex­pen­sive op­tion. Some rumshops owned by In­di­ans served roti as well.

It is a long and stony road that In­do-Trinida­di­an cui­sine has trav­elled to gain the uni­ver­sal ac­cep­tance it en­joys to­day.


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