Today am taking you all to Trinidad which is the larger and more populous island of two major islands of Trinidad and Tobago. Trinidad cuisine is a blend of Indian, European Creole, Arab,Chinese,Latin American, African west, influences. And their well known dishes are Sada Roti, Fried Bakes, Coconut Bake which includes street foods like Doubles, Pholourie,Kachori, Roti Wrap, Aloo pie and much more. Today i want to showcase one of the most popular Street food aka Dhalpuri Roti which have its Indian influence. Roti is consider as the Staple of this West Indian island's cuisine. A roti is Trinidad is served with its accompaniments typically with yellow curry stew of meat, potatoes and chickpeas. Roti arrived to the Trinidad island around the slavery was abolished in the late 1830s, with servants from India, where the unleavened flatbread has been popular for many centuries. Dhal puri, paratha and sada are the most readily available styles of roti in Trinidad.Locals call their brand of paratha “buss up shut,” which gets its name from the Trini pronunciation of the phrase “busted-up shirt,” a reference to what the dish looks like. Not like the traditional paratha in India, buss up shut is broken into pieces, and diners typically pick up the pieces with their hands and use them as utensils to scoop the curry.
Sada roti is comparable to naan without the leavening and usually eaten at breakfast with a choka, which is roasted and ground vegetables or fish. And coming to Dhal puri is a roti stuffed with ground split peas. It’s large, round and flat, and it’s often wrapped around curry so it can be eaten like a sandwich. While dhal puri is cooked on a griddle, the puri in India is deep-fried and smaller than the Trinidadian flatbread. Dhal puri can be served either for breakfast or dinner with an accompaniment though this dish is well known as Trini's street food. The portability of a dhal puri (with curry inside) makes it a popular grab-and-go street food and lunch option. Am running this month's Mega Marathon with A-Z International flatbreads and here comes the popular Trini's Dhal puri roti for the letter 'D'.
Recipe Source: Here
Dough:
3cups All purpose flour
2tbsp Baking powder
1/4tsp Instant year
1/2tsp Salt
Oil for cooking
Filling:
2cups Channa dal
2 Garlic cloves
1tsp Roasted cumin powder
1/4tsp Turmeric powder
1 Green chilly
Take the flour, baking powder, instant yeast, salt in a bowl.
Add enough water and knead everything well. Knead again for few minutes until the dough turns soft and smooth.
Keep the kneaded dough aside for half an hour.
Cook the channadal with turmeric powder with enough water until they turns soft.
Drain the cooked dal and let it cool completely. Once cooled, take the cooked dal with garlic cloves and green chilly in a food processor and grind as fine powder.
Add the roasted cumin powder, salt and mash the mix well with your hands. Keep aside.
Once the filling is ready, divide the dough as 6-7 balls. Turn them as medium sized discs with your hands.
Put enough filling inside and bring the edges to together to form a stuffed dough ball.
Now dust the dough ball and roll them as thinner as possible.
Meanwhile heat a tawa, grease it with oil, drop the rolled dhalpuri and cook on both side until they gets cooked.
Serve warm with a curry.
Check out the Blogging Marathon page for the other Blogging Marathoners doing BM# 92
Sada roti is comparable to naan without the leavening and usually eaten at breakfast with a choka, which is roasted and ground vegetables or fish. And coming to Dhal puri is a roti stuffed with ground split peas. It’s large, round and flat, and it’s often wrapped around curry so it can be eaten like a sandwich. While dhal puri is cooked on a griddle, the puri in India is deep-fried and smaller than the Trinidadian flatbread. Dhal puri can be served either for breakfast or dinner with an accompaniment though this dish is well known as Trini's street food. The portability of a dhal puri (with curry inside) makes it a popular grab-and-go street food and lunch option. Am running this month's Mega Marathon with A-Z International flatbreads and here comes the popular Trini's Dhal puri roti for the letter 'D'.
Recipe Source: Here
Dough:
3cups All purpose flour
2tbsp Baking powder
1/4tsp Instant year
1/2tsp Salt
Oil for cooking
Filling:
2cups Channa dal
2 Garlic cloves
1tsp Roasted cumin powder
1/4tsp Turmeric powder
1 Green chilly
Take the flour, baking powder, instant yeast, salt in a bowl.
Add enough water and knead everything well. Knead again for few minutes until the dough turns soft and smooth.
Keep the kneaded dough aside for half an hour.
Cook the channadal with turmeric powder with enough water until they turns soft.
Drain the cooked dal and let it cool completely. Once cooled, take the cooked dal with garlic cloves and green chilly in a food processor and grind as fine powder.
Add the roasted cumin powder, salt and mash the mix well with your hands. Keep aside.
Once the filling is ready, divide the dough as 6-7 balls. Turn them as medium sized discs with your hands.
Put enough filling inside and bring the edges to together to form a stuffed dough ball.
Now dust the dough ball and roll them as thinner as possible.
Meanwhile heat a tawa, grease it with oil, drop the rolled dhalpuri and cook on both side until they gets cooked.
Serve warm with a curry.
Wow Priya..Dalpoori looks melt in the mouth kinds, so well made. I guess it is the baking agent that gives this roti a real classic look..amazing !..bookmarking right away, well the complete series is being bookmarked.
ReplyDeleteThis was my first choice for the alphabet, but then I went and chose another recipe. This sounds so much like our poli's savoury version and it looks super inviting..
ReplyDeleteThat’s such a gorgeous roti...so soft and would soak up curry so well! And it is very interesting to read about Indian cuisine influences in Trinidad & Tobago! Wow...didn’t know that!
ReplyDeleteI also felt it looks more like puran poli but a savory version.The fluffy roti with the stuffing is very appetizing.
ReplyDeleteDaalpoori looks so soft ! I have read about this but never made it. Like Vaishali mentioned, we have to bookmark this whole edition!
ReplyDeleteI am sure you should get the best Geographic Teacher by now. So much about this paratha, and dhalpuri paratha came out so perfect and inviting. Great recipe share.
ReplyDeleteI love how soft and fluffy your Dhal Puri looks. Amazing pick and we loved it as well. This will be something that I will be making often.
ReplyDeleteUsing yeast and baking agents makes this dhal puri really soft. I have to try out this version. Your preparation looks very tempting and love the write up about street food in the Caribbean.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it so much when I had made it for a previous edition, you have surely got it done so well Priya, love the way the parathas have puffed up..wonderful pick!
ReplyDeletewow. looks so tasty... totally melted in mouth bread. perfect for breakfast.
ReplyDeleteSame pinch Priya, even I made the same, I did not add the yeast though. Yours looks too soft and fluffy. Just melt in mouth texture.
ReplyDelete