1 / 23

INDIAN IMPACTS ON BRITISH CUISINE

INDIAN IMPACTS ON BRITISH CUISINE. – Curry: An Indian Dish Conquers the British Isles –. 1 Indian Overall Impacts 2 Food: Curry – An Indian Dish Conquers the British Isles 2.1 Definition and Pronunciation 2.2 Origin 2.3 Semantic Relationships Varieties of Curry: Masala and Balti Dishes

neka
Download Presentation

INDIAN IMPACTS ON BRITISH CUISINE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INDIAN IMPACTS ON BRITISH CUISINE – Curry: An Indian Dish Conquers the British Isles –

  2. 1 Indian Overall Impacts 2 Food: Curry – An Indian Dish Conquers the British Isles 2.1 Definition and Pronunciation 2.2 Origin 2.3 Semantic Relationships Varieties of Curry: Masala and Balti Dishes 3.1 Chicken Tikka Masala – The New Traditional English Dish? 3.2 Balti – An English Invention? Empirical Data – Entries in Search Engines Evaluation: www.currypages.com Outline

  3. 1 Indian Overall Impacts FOOD CLOTHING … RELIGION Indian Bangladeshi Pakistani … EMPLOYMENT MUSIC FILM, EG. BOLLYWOOD ART JEWELLERY TELEVISION

  4. 2.1 Definition and Pronunciation [1] Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary (1995: 276) curry /kAri/ n a dish of meat, fish, vegetables, etc cooked with certain hot-tasting spices. Curry is often eaten with rice […] ► curriedadj cooked with certain hot-tasting spices […] ■ curry powdern a mixture of various spices ground to a powder and used in making curry 2 Food: Curry – An Indian Dish Conquers the British Isles

  5. 2.1 Definition and Pronunciation [2] Cobuild English Dictionary for Advanced Learners (2001: 371) curry /kAri, AM k3:ri/ (curries, currying, curried) [1] Curry is a dish composed of meat and vegetables, or just vegetables, in a sauce containing hot spices. It is usually eaten with rice and is one of the main dishes of India. [2] … Oxford Dictionaries (http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/curry_1?view=uk) curry1 • noun (pl. curries) a dish of meat, vegetables, etc., cooked in an Indian-style sauce of strong spices. • verb (curries, curried) prepare or flavour with such a sauce.

  6. 2.2 Origin Alan Davidson's Oxford Companion to Food: from the Tamil word kari meaning spiced sauce Camellia Panjabi [author of 50 Great Curries of India]: concedes with this argument, though she suggests Northern India may have played some part; gravy dish called khadi Others: word curry originates from Old English as cury was the Old English word for cooking derived from the Frenchcuire, meaning to cook, broil or grill

  7. Collocations hot / medium / mild curry curry powder curry sauce curry stuff (chillies, onions, ginger, coconut, turmeris, cardamom, colves, etc ground into paste or powder) chicken curry / beef curry curry paste 2.3 Semantic Relationships [1]

  8. Homonymy according to the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary(1995: 276), curry is a homonym: curry1 “a dish of meat, fish, vegetables etc” curry2 “[…] IDM: curry favour (with sb) to try to gain sb’s favour by giving them help, praise, etc” 2.3 Semantic Relationships [2]

  9. 2.3 Semantic Relationships [3]

  10. 2.3 Semantic Relationships [4] Lexical Field:  though rather folk linguistics

  11. 3.1 Chicken Tikka Masala – The New Traditional English Dish? Definition and Origin(http://www.sonzyskitchen.com/chickentikka.htm) chicken tikka masala , n., mild curry dish of chicken in a tomato-based sauce, cooked tandoori style (in a charcoal-fired oven) developed during colonial times in India (½ Indian & ½ British) 3 Varieties of Curry: Balti and Masala Dishes

  12. Sainsbury's sell 1.6 million CTM meals every year and stocks 16 CTM-related products including chicken tikka masala pasta sauce & chicken tikka masala sandwiches etc a 1998 survey by Real Curry Restaurant Guide of 48 different CTMs found only common ingredient was chicken 23 million portions a year are sold in Indian restaurants 10 tonnes of Chicken Tikka Masala a day are produced by Noon Products destined for supermarkets most schools and charities in Sylhet, Bangladesh are run by proceeds from its sales Chicken Tikka Masala – Facts and Figures

  13. Definition and Pronunciation Oxford Dictionaries (http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/balti?view=uk) balti /b):lti/ or /bAlti/ n (pl. baltis) a type of Pakistani cuisine in which the food is cooked in a small two-handled pan ORIGIN: Urdu, ‘pail’ Nationmaster (www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Cuisine-of-India) “Balti is the name for a style of food probably first devised and served in Birmingham, England around the late 1970s, probably 1977. The food is a hot curry-style dish, most likely taking its name from the thick flat-bottomed steel or iron pot in which it is both cooked and served.” 3.2 Balti – An English Invention?

  14. exact origin of the word is debated, but the following are possible: A: usual explanation: balti (meaning, literally, "bucket" in India) refers to the steel or iron pot. B: name refers to the region of Baltistan or the Balti people who live there C: arose from "bowl tea", a Pidgin-English phrase used by English working-class workmen who found the meal to be an affordable and filling 'tea' (dinner) at the end of a day's work Origin

  15. Birmingham = Capital of the Balti  spicy dish was introduced to the city by Pakistani and Kashmiri population in the mid 1970s  bridged the cultural gap between immigrants and new home country vast majority of Balti houses are situated in the Sparkbrook, Balsall Heath and Moseley areas of South Birmingham = “Balti Triangle” there are around 50 balti houses in the “Balti Triangle” - many of them famous for their giant 'table top' naans Birmingham‘s Balti Triangle

  16. Balti Triangle – Map

  17. 4 Empirical Data – Entries in Search Engines

  18. 5 Evaluation: www.currypages.com[1]

  19. 5 Evaluation: www.currypages.com [2]

  20. 5 Evaluation: www.currypages.com [3]

  21. 5 Evaluation: www.currypages.com [3]

  22. Balti Experience. City of Birmingham. 26 June 2005. <http://www.birmingham.gov.uk> Balti Triangle. Travel West Midlands. 26 June 2005. <http://www.travelwm.co.uk/events/ ptv/baltitriangle.asp> Crowther, Jonathan, ed (1995). Oxford Advanced Learner‘s Dictionary. Oxford: University Press. Curry. Wikipedia. 26 June 2005. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curry> Dish Glossary. Curry Pages. 26 June 2005. <http://www.currypages.com/dishglossary. aspx> Encyclopeadia. Nationmaster. 26 June 2005. <http://www.nationmaster.com/ encyclopedia> Inside Out. BBC. 26 June 2005. <http://www.bbc.co.uk/insideout/northwest/series1/ curry.shtml> Legacies – Birmingham. BBC. 26 June 2005. <http://www.bbc.co.uk/legacies/immig_ emig/england/birmingham/index.shtml> Sinclair, John, ed. (2001). English Dictionary for Advanced Learners. Glasgow: HarperCollins Publishers. Sony‘z Kitchen. Home Page. 26 June 2005. <http://www.sonzyskitchen.com/chicken tikka.htm> Sources

  23. … questions? If not, … THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!

More Related