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Food stalls in Debe Coconut vendor in Marabella. Popular freshly prepared street foods include: Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian foods like doubles, [21] aloo pie, [22] pholourie, [23] saheena, [24] baiganee, bara, and kachori are popular street foods throughout the country. Another popular Indo-T&T street food is wrap roti, (usually paratha or ...
The roti sandwich is named after the chapati bread (also known as roti) in which it is wrapped. Indian indenture workers came to Trinidad in great numbers after the slavery system ended in 1838. [3] They brought recipes for various roti variations with them that today still are a staple in Trinidadian cuisine as a side dish.
The roti wrap is the commercialization of roti and curry together as a fast-food or street-food item in the Caribbean. This wrap form of roti originated in southern Trinidad. It was first created in the mid-1940s by Sackina Karamath, who later founded Hummingbird Roti Shop in San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago. The wrap was convenient, as the ...
Dhalpurie roti, pumpkin tarkari, channa and aloo, and curry goat, Indian-origin dishes from Trinidad and Tobago. Ingredients that are common in most islands' dishes are rice, plantains, beans, cassava, cilantro, bell peppers, chickpeas, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, coconut, and any of various meats that are locally available like beef, poultry, pork, goat or fish.
Goat roti (/ ˈ r oʊ t i / ROH-tee) is a wrap roti (either Paratha, Dhalpuri, or Dosti roti) filled with curry goat and other ingredients. It originates in the Trinidad and Tobago cuisine and is also popular in other Caribbean countries such as Guyana , Suriname , and Jamaica .
Doubles is a common street food originating from Trinidad and Tobago. It is normally eaten during breakfast, but is also eaten occasionally during lunch or as a late night snack and popular hangover food for local Trinidadians. Doubles are made with two baras (flat fried dough) and filled with curry channa (curried chickpeas) and various chutneys.
Another Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian street food that is popular is roti, which consists of roti (usually paratha or dhalpuri) that wraps curried vegetables, curried channa (chickpeas) and aloo (potatoes), curried chicken, curried shrimp, curried goat, curried duck, curried conchs, or any other spicy fillings.
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