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  2. List of snack foods from the Indian subcontinent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_snack_foods_from...

    Ingredients include specially roasted rice, mixtures of peanuts, various spiced pulses, seb (salty fried beans), coconut dried-ups, spices, salt, and mustard. Bikaneri bhujia. A famous crisp snack, originating from Bikaner, a town in the western state of Rajasthan, it is prepared by using gram flour and spices.

  3. Bakarwadi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakarwadi

    Bakarwadi is a traditional crispy, deep-fried, disc-shaped, sweet and spicy snack popular in the western state of Maharashtra in India. [2] It was already popular before 1960 when these were not Gujarat or Maharashtra states; they were both a part of Bombay State, and both cultures added their own flavors to each other's recipes.

  4. Vada (food) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vada_(food)

    Vada, vadai, wada, bara, or bora is a category of savoury fried snacks native to India. Vadas can be described variously as fritters, cutlets, or dumplings. [7][8] Vadas are sometimes stuffed with vegetables and traditionally served with chutneys and sambar. In North India and Pakistan, Bhalla is a similar food.

  5. Chaat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaat

    Chaat, or chāt (IAST: cāṭ) (lit. 'lick, tasting, delicacy') is a family of savoury snacks that originated in India, typically served as an hors d'oeuvre or at roadside tracks from stalls or food carts across South Asia in India, Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. [1][2] With its origins in Uttar Pradesh, India, [3] chaat has become immensely ...

  6. Andhra cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andhra_cuisine

    Dibba rotti or minapa rotti is a classic Andhra dish eaten for breakfast, brunch, or evening snack with a chutney or pickle. Rice is the main dish, eaten by mixing with the side dishes using the right hand, and the primary source of carbohydrates. Spiced pickles, pachadi, podi, and papadum (appadam) are typical side dishes.

  7. Bread pakora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bread_pakora

    Bread pakora is an Indian fried snack (pakora or fritter). It is also known as bread bhaji (or bajji). A common street food, it is made from bread slices, gram flour, and spices among other ingredients. [1][2] The snack is prepared by dipping triangular bread slices in a spicy gram flour batter and frying them. [3]

  8. Samosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samosa

    In the Indian states of Assam, Odisha, West Bengal, Bihar and Jharkhand, singaras or shingras (চিংৰা) [20] (the East Indian version of samosas) are popular snacks found almost everywhere. They are a bit smaller than in other parts of India, with a filling consisting chiefly of cooked diced potato, peanuts, and sometimes raisins. [ 18 ]

  9. Chakli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chakli

    Chakli is a savoury snack from India. It is a spiral-shaped snack with a spiked surface. [1] Chakli is typically made from flours of rice, Bengal gram (brown chickpea) and black gram (urad daal). It has several variations, depending on the types and proportion of flours used. Murukku, a similar snack typically made without Bengal gram flour, is ...