It is difficult or rather impossible to understand India’s food without any sense of India’s history and culture.
Over the millennia, India had been invaded and colonised many times, which have subjected this ancient civilisation and a modern nation to varied cultural influences. Indian culture’s innate ability to assimilate and absorb varied ideas and influences is reflected in various facets, one of which is our diversified culinary character.
In post-modern digital India, this diversified culinary character of our country has received a further momentum through influences of globalisation. Today we are not only loving Mughlai cuisine, but are also eagerly lapping up Thai, Mexican, Japanese, American, Greek, Spanish and other exotic cuisines.
These days a significant section of Indians have developed a penchant towards delicacies like tom yam kung (Thailand), gyros (Greece), sushi and sashimi (Japan), jamon iberico (Spain), macarons and baguette (France), to name a few, which not so long ago were largely foreign to our palates.
The country has witnessed the mushrooming of restaurants serving international cuisines, which are patronised primarily by the well travelled youth who have developed a taste for some of the exotic cuisines during their overseas travels. Ashok Malkani probes the rising popularity of international cuisines in India, explores the reasons behind this trend, and discusses the future of these cuisines in the Indian food service industry through industry feedbacks.
It doesn’t deserve a mention that eating out culture in urban India has gained momentum during the last two decades. And now thanks to globalisation and the growing potency of Internet and social media, eating out in India has much more room for experimentation than it had a decade or two earlier. This has been one of the reasons for paving the growth in popularity for a number of international cuisines across India’s food service industry.
This story is from the February-March 2018 edition of Food & Beverage Business Review.
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This story is from the February-March 2018 edition of Food & Beverage Business Review.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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