字幕表 動画を再生する
-
'Going for an Indian' or 'having a curry'
-
is almost as stereotypically British as roast dinners or fish and chips.
-
There are around 12,000 curry houses in Britain.
-
The word came from the Tamil 'kari', which meant a spiced sauce.
-
But gradually the term was adapted and used as a generic term
-
for any stew-like food from the Indian subcontinent -
-
rather ignoring such subtleties as,
-
regional differences and completely different flavours,
-
textures, cooking methods and ingredients.
-
The first definite mention of 'curry' in English is in 1598.
-
But the first recipe for curry published in Britain
-
wasn't until 1747,
-
by which time Brits, long-time traders with India,
-
were slowly taking over the country.
-
Thousands of British men and women spent time in India.
-
They had Indian cooks and servants,
-
and while some tried to maintain Western eating habits,
-
most quickly embraced the tastes of their new home.
-
When they returned to Britain,
-
they brought their new love of Indian food back with them.
-
Those who had lived in India
-
knew very well that not all Indian dishes were curry,
-
and when the first,
-
albeit short-lived Indian restaurant in Britain
-
opened in London in 1810,
-
its menu contained khichdi, chutnee and pulao...
-
dishes later known by the anglicised names, kedgeree, chutney and pilaf.
-
Manuscript books, kept by those in the know,
-
also differentiated between dishes.
-
But they were very much a minority, and in Britain,
-
curry became a catch-all term for almost anything with Indian spices.
-
Slowly certain dishes, especially chicken curry -
-
which used an elderly fowl, which had stopped laying eggs -
-
entered the mainstream repertoire.
-
Ready-made curry powders were widely sold.
-
British palates were not used to Indian spices,
-
and the early recipes are more like gently flavoured meaty stews,
-
laden with turmeric, ginger and galangale, with cayenne for a hit.
-
By the 19th Century,
-
curry was in every cookbook, mainly as a leftover dish.
-
The Anglo-Indian cuisine of this era was a hybrid,
-
using pickled cucumbers to replace mango, apple instead of tamarind,
-
and ready-made spice blends galore.
-
It was great, but had very little in common with its Eastern roots.
-
Queen Victoria took a different approach,
-
regularly eating 'Indian dishes'
-
prepared by the cook to her Indian attendants,
-
who'd joined the royal staff at her Golden Jubilee in 1887.
-
There were a few eating houses run by Indians,
-
mainly for other Indians, in port towns,
-
but it took until the 1920s for high profile restaurants to open,
-
catering for a British market.
-
By 1946 there were around 20 Indian restaurants in London.
-
Boomtime for curry came after the Second World War,
-
when the partition of India brought migrants
-
from Punjab and Sylhet to Britain.
-
In the 1970s,
-
civil war in Bangladesh saw many Bangladeshis flee to Britain,
-
and even today many apparently generic Indian restaurants
-
are really Bangladeshi.
-
Curry, in its 1970s form, was cheap and cheerful,
-
adapted for British tastes.
-
In 2001 the then foreign secretary, Robin Cook
-
declared boldly that Britain's national dish was chicken tikka masala…
-
a classic example of an Indian dish - buttered chicken -
-
meeting British tastes,
-
in this case with the addition of cream and, allegedly,
-
cream of tomato soup.
-
In the last decade or so,
-
the British relationship to Indian food has changed.
-
Most of us have grown out of wanting something so hot
-
it'll hospitalise us.
-
Leading Indian chefs are teaching us
-
that there is so much more to Indian food
-
than the comforting predictability of the average restaurant menu.
-
Maybe after 250 years, we've simply come full circle.