Tuesday, 2 August 2016

The Debe experience - Part 2 - Sweet

Another aspect of street food in Debe is the wide range of East Indian sweets offered for sale. Debe is also known for its delicious Indian sweets like kurma, goolab jamoon, barfi, jalebi, and even non-Indian sweets like fudge, sugar cake and peanut brittle.

A vendor in Debe smiling and ready to serve

Laddu or laddoo are ball-shaped sweets made of flour and sugar. They are often served at festive or religious occasions but you can find them at any time in Debe!

Ladoo - golden and delicious

Jalebi is made by deep-frying a wheat flour (maida flour) batter in pretzel or circular shapes, which are then soaked in sugar syrup. The deep orange color comes from turmeric include in the flour mixture.

Jalebi

Kurma is made with wheat flour, milk, coconut milk, spices which is combined into a stiff dough then fried and tossed in simple sugar syrup.

Kurma

Goolab jamoon is similar to kurma except that condensed milk is used to keep the dough soft.

Goolab jamoon


Barfi is a powered milk based Indian sweet that is moulded and topped with colored sprinkles. Debe now offers differnt flavours of barfi including soursop and coconut.

Barfi

The Debe experience - Part 1 - Savoury

Travelling to South to visit relatives was an onerous chore for a little child. You’re stuck in a slow-moving car for at least 2 hours with no entertainment, save for singing tunes from Sesame Street and telling lame jokes. The scenes from the country-side quickly merged into one as little tummies grumbled. The only hope was to stop at Debe to buy delicious Indian snacks. That meant continuously asking what the time was in eager anticipation of lunch.

Debe (or Débé) is a town in south Trinidad located in the Penal-Debe Region.



Debe has grown from a small village settlement into a key transit point. Historically, Debe became important as a train depot during the sugar-cane production era. Villagers began selling home-made lunches and sweets to travellers and workers on the train line.



There used to be a long stretch of food stalls erected just in front of the homes of enterprising individuals. In my child’s mind, this meant the food would never run out because they can always go home and make more!



Tripadvisor rated Debe food stalls as a 4.5/5 

(https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g147389-d3777463-Reviews-Food_carts-Port_of_Spain_Trinidad_Trinidad_and_Tobago.html#REVIEWS).

Debe as a rural community

Despite the shutdown of the sugar-cane industry in Trinidad, Debe is still widely known for Indian street food and delicacies e.g. saheena, poulourie, baiganee, aloo pie etc.




Baiganee is slices of melongene (baigan) coated in a split pea flour and fried to golden perfection. They can be eaten as is or accompanied by curried mango, mango anchar, or pepper sauce.



Aloo pie is a flour dough shell that is stuffed with spiced potato filling and accompanied by seasonings like pepper sauce, curried mango, curried channa



Kachori is a split peas flour savory concoction that is deep fried and served with a spicy condiment like mango chutney.


Saheena is a simple fried delicacy composed of taro leaves (dasheen bush leaves) folded or rolled in a split peas flour batter and then fried.


Street foods are ready-to-eat foods and beverages prepared and/or sold by vendors represent a significant part of urban food consumption for millions of low-and-middle-income consumers, in urban areas on a daily basis in developing countries according to the FAO. Street foods may be the least expensive and most accessible means of obtaining a nutritionally balanced meal outside the home for many – this is the case with doubles.


I think the Debe experience epitomizes the importance of street food preparation and sales in providing a regular source of income for many of men and women with limited education or skills in an otherwise impoverished area. The outcome is a thriving and bright Debe that looks remarkably different from decades past but whose primary product remains delicious and convenient street food.



Sunday, 31 July 2016

Geera horse you say??

Geera or “jeera” refers to cumin seeds which are usually patched or roasted before they are used in trini cuisine. To “geera” any meat requires marinating in a spicy patched or roasted geera or cumin seed marinade and then adding more geera when the dish is nearly finished cooking.

But, different people use different seasonings or a different technique in cooking to achieve the same tasty trini dish. Every trini geera meat connoisseur has a recipe that is the best. But, the geera king in Arima is hailed to be David Etienne on Queen Street in Arima according to the Trinidad Daily Express newspaper in April 5th, 2013.

Cumin seeds or geera on the left; herbs and seasonings used to season the meats



You can also use prepared roasted ground geera instead of grinding your own in a coffee grinder or using a rather ineffective mortar and pestle. But, a traditional East Indian grinding stone combo will do the trick!


The grinding stone or “lohar” as it was called in Hindi which was used for grinding spices or anything else really.

Geera meat is either eaten alone or in hops bread or in coconut bake at a bar usually. Geera meats are served at bars as “cutters” because as one folklore explains, the geera and pepper combo in the meat actually makes you take longer to get intoxicated. Although I haven’t personally tested this, many have attested to its benefits!

 Geera pork in coconut bake


Any kind of meat can be prepared like this, chicken, pork, lamb, shrimp, fish, even horse….according to someone from Grande….where the horse race track was in Wallerfield…hmmm.


And any kind of chicken part can be used from neck to feet to wings to gizzard....

Although it may have started as appetizers in a bar, the humble geera meat can now be served as a main course with dhal and rice at Sails restaurant and pub.





Geera pork




Geera chicken


Geera lamb

Friday, 29 July 2016

Smoked herring - a happy accident?

A riddle, a riddle a-ree: what has fine bones galore, a deeply pungent smokey taste, super peppery, salty and can be eaten with just about any type of carbs? Plus, it’s another Diana power mint classic. Any guesses?

Classic smoked herring

Herring is a small oily fish. Smoked herring is a smoke- and salt-cured preparation of herring fish that is imported into Trinidad. They are often eaten for breakfast in the United Kingdom, Belgium, The Isle of Man, Japan, and a minority of North American regions. Smoking and salting of fish—in particular of spawning salmon and herring which are caught in large numbers in a short time and can be made suitable for edible storage by this practice, predates 19th century Britain. It can be purchased relatively cheaply, prepared simply and does not need refrigeration. Is this another throw-back to our colonial history then?


Dried smoked salted herring fish

It goes with just about any carbohydrate- from dumplings, ground provision, crix, roti, bake, hops bread, green fig, to dhal and rice… To cut the saltiness, several cooks boil the fish first- similar to salt-fish preparation, de-bone, flake the fish, then sautee in oil along with a variety of vegetables to both enhance the flavour and to cut the saltiness e.g. tomatoes, grated carrots, finely sliced onions, minced garlic, chives, chadon beni and hot pepper. Some add a little thinly shredded cabbage too. Serving it with avocado or cucumber slices cools down the taste-buds nicely.

Smoked herring and corneal dumplings
Smoked herring pizza anyone?

http://www.getmecooking.com/recipe/smokedherring-pizza

Dhal and rice and smoked herring


According to Mark Kurlansky, "Smoked foods almost always carry with them legends about their having been created by accident".