Roti

Phulka
Cauliflower Roti
Preparation of Roti with sorghum flour.
Roti Shop in San Fernando, Trinidad & Tobago
Roti Shop in Port of Spain, Trinidad & Tobago

Roti (Urdu|روٹی }}; Hindi| रोटी}}; Dhivehi: ރޮށި ; Punjabi: ਰੋਟੀ ; Gujarati: રોટલી; IPA[ro:ʈi]) is the word for flat bread in Hindi, Urdu, Punjabi, Pashto, Assamese, Indonesian, Malay, Bengali, and Somali. In Maharshtra and some parts of Gujarat, poli and bhakri are used to denote the same unleavened South Asian breads.

Contents

Indian/Pakistani

Roti is the traditional Indian bread, normally eaten with curries or cooked vegetables. It is made most often from wheat flour, cooked on a flat or slightly concave iron griddle called a tawa. It is similar to a tortilla in appearance. Like breads around the world, roti is a staple accompaniment to other foods, maybe spread with ghee (clarified butter).

Blended Roti

Whole Wheat can be blended with other flours to make highly nutritious rotis. Below is the ratio in which one of the best recommended nutritious blended flours is mixed:-

Outside South Asia

Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand

In Indonesia and Malaysia, the term encompasses all forms of bread including western-style bread as well as the traditional Punjabi breads.

In Thailand, "roti" refers to the maida paratha—known in Malaysia as roti canai and in Singapore as roti prata—which is typically drizzled with condensed milk, rolled up, and eaten as a hot snack.

West Indies

Roti also features prominently in the diet of many West Indian countries, especially Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Suriname. West Indian roti are primarily made from wheat flour, baking powder,salt, and water and cooked on a tava. Certain rotis are also made with butter. There are several types of roti made in the West Indies.

Trinidad and Leeward Islands
Guyana

Depending on where Indians settled in Guyana, foods can be different. In some parts of Guyana, Dosti Roti is made. Indo-Guyanese food as a whole can be different from their Trinidadian brothers, including the names of many items.

Other dishes

The word 'roti' in the West Indies may also refer to a dish of stewed or curried ingredients wrapped in a 'roti skin'. In Trinidad and Tobago various rotis are served. Popular variations include chicken, conch, beef and vegetable. Shrimp and goat are available. The term is used locally in cities with large West Indian populations, such as Brooklyn, Toronto and Montreal. In such locales the dish has also become popular among non-West Indians.

While common variations may include chicken, beef, or cabbage and carrot, one of the more authentic alternatives (goat) is known as Groti.

In Suriname roti refers also to a dish of stuffed and spiced roti wraps. Due to mass emigration of Surinam Hindustani in the 1970s, roti became a popular take-out dish in The Netherlands. It usually includes chicken, potatoes, boiled eggs and various vegetables, most notably the kousenband or yardlong bean. Another variation includes shrimp and aubergine. It is custom to eat the dish by hand.

See also

References

External links