Editor's Blog2 mins ago
chicken tikka masala
4 Answers
Hi guys, please help me with this problem. A guy down the club was talking about chicken tikka masala and I said it was a british dish and that it wasn't ever seen on a menu anywhere in the world until about 1970ish making it a british "invention" Now he actually bet his house on the fact that it wasn't a british dish! Do I have a case? Because in return I put my house up as well. Come on guys help me out or I'm on the street.
Thanks.
Thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by stanwilcock. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I understood it was invented in Glasgow. But according to this:-
http://en.wikipedia.o.../Chicken_tikka_masala
no one really knows.
http://en.wikipedia.o.../Chicken_tikka_masala
no one really knows.
I;ve always understood that it was a combination dish cooked to meet British tastes - a bit like some of the food in Chinese restaurants here, you wouldn't see Chinese people eating it in China. Chicken tikka yes, Chicken masala yes, but chicken tikka masala - no. Here's another semi-supportive theory! http://www.littleindi...dex.php?showtopic=507
From the Oxford English Dictionary website:
"Restaurant menus and reviews start to show chicken tikka masala from 1975, according to the latest research from the OED. Despite the dish's claim to be a great British national dish, the first recorded evidence comes from America. Something wrong here? Or not?"
http://www.oed.com/bbc-series1/list.html
Chris
"Restaurant menus and reviews start to show chicken tikka masala from 1975, according to the latest research from the OED. Despite the dish's claim to be a great British national dish, the first recorded evidence comes from America. Something wrong here? Or not?"
http://www.oed.com/bbc-series1/list.html
Chris