South India Travel Tours

Kerala Beaches, Kerala Travel Packages, South India Travel Packages
Kerala Backwaters, Kerala TravelKerala Backwaters, Kerala TravelMahabalipuram Temple, Tamilnadu TravelReligious South India TravelBeaches Kerala, Kerala Travel Packages
South India Travel Kerala Travel Tamilnadu Travel Karnataka Travel Andhra Pradesh Travel Goa Travel
Language Converter:France FlagFrench |Español FlagEspañol |Italiano FlagItaliano |Deutsch FlagDeutsch |Português FlagPortuguês
SOUTH INDIA TOURISM ––›› Mumbai Travel Guide ––›› Cuisine & Food in Mumbai

Mumbai Travel Guide

Cuisine & Food in Mumbai

Indian cooking is distinguished by the use of a larger variety of vegetables than many other well-known cuisines. Within these recognisable similarities, there is an enormous variety of local styles.

In the north and the west, Kashmiri and Mughlai cuisines show strong central Asian influences. Through the medium of Mughlai food, this influence has propagated into many regional kitchens. To the east, the Bengali and Assamese styles shade off into the cuisines of East Asia.

All coastal kitchens make strong use of fish and coconuts. The desert cuisines of Rajasthan and Gujarat use an immense variety of dals and achars (preserves) to substitute for the relative lack of fresh vegetables. The use of tamarind to impart sourness distinguishes Tamil food. The Andhra kitchen is accused, sometimes unfairly, of using excessive amounts of chilies.


All along the northern plain, from Punjab through Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, a variety of flours are used to make chapatis and other closely related breads. In the rain-swept regions of the north-eastern foothills and along the coasts, a large variety of rices are used. Potatoes are not used as the staple carbohydrate in any part of India.

Modern India is going through a period of rapid culinary evolution. With urbanisation and the consequent evolution of patterns of living, home-cooked food has become simpler. Old recipes are recalled more often than used. A small number of influential cookbooks have served the purpose of preserving some of this culinary heritage at the cost of homogenising palates. Meanwhile restaurants, increasingly popular, encourage mixing of styles. Tandoori fish, mutton dosas and Jain pizzas are immediately recognisable by many Indians in cities.



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mumbai Travel Guide How to Reach Mumbai Mumbai History Mumbai Must See Mumbai Excurisons Museums in Mumbai Art Galleries in Mumbai Gardens & Parks in Mumbai Mumbai Shopping Paradise Cuisine & Food in Mumbai Mumbai Hotels
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
South India Travel Guide ––›› Goa Travel Guide ––›› Mumbai Travel Guide ––›› Kerala Travel Guide ––›› Chennai Travel Guide ––›› Madurai Travel Guide ––›› Tamil Nadu Travel Guide ––›› Bangalore Travel Guide ––›› Karnataka Travel Guide ––›› Pondicherry Travel Guide ––›› Andaman Nicobar Travel Guide ––›› KanniyaKumari Travel Guide ––›› Andhra Pradesh Travel Guide
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------