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Tried my first south indian food

Has any of you tried aappam? It is like a soft fluffy in the middle and crispy at the edges.

Had it long back - Appam and Paya - but went to India for a week in June and tried different appams in Nalas Appa Kadai in Chennai and it was excellent though folks with me(my brother and couple of other friends who live there) cribbed about the taste. :lol: - For me, going back to India for a visit after 3 years, everything tasted very good. And it was surprising for me to see many North East Indians working there and couple of them even spoke Tamil. So it is a good thing cultural blend is happening in Chennai.

That means you are very old.

How old is very old in your books??? :lol:
 
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Had it long back - Appam and Paya - but went to India for a week in June and tried different appams in Nalas Appa Kadai in Chennai and it was excellent though folks with me(my brother and couple of other friends who live there) cribbed about the taste. :lol: - For me, going back to India for a visit after 3 years, everything tasted very good. And it was surprising for me to see many North East Indians working there and couple of them even spoke Tamil. So it is a good thing cultural blend is happening in Chennai.



How old is very old in your books??? :lol:

There is a restaurant called Aachi aapakadai in Bay area. I felt their appam were better than Nala's. You should make a trip to Bay area just to try all the awesome food available here. You'll never miss India.
 
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There is a restaurant called Aachi aapakadai in Bay area. I felt their appam were better than Nala's. You should make a trip to Bay area just to try all the awesome food available here. You'll never miss India.

Used to come for conferences every year to SFO but for the past 2 years stopped coming. Maybe if I make a trip to meet friends, will try it out. Thanks for the tips. Maybe they might start something in NY or NJ.
 
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Used to come for conferences every year to SFO but for the past 2 years stopped coming. Maybe if I make a trip to meet friends, will try it out. Thanks for the tips. Maybe they might start something in NY or NJ.

NJ has anjappar I believe . Have you tried it?
 
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NJ has anjappar I believe . Have you tried it?

Am traveling to NYC and NJ for the US open finals. Then I am planning to visit Anjappar for South Indian non veg, Ali baba for Turkish, Jackson Heights for Bangladeshi food and Indian Chinese restaurant. :D
 
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Am traveling to NYC and NJ for the US open men and women final. That time I am planning to visit Anjappar for South Indian non veg, Ali baba for Turkish, Jackson Heights for Bangladeshi food and Indian Chinese restaurant. :D

Go to Flushing China Town(as you are going to watch the US open) and look for Malay restaurant(Malaysian cuisine) - a small joint in 40th road, Flushing - If you drink, take your own liquor(they allow it and will give you ice and glasses as well) - start with Roti/Canai and try the seafoods - the food is out of the world and the prices are very reasonable.

Also if you are going to Jackson Heights try restaurants between 80th and 90th streets and Roosevelt ave and you will come across fusion of Chinese and Latin American cuisines(like Indo-Chinese) - try them as well.
 
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Have any of you tried aappam? It is like a soft fluffy in the middle and crispy at the edges.

164020d1345815238-appam1.jpg

You should dry it with chicken curry made with coconut milk or egg roast!! :smitten:
 
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Go to Flushing China Town(as you are going to watch the US open) and look for Malay restaurant(Malaysian cuisine) - a small joint in 40th road, Flushing - If you drink, take your own liquor(they allow it and will give you ice and glasses as well) - start with Roti/Canai and try the seafoods - the food is out of the world and the prices are very reasonable.

Also if you are going to Jackson Heights try restaurants between 80th and 90th streets and Roosevelt ave and you will come across fusion of Chinese and Latin American cuisines(like Indo-Chinese) - try them as well.

Sure!! Thanks for the pointers. I went to Jackson Heights earlier once, but went to a Bangladeshi restaurant. In that case will try something new this time!!
 
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Is it true that South Indians are more staunchly vegetarian

because I can only go so long without having some more meat especially my burgers...yum yum.

The cuisines are largely vegetarian but you can put meat in it as per your wish.
 
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Have any of you tried aappam? It is like a soft fluffy in the middle and crispy at the edges.

164020d1345815238-appam1.jpg

it is called Appam. I think in tamil they say Aaappam.

Anyone read this? the food products like ready-to-cook items exported from Kerala to GCC and elsewhere is consumed by Srilankans and others! eg: Puttu,Appam etc. Kerala food somehow reached there due to the Malabar population who were once there(in Ceylon) pre-Independence. though, the names are corrupted. like Appam goes as aaappam!
Keralan food gets Lankan mouths watering - Times Of India
Keralan food gets Lankan mouths watering
Shenoy Karun, TNN Sep 5, 2012, 04.40AM IST
KOCHI: The Lankan and Keralan topography and physiognomy have parallels, but their gastronomies too have an uncanny similarity which is proving beneficial to the ethnic food producers of Kerala. Traditional Kerala food items like puttu and idiyappam, exported to western Europe and Australia targeting the Keralites working there, are increasingly consumed by Sri Lankan expatriates in those markets.

"Thirty per cent of our products sold in the UK, Switzerland, Austria, Germany and France are consumed by Sri Lankans living there," revealed Sajive Manjila, managing director of Thrissur-based Manjilas Group of Companies. The company markets rice and rice flour for traditional Malayali food products like puttu and idiyappam (noolputtu) in markets like the US, western Europe, the Middle East and Australia under the brand 'Double Horse'.

"The reddish products - puttu, idiyappam, and rice made from the Chembavu variants - are found to be popular among the Sri Lankans," Manjila revealed. His company exports 30 containers of food products every month for the American and western European markets.

London-based Sony Robinson, who markets Palakkadan Matta rice under the brand name Jasu Rice in the UK also noticed this trend. "I import 48 tonnes of rice every three months to London and 70 - 75% is being consumed by the Sri Lankan expatriates here," he said. Michael Pullolil Kurien, who runs Keraleeyam, a store for ethnic Kerala foods in Oxford in the UK, says Sri Lankans regularly buy traditional Kerala food from his shop.

What attracts the Sri Lankan community towards the ethnic Kerala food is the similarities between the cuisines of both the lands. "Roughly 35% of the food items in Lanka are similar to that of Kerala," observed Surendra Madhavan, executive director of Kochi-based Vijaya Corporate, who had spent a decade in Sri Lankan capital Colombo till 2002.

Kindred culinary interests of the Lankans and Keralites, initially a serendipity for local businessmen in the state, are transforming into good business opportunities for them. At times, this business-cultural relationship turns quid pro quo - during Onam, the Keralites in London and nearby towns serve traditional Onasadya on plantain leaves from Sri Lanka.

Like Keralites, Lankans migrate in large numbers to developed nations across the world. According to the website of British High Commission, Colombo, the number of Sri Lankans living in Britain is 5 lakh, and the number of Lankans applying for British visa is upwards of 30,000 per annum.

Similarly, the Australian High Commission estimates that one lakh Lankans live in Australia. BASUG Diaspora and Development, a Netherlands-based organisation, puts the figure of Lankans in France as 1.5 lakh.
 
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