Food and Drink

How Partition Has Shaped The Food In Punjab

Punjabi cuisine today is a mélange of Indo-Mughal-Persian-Afghani nuances. With the fleeing Punjabis from the North West Frontier region came the tandoor, and a whole new landscape of barbequed fare for the rest of India

Punjabi cuisine today is a mélange of Indo-Mughal-Persian-Afghani nuances Photo: Shutterstock
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Javed Akhtar's immortal lyric "Panchee, dariya, pawan ke jhonke…koi sarhad inhe na koi rokay" (The birds, the river, the wafting breezes... no borders can stop them) could well be true of the culinary culture of divided Punjab. In 1947 after the partition of British India, the Punjab province was divided between India and Pakistan — a tragic decision that led to the creation of a new country. Yet, no matter what politicians in their wisdom may do, Punjab's culinary heritage is eternally rooted in the vast swathes of its lands fed by the five rivers, from which the name of this region — (Persian-panj/five, ab/waters) — was inspired.

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