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Bunny Chow And Its Durban Curry

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Ingredients

Adjust Servings:
1 loaf bread, white, unsliced, flat-topped
1 star anise
1 cinnamon stick
3 whole cardamom pods
1/2 teaspoon fennel seed
1/2 teaspoon cumin seed
1/2 cup oil
1 onion, chopped

Nutritional information

2165.7
Calories
1111 g
Calories From Fat
123.5 g
Total Fat
35.1 g
Saturated Fat
303.9 mg
Cholesterol
1305.9 mg
Sodium
154.8 g
Carbs
13.7 g
Dietary Fiber
16.1 g
Sugars
106.7 g
Protein
593 g
Serving Size

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Bunny Chow And Its Durban Curry

Features:
    Cuisine:

    Two spices that we in India would NEVER use too much : turmeric and gram masala. The amount used in this recipe is WAY too much!

    • 90 min
    • Serves 2
    • Easy

    Ingredients

    Directions

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    Bunny Chow and Its Durban Curry,This is a story: with a recipe. During the Great Depression in 1933 Indians, whites and Chinese in Durban, South Africa, suffered hunger like everyone else. The kids then discovered that the cheapest curry they could buy (for a quarter penny or half a penny) was made by a vegetarian Indian caste known in Durban slang as the Bania. It was made from dried sugarbeans (no meat). The children didn’t have plates, and one kid got the bright idea to hollow out a quarter bread, asked the seller to put the bean curry in the hollowed-out bread, and then used the broken bread he’s taken out as a sort of eating utensil. Chinese food was called “chow”. Somehow the two words came together: Bania Chow. In time it simply became known as Bunny Chow. Bunny Chow was what the Indian sugar plantation workers took as their day’s food to the lands: curry in hollowed-out bread halves. Cheap and practical … Today it does not matter what your skin colour or station in life is: Durbanites and people from the Kwa-Zulu-Natal province love their bunny chow … For this story and the recipe he managed to get from “the mysterious Lingela” who makes bunny chows daily, I am indebted to “Kitchenboy”. Should he happen upon this story, he’ll know who he is … Thanks, Braam!,Two spices that we in India would NEVER use too much : turmeric and gram masala. The amount used in this recipe is WAY too much!,Gram Masala


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    Steps

    1
    Done

    Fry All the Ingredients Listed Under "whole Spices" Until the Onion Is Glassy.

    2
    Done

    Add the List Called "fine Spices". Lingela Says: "stir and Fry Until the Spices Stick to the Bottom of the Pot. If You Have a Good Teflon-Coated Pot, Go and Buy a Cheap One First.".

    3
    Done

    Now Add the Tomatoes, and Stir Until Everything Sticking to the Pot Bottom Comes Loose.

    4
    Done

    Add the Meat, Ginger, Garlic and Curry Leaves.

    5
    Done

    Simmer For Half an Hour or More, Until the Meat Is Almost Tender, Then Add a Little Water and the Potato Cubes.

    6
    Done

    Simmer Until Meat Is Tender.

    7
    Done

    the Bread:.

    8
    Done

    It Should Be the Unsliced Rectagular Loaf With the Flat Top, Known in South Africa as a "government Sandwich Loaf".

    9
    Done

    You Could Cut the Bread Across Into Two, Three or Four Even Chunks, Depending on How Hungry the Eaters Will Be.

    10
    Done

    Whatever You Decide, With a Sharp Knife Cut Out Most of the Soft White Bread, Leaving a Thick Wall and Bottom. Keep the Bread You Removed.

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    Ariel Torres

    Seafood specialist with a deep love for creating ocean-inspired dishes.

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