Trinidad street food to try when you’re there

Trinidad street food to try when you're there | H is for Home

I’ve just returned from 3 weeks in Trinidad – the place where I grew up – on a joint business and pleasure trip. When I visit the island, one of the main things I look forward to doing is indulging in the array of delicious street food that’s available.

All the images included here were taken either by me, my good friend, Simone or my aunt Coleen who was visiting at the same time – on holiday from Canada.

Doubles

Doubles are probably my favourite of all the street food you can buy in Trinidad – and they’re the messiest to eat! Doubles – an Indian dish – are two bara (hence the name ‘doubles’) with a spoonful of curry channa (chickpeas) in between. You have the option of a sprinkling of kuchela, amchar, tamarind chutney, chopped cucumber and/or pepper sauce. Ask for “no pepper”, “slight pepper” or “plenty pepper” depending on your tolerance for chilli!

Two women making doubles at the roadside on Tunapuna Road, Arima | H is for Home

Locals have them for breakfast – to set them up for the day – or in the wee hours following a late night out drinking and socialising.

Buying doubles at the roadside in doubles at the roadside on Tunapuna Road, Arima | H is for Home

Roti

Ask six people who makes the best roti and you’ll get half a dozen different answers! Roti is another Indian speciality eaten  straight out of the wrapper with the hands. It’s a soft, slightly spiced bread – similar to a tortilla – that is stuffed with curried vegetables, meat (chicken, beef, goat, lamb) or seafood (shrimp, conch) and condiments such as curry mango and pepper sauce before being folded and wrapped ready for demolishing.

A couple of the best roti places are Hosein’s on Eastern Main Road, San Juan and Hott Shoppe on Mucurapo Road, St James. The one pictured below – a dhalpuri roti filled with channa, potato and pumpkin – (which was the best one I ate on my visit) was from The Roti Café, Upper Saddle Road, Cantaro, Santa Cruz. I sat down to eat at a table outside, washing my roti down with a Carib from the Roundabout Bar next door – it doesn’t get much better than that!

There are a few different forms of roti from which to choose; the aforementioned dhalpuri, sada, parata/buss-up-shut (busted up shirt) – they’re all good!

Vegetable dhalpourie roti with a bottle of Carib lager beer | H is for Home

Ice cream

As well as doubles and roti, I was most looking forward to becoming reacquainted with B&M ice cream on Western Main Road in St James. The home-made ice cream is available in a variety of flavours – chocolate, coconut, rum & raisin, Guinness, cocopine, peanut, cherry vanilla, barbasop (barbadine and soursop) – and my own personal favourite – soursop (guanábana).

B&M ice cream vendor. Western Main Road, St James | H is for Home

Coconut water

Nothing quenches the thirst in the midday tropical heat of Trinidad like coconut water. There are half a dozen or so coconut vendors to choose from around the Savannah in Port of Spain. Back in the day, they were sold out of the back of old wooden carts. Today, the vendors have fancy chariots sporting colourful wrought ironwork and advertising boards. To find them, head for the west side of the Savannah, opposite the ‘Magnificent Seven‘. When you’ve downed the water, don’t forget to hand the coconut back to the vendor to chop it into segments so you can eat the delicious jelly.

Coconut vendors around the Savannah. Port of Spain, Trinidad | H is for Home

Snow cones

Snowcones comprise of a dome of shaved ice (about the size of a tennis ball); a few squirts of brightly coloured, sweet flavoured syrup and topped with (optional) condensed milk. To be honest, they’re not my favourite, but they’re very popular – especially with young kids!

Snowcone vendors in Trinidad | H is for Home

Gyros

Not everyone is a vegetarian like me. There’s a lot of choice for the carnivore too! The number of gyros stands has exploded in Trinidad, helped by the rise in Syrian immigrants to the country. Ariapita Avenue, or simply ‘The Avenue’, in Woodbrook/St James is Gyros Central.

Yousef Gyros on Ariapita Avenue, Woodbrook, Trinidad | H is for Home

The Avenue is where many of the capital’s popular bars are located. Often, where you find people drinking alcohol, you’ll find people who crave a kebab (the nearest UK equivalent of a gyro). It’s not just drinkers though, people stop to buy gyros on their way back from work to eat them at home.

Working the rotating spit at Yousef Gyros on Ariapita Avenue, Woodbrook, Trinidad | H is for Home

Jerk

Another meaty street food to be found in Trinidad is jerk. It arrived fairly recently from Jamaica, further up the Caribbean, and in becoming an increasingly popular choice. The meat – usually chicken – is marinaded in a jerk seasoning and cooked on a barbecue. It’s served with French fries with toppings such as BBQ sauce, tomato ketchup and the ubiquitous pepper sauce.

Jerk chicken vendor. St James, Trinidad | H is for Home

Bake and shark

Or should that be shark and bake? Whichever way you say it, it’s a must when you visit Maracas Beach. Maracas was the place my friends and I would drive to every Sunday to relax after a hectic weekend of partying.

The ‘bake’ part is a fried bread, the ‘shark’ component is self-explanatory – pan fried, seasoned shark. However, these days, other types of fish such as king fish, grouper and talapia are used as a substitute for shark – mainly due to environmental and availability reasons. The bread is topped with salads, condiments and sauces of all kinds. The bake and shark pictured below is from Uncle Sam & Sons on Maracas Beach.

Bake and shark from Uncle Sam's, Maracas Bay© Simone De Silva-Gomes

‘Lookout’ stalls

There’s a lookout on the Lady Young Road and another on the North Coast Road en route to beaches at Maracas, Las Cuevas and Blanchisseuse. They’re places to stop the car to take in the stunning, panoramic views. The former overlooks the capital city, Port of Spain and the latter, the verdant coastline tumbling into the Caribbean Sea. Both boast a couple of large food stalls that offer sweet, savoury, salted and pickled snacks and treats to peckish travellers. I especially recommend trying the pineapple chow, salt prunes, red mango, tamarind (pronounced ‘tambran’) balls and sugar cake.

Trini Treats food stall at the North Coast Road lookout | H is for Home Edens food stall at the North Coast Road lookout | H is for Home

We pulled over, bought some snacks and took a few photos on our way to Las Cuevas.

Edens food stall at the North Coast Road lookout | H is for Home Edens food stall at the North Coast Road lookout | H is for Home

Debe food strip

Simone drove me to Débé – a town in the South of Trinidad – that’s famous for it’s Indian food stalls. Indian fast food is my all-time favourite – and there’s a huge choice for vegetarians like me!

Welcome to Debe sign, Trinidad | H is for Home

Strip of food stalls in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home Strip of food stalls in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home Strip of food stalls in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home

Sweet treats for sale in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home Sweet treats for sale in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home

Indian street food display cabinets in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home

Selection of street food we bought in Debe, Trinidad | H is for Home

The photo above is what we bought:

1. Baiganee (aubergine) | 2. Saheena (dasheen and split peas) | 3. Kachourie (channa and/or split peas)
4. Khurma (sugar-coated flour) | 5. Aloo (potato) pie | 6. Baiganee (aubergine)
7. Doubles | 8. Ginger ale | 9. Solo Apple J

Cakes & Bakes: Coconut ladoo

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Home-made coconut ladoo in a vintage tin | H is for Home

Justin cooked a curry for visitors between Christmas & New Year. We figured it would be the ideal flavour contrast to all the other seasonal fayre – and judging by the crowds we’ve noticed in our local curry house this week, we weren’t alone!! I usually make some type of cake for dessert, but following a hearty curry that option would likely prove too filling.

Dainty Indian sweets would be the perfect end to the meal. I chose to make coconut ladoo (or laddu) because we already had all 3 ingredients in our store cupboard. 

Cardamom pods with a wooden mortar and pestle

It’s the flavour of the pungent ground cardamom which gives this sweet its Indian taste.

Coconut ladoo cooked mixture

There are other kinds made with chickpea flour or semolina instead of coconut and fried in ghee. They are also be made with the addition of dried fruit and/or nuts such as pistachios or cashews.

Rolling coconut ladoo balls

They’re make a great little alternative present to the more traditional box of chocolates.

Coconut ladoo

A treat often served at celebratory events such as the Hindu festival of Diwali
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Total Time 20 minutes
Course Dessert
Cuisine Indian
Servings 30 balls

Ingredients
  

Instructions
 

  • Remove the cardamom seeds from their papery outer shell and grind finely using a pestle & mortar
  • In a large saucepan add 220g of the dessicated coconut, condensed milk and powdered cardamom
  • Heat over a medium flame stirring constantly until just before the mixture begins to colour (about 5 minutes) and most of the liquid has evaporated
  • Allow the mixture to cool slightly before forming into balls the size of marbles using the palms of your hands
  • Roll the balls in the reserved 30g of dessicated coconut
Coconut ladoo ingredients
Keyword coconut, ladoo, sweets

Cakes & Bakes: Paratha

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Paratha with curry & rice | H is for Home #recipe #paratha #flatbread

When we order an Indian takeaway we always include a portion of breads to go with our curries. Our favourite is paratha – an unleavened, fried flatbread made with wholemeal flour. The name originates from the words ‘parat’ and ‘atta’ which means layers of cooked dough.

They can sometimes be made stuffed with vegetables, paneer or potatoes (aloo). We prefer them plain – and this time I’ve made half the batch studded with pan fried cumin seeds (geera).

Traditionally they’re cooked on a tawa but a large, cast iron frying pan will do. If you don’t want to eat all the parathas in one go, you can prepare the dough up to stage 10 and freeze the extra. Just place each circle between 2 pieces of parchment paper, stack them one on top of the other, wrap in cling film or zip-lock bag and store flat.

Paratha

Ingredients
  

  • 450 g plain flour I used an equal amount of chapatti flour + a little extra for dusting
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 350 ml water approx
  • 45 g ghee clarified butter or vegetable oil
  • 1 tsp cumin seeds geera
  • 55 g vegetable oil for brushing
  •  
  •  

Instructions
 

  • Sift together the flour, baking powder & salt
  • Add enough of the water to form a smooth, soft dough
  • Knead well and leave to relax for ½ hour covered with a damp cloth
  • In a small frying pan over a medium heat, dry fry the cumin seeds for about 3 minutes, shaking continuously to stop burning. Set aside
  • After the dough has relaxed, re-knead and divide into four balls (loyah)
  • Flour surface and roll out each dough ball into 20-23cm/8-9inch circle
  • Sprinkle half the dough with the cumin seeds
  • Spread with some ghee and sprinkle with a little flour
  • Cut rolled dough circles from centre to edge. Roll each tightly into a cone. Press the peak of the cone into the centre and flatten. Leave to rest for 30 minutes
  • Flour the surface again and roll out the dough very thinly with a rolling pin
  • Cook on a moderately hot, greased tawa/frying pan for 1 minute
  • Turn over, brush with ghee/oil and cook for another minute
  • As each one is cooked, stack on top of each other, wrap them in a clean tea towel and move on to the next
  • Eat immediately

Simple home made paneer

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Home-made paneer, cubed | H is for Home

I’m a regular stalker of the discounted shelves and fridges in our local supermarket. I’m very strict though, I only ever pick something up that I would have bought anyway. On a recent, late evening trip to Morrisons in Todmorden, I saw a 4-pint bottle of whole organic milk for 89p down from £1.84. We don’t generally use full fat milk, and we never buy it in such large quantities, but I knew that I wanted to try making home made paneer.

Paneer is a simple curd cheese – similar to cottage cheese, mascarpone and quark – that relies on acid rather than rennet to form. From earlier research I knew that only full fat milk really works – and you need a fair amount of milk to make a big enough portion of paneer worth the process. You also need the acid which separates the curds from the whey. This can be in the form of natural yoghurt, citric acid, lemon juice or vinegar.

The process was like a doing a school science experiment. Heat the milk in a big saucepan, add the acid, stir and the alchemy of the separating liquid from solid happened instantaneously! I knew it was simple to do – but didn’t realise it was that simple. Why hadn’t I done it before? Paneer costs about £7 per kilo in the shops – when you can actually get hold of it that is!

We used some of it when making a curry and some of it like you would ricotta, in a spinach & paneer lasagne. We saved the whey and used it in place of the water when making a dhal. It made the dish slightly sweeter, creamier and tastier.

Here’s how I made it…

Simple home made paneer

Course Main Course
Cuisine Indian

Ingredients
  

  • 4 pints/2 litres full cream milk
  • 150 g plain natural yoghurt
  • 2 tsp white wine vinegar
  • or 1½tsp powdered citric acid
  • or 1½tsp lemon juice
  • ½ tsp salt

Instructions
 

  • Sterilise a large piece of muslin, cheesecloth (or a lint-free glass cloth like I used) by putting it into a pan/heatproof bowl and covering it completely with boiling water from a kettle
  • Using tongs, remove the cloth from the water and spread it over a metal colander
  • If you plan on using the whey, put the colander into a large mixing bowl so that all the liquid can be collected
  • Put the milk into a heavy-bottomed pan and heat to boiling stirring regularly to prevent it burning
  • When it begins to bubble, add the yoghurt and vinegar turn off the heat and stir. The curds should separate from the whey
  • Set aside until cool enough to handle
  • Pour the contents of the saucepan into the cloth covered colander
  • Remove the colander from the mixing bowl, put the colander into the kitchen sink and carefully rinse the curds
  • Sprinkle evenly with salt
  • Take up the corners of the cloth into your hands and twist & squeeze as much of the liquid out as possible
  • Form the cloth into a block shape
  • (I put the cloth into a DIY 'mould', a plastic container that some mushrooms came in that I punched holes in the bottom of)
  • Weigh it down with something heavy (I put a jar of dried split peas into an identical mushroom container and popped that on top)
  • Put the paneer on to an under-plate and refrigerate with the weight still on top for about half an hour
  • The paneer is ready to cut into cubes to be used or can be removed from the cloth, covered in cling film/saran wrap and left in the fridge for up to 5 days
Keyword cheese,, paneer