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Food stalls in Debe Coconut vendor in Marabella. Popular freshly prepared street foods include: Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian foods like doubles, [21] aloo pie, [22] pholourie, [23] saheena, [24] baiganee, bara, and kachori are popular street foods throughout the country. Another popular Indo-T&T street food is wrap roti, (usually paratha or ...
Jamaican cuisine includes a mixture of cooking techniques, ingredients, flavours, spices and influences from the Taínos, Jamaica's indigenous people, the Spanish, Portuguese, French, Scottish, Irish, English, African, Indian, Chinese and Middle Eastern people, who have inhabited the island.
Travellers Rest Restaurant, in Nassau, is known for serving authentic "local" foods. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] Bahamian cuisine is showcased at many large festivals, including Independence Day (Bahamas) on July 10 (during which inhabitants prepare special dishes like guava duff ), Fox Hill Day (second Tuesday in August), and Emancipation Day .
Caribbean cuisine is a fusion of West African, [1] Creole, Amerindian, European, Latin American, Indian/South Asian, Chinese, Javanese/Indonesian, North American, and Middle Eastern cuisines. These traditions were brought from many countries when they moved to the Caribbean. [ 1 ]
Jamaican cuisine is available throughout North America, the United Kingdom, and other places with a sizeable Jamaican population or descendants, [87] [88] such as coastal Central America [7] [8] [11] and the Caribbean. Jamaican food can be found in other regions, and popular dishes often appear on the menus of non-Jamaican restaurants.
Antigua and Barbuda cuisine refers to the cuisines of the Caribbean islands Antigua and Barbuda. The national dish is fungee (pronounced "foon-jee") and pepperpot. [1] Fungee is a dish similar to Italian polenta, made mostly with cornmeal. [1] Other local dishes include ducana, seasoned rice, saltfish and lobster (from Barbuda).
Coco bread stuffed with a beef patty. The beef patty is a product of the long history of Jamaica, mixing an empanada-styled turnover introduced by the Spanish and pasties introduced by Cornish immigrants, turmeric or curry which were introduced by Indian indentured labourers, and cayenne pepper native to Central and South America, [3] which was introduced to the Caribbean by the Arawaks.
Barbadian cuisine, also called Bajan cuisine, is a mixture of African, Portuguese, Indian, Irish, Creole, Indigenous and British background. A typical meal consists of a main dish of meat or fish, normally marinated with a mixture of herbs and spices, hot side dishes, and one or more salads.