The short history of Indian Chinese food and where to breathe fire in Mumbai
In Mumbai Nelson and son Eddie (Edward) Wang of China Garden restaurant, continue concocting new fusion dishes. Wang is the inventor of Chicken Manchurian, one of the first ever Indian Chinese recipes to be popularized.
While the Chinese have been visiting India for millennia in search of Buddhist teachings, Yang Tai Chow was the first recorded Chinese to migrate to India for better material prospects. In 1778 he put down roots in Kolkata, or Calcutta, the then capital of British India and the easiest accessible metropolitan area from China by land.
Over the years, many like him came, mostly Hakkas, and by the early part of the 20th century a Chinatown had developed in Kolkata and it thrived and buzzed with enterprise. Chinese served with distinction as dentists, tannery owners, sauce manufacturers, beauticians and shoe shop owners but it was as restaurateurs that the Chinese found their fame and glory in India.

And so it was with food that the Sino-Indian cultural fusion began.
About 85 years ago, the Indian culinary world was affected by a new cuisine. The first Indo Chinese restaurant Eau Chew opened in Kolkata.
Presumably hordes came out satiated and impressed, beaming their approval to the next lot of people who hadn’t tried this new fangled cuisine of foreign origin, yet spicy and tasty like their own.
New restaurants mushroomed all over Kolkata, and legends like Fat Mama and Kim Fa were born, offering newer dishes with fancier combinations and names like August Moon Rolls and Fiery Dragon Chicken. Before you knew it 'Indian Chinese' had tickled the taste buds of folk in every small town and city across India. No small feat for a foreign cuisine.
Indian Chinese food wasn’t just served by restaurants big and small, but also by handcart owners, highway food stalls and mobile Chow Mein vans boasting imaginative names like Hungry Eyes and Dancing Stomach. Classic Mumbai street food now even has Chinese versions with 'Chinese bhel' and 'Sichuan dosa'.
What is it that makes Chinese food so spectacularly popular? The answer lies with Indian food.
Quick to figure out that Indians love spicy, oily preparations, the Chinese merely masala-fied and greased their cuisine into a glutinous, winning combination.

But wait a minute. Manchurian? Is that even a dish?
Not in China, no. But in India, it's practically synonymous with Chinese food. The result of a request by a customer at China Garden, Mumbai's original Indian Chinese restaurant, to create something different from the menu, and owner Nelson Wang (then caterer of Chinese food at the Cricket Club of India) took cubes of chicken, coated them in corn flour and deep fried them. Wang then prepared a red sauce with onions, green chillies and garlic, and slapped some vinegar and soy into it. He popped the fried chicken dumplings back into the sauce and gave it a quick stir so that the flavors came together and served it with steamed or fried rice. The customers loved it. As Nelson says, "word of mouth" spread the acclaim of this dish and today it is found in almost every menu that serves Chinese food in the country.
This word-of-mouth publicity inspired Nelson Wang to start his own restaurant China Garden which is a veritable Mumbai institution, even today.
Nowadays his son Eddie, a third generation Chinese Indian, spearheads the restaurant’s expansion to Delhi, Hyderabad, Bangalore, Pune and Goa. Not bad for a man who began his career eking out a modest living doing odd jobs, including limbo dancing at clubs in Kolkata, which, by the way, he was also very good at.
The feel-at-home comfort of Indian Chinese food is accentuated by the garnishes. Most dishes are covered with fresh coriander leaves, and depending on the dish, sliced onion rings too.
But it's the ingredients that distinguish Indian Chinese food from real Chinese food.

Who needs the bland original Chinese food when you’ve got a pungent chili garlic prawn in front of you? Or hakka noodles? Noodles tossed with garlic, lots of chillies, cabbage, capsicum, carrots, ajinomoto, soya, Worcestershire sauce, vinegar and garnished with spring onions. Or a chicken lollipop? Chicken wings artfully stuffed with more meat, dipped in a red batter and deep fried. Or crispy fried shredded lamb with red chillies camouflaged so well that there's danger in every bite.
Firmly established in the Indian culinary milieu now, these dishes define the Indian Chinese food experience. Today, restaurant menus also offer a selection of dishes from different regions of China -- steamed and delicate like the original, but there's always the Indian Chinese touch sitting on the same page.
As the second and third generation of Chinese Indians grew up they migrated to other parts of the world. And they did what they knew best. Cook Indian Chinese food. Even in Europe and America these days, if you want that extra punch from your home delivery boxes, the recipe probably originated in Mumbai or Kolkata.
Blame it on Yang Tai Chow. Or thank him. Depending on how much you like your mouth breathing chili garlic fire.
Sanjiv Khamgaonkar's top six picks for authentic Indian Chinese food:
- China Garden, Om Chambers, Kemps Corner; tel. +91 (0) 22 2363 0841/42, 11am–3pm, 7-11.30pm
- Ling’s Pavilion, Mahakavi Bhushan Road, Apollo Bunder, Behind Regal Cinema; tel. +91 (0) 22 2282 4533. 12noon–11pm
- Mainland China, Branches at Andheri, Powai, Bandra, and Haji Ali. Tel. +91 (0) 22 3222 1038. 12.45-3.30pm, 7.30-11.30pm
- Chopsticks, 90-A, Manik Mahal, Veer Nariman Road, Churchgate; tel. +91 (0) 22 2204 9284. 12noon3.30pm, 7-11.30pm
- Kamling, Veer Nariman Road, Churchgate; tel. +91 (0) 22 2204 2618. 12noon-11.30pm
- China Gate, 155, RK Patkar Marg, Khar (West); tel. +91 (0) 22 2645 9711. 12noon3.30pm, 7pm -12.30am
Writer, filmmaker, foodie, and digital artist. Currently working on my first 'Bollywood' feature film.
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