Wok Stars of the Diaspora: The Untold Story of Indian Chinese Cuisine
How Kolkata's Immigrant Cooks Invented a Global Flavor Revolution, One Stir-Fry at a Time Indian Chinese cuisine is not a culinary accident or a watered-down imitation—it is a deliberate, brilliant act of cultural reinvention. Born in the industrial lanes of Kolkata's Tangra neighborhood by Hakka, Cantonese, and Hubei immigrants, this cuisine evolved through strategic adaptation: replacing Sichuan peppercorns with green chillies, rice wine with synthetic vinegar, delicate broths with cornstarch-laden gravies. What emerged wasn't "fake" Chinese food but a sovereign culinary language that speaks directly to the Indian palate while honoring Chinese technique. Today, this 250-year-old fusion story has gone global, with "Desi Chinese" flavors marketed from London to New York as premium, trend-setting profiles. This is the story of how survival became sophistication, and how a community's pragmatic choices created a cuisine that now defines "fusion...