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8 Indian Dishes And Their Global Cousins

November 11, 2025 20:30 IST
4 Minutes Read

Across continents and cultures, people unknowingly cook similar dishes -- same idea, slightly different ingredients or different methods of preparation.

Many Indian favourites have surprising global twins that nearly mirror our flavours, techniques or eating style.

There are sometimes easy explanations, because food, especially good food, travels fast, maybe getting mildly modified along the way, with invaders, migrants, explorers, settlers, traders, often along well known paths, like the Silk Route or on the Indian Ocean routes. That explains why both Italy and China love their noodles. Or why Balti Chicken is a hot UK favourite.

Hemantkumar Shivsharan/Rediff identifies a few of these intriguing culinary doppelgangers.

 

Photograph: Kind courtesy GFDL and Tamorlan/Wikimedia Commons

Karanji vs Empanada

India's festive karanjis -- also known as gujiyas -- is a deep-fried crescent pastry filled with sweetened coconut, jaggery, khoya or semolina or dry fruits. Across the world, in Latin America, empanadas follows the same concept -- a folded pastry pocket, baked or fried, with sweet (fruit) or savoury fillings. It originated in Spain and was brought to the New World by settlers. 

Photograph: Kind courtesy Rajeeb Dutta and AmnaMF/Wikimedia Commons

Khichdi vs Mujaddara/Madrouba

India's warm, soothing khichdi is a close cousin of Levant's mujaddara, made with lentils and rice topped with caramelised onions, and Bahrain's madrouba, a slow-cooked rice porridge with chicken. Though separated by miles, all three celebrate the comfort of rice cooked mushily with lentils/vegetables/meat as a flavourful one-pot meal. 

Photograph: Kind courtesy Kskhh and Rainer Zenz/Wikimedia Commons

Raita vs Tzatziki

Indian raitas and the Greek tzatziki share ingredients -- yoghurt, herbs, and vegetables. Both are equally refreshing. Whether served with biryani or gyros, both succeed in cooling the palate and balancing spicy, rich meals.

 

Photograph: Kind courtesy Vis M and Colombo Tiziana/Wikimedia Commons

Dosa vs Injera

South India's crispy dosa and Ethiopia's spongy injera look only slightly different and are made from fermented batters. Each serves as a base for flavourful accompaniments.

Fermented for longer, injeras are slightly more sour (using a starter culture) and are made from the teff grain, a cereal native to Ethiopia but they can be made from millets too. The batter is poured out onto a griddle and baked. Fermentation incidentally is a universal culinary language.

 

Photograph: Kind courtesy Methlee07 and Miansari66/Wikimedia Commons

Baingan Bharta vs Baba Ghanoush

The Middle East and Turkey has Baba Ghanoush or Patlijan. India loves its bharta. Baba G is eaten with pita. Bharta is had with parathas or rotis. The backbone of each of these dishes is fragrant roasted eggplant. And each is equally yum.

Photograph: Kind courtesy Gannu03 and Asadi/Wikimedia Commons

Jalebi vs Zoolbia/Zalabiyas

Indian jalebis and Persian and Middle Eastern zoolbias/zalabiyas are practically sagaa siblings -- deep-fried spirals soaked in fragrant sugar syrup. One uses saffron and rosewater, the other cardamom and citrus, but both deliver the same irresistible sticky sweetness.

History made them bhai-behen because they are both travellers on the Silk route, like sevaiya was too. Incidentally a version of jalebis is eaten in the Europe and America, often at fairs and it is called funnel cake. 

 

Photograph: Kind courtesy Manna16 and Maderibeyza/Wikimedia Commons

Aloo Paratha vs Gözleme

India's versatile stuffed paratha and Turkey's gözleme... Are they that different? Paratha stuffings are paneer, kheema, alu, spinach, fenugreek, onions, cauliflower, bottle gourd, radish. Gözleme stuffings are mince, potato, cheese, spinach. They are then fried up on a griddle.

Photograph: Kind courtesy anders pearson and SajjadF/Wikimedia Commons

Caramel Custard vs Creme Caramel/Flan

This custard is a major traveller, its suitcase always packed, its passport full of multiple visas. Practically every part of the world makes their own version of this delicious burnt sugar-topped wobbly steamed egg custard. Some spike it with a little alcohol and serve it with whipped cream, others thicken it with coconut milk or condensed milks. In India caramel custard is made with milk eggs and melted and browned sugar.

Although probably of French origin, it was the Spaniards and Portuguese who took it around the globe -- to Mexico, Goa, Philippines, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Central America, Vietnam. 

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