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Tiffin carrier

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A dabba, or Indian-style tiffin carrier

Tiffin carriers or dabbas are a kind of lunch box used widely in Asia and the Caribbean for tiffin meals. From India, they spread to Pakistan, Cambodia, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Fiji, Mauritius, Guyana, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago, where they are now widely used.[1][2] They are also used extensively in Hungary, primarily to transport restaurant meals for consumption at home. The Hungarian version typically contains soup, a main course, and piece of cake. A very similar device is called Henkelmann in Germany. It is usually round or oval similar to military mess kits. The Henkelmann was very popular until the 1960s, but is very rarely used by Germans today.

In the Indian city of Mumbai, there is a complex and efficient delivery system that regularly delivers hot lunches packed in dabbas to city office workers from their suburban homes or from a caterer. It uses delivery workers known as dabbawalas.

The book Tiffin: An Untold Story covers 172 tiffin carriers, some over a century old.[3][4]

Nomenclature

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In Cambodia, tiffin carriers are known as Chan Srak (Khmer: ចានស្រាក់), in Hokkien they are called Uánn-tsân (Chinese: 碗層), in Indonesian as rantang; mangkuk tingkat ('tiered bowls') in Malay; while in Thai they are known as Pin To (Thai: ปิ่นโต [ˈpìn ˈtoː]). In Arab countries they are called safartas (سفرطاس, from Turkish "sefer tası" meaning 'travel bowls'). The Hungarian word for a tiffin box is éthordó ('food carrier').

Design and materials

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Normally these containers come with two or three tiers, although more elaborate versions can have four. The bottom tier, sometimes larger than the others, is the one usually used for rice. Tiffin carriers are opened by unlocking a small catch on either side of the handle. Tiffin carriers are generally made out of steel and sometimes of aluminium, but enamel and plastic versions have been made by European companies.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Leong-Salobir, Cecilia (2011). Food Culture in Colonial Asia; A Taste of Empire (Hardback ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415606325. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
  2. ^ Yang, Eun; Gibson, Teneille (6 July 2021). "Food Fare: H Street's Cane Pays Tribute to Trinidad Roots with Tiffin Boxes". NBCUniversal Media.
  3. ^ Filmer, Andrea (2020). "Malaysian book explores the wonders of vintage tiffin carriers". The Star. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  4. ^ Ong, K.H. (8 March 2020). "Story of tiffin carriers never dies, say authors after book launch". Buletin Mutiara. Retrieved 20 November 2022.

Bibliography

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  • J. Prakash & M. Punita (2020) Tiffin: An Untold Story[ISBN missing]

Further reading

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