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7 wartime dishes that became everyday Indian classics

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 6, 2025, 08:57 IST
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7 wartime dishes that became everyday Indian classics

Wars don’t just shape borders; they shape kitchens. Scarcity, mobility, and the need for food that sustains under pressure have given rise to dishes that later became everyday staples. Necessity turned into invention, and over time those survival recipes picked up the flavours of memory and tradition. Across India, many humble classics trace their roots back to survival, meals that once kept soldiers and travellers going, now comfort homes and festivals alike. Here are seven Indian foods whose stories carry the grit of wartime.

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Litti Chokha

In Bihar and eastern Uttar Pradesh, litti chokha was once a soldier’s fuel. The dough balls stuffed with roasted gram flour (sattu) could be baked on open fires, needing no oil and lasting for days. Chokha, mashed roasted eggplant or potatoes with mustard oil, added flavor without elaborate cooking. Portable, durable, and nourishing - it was food for men who had no luxury of kitchens but every need for strength.

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Chapati

A flat disc of wheat flour, chapati seems ordinary, but history says otherwise. During the 1857 uprising, chapatis were circulated secretly across villages, both as food for rebels on the move and as coded signals of resistance. Lightweight, quick to make on a griddle, and universally understood across regions, chapati carried more than grain; it carried rebellion. Being low in fat and versatile, roti pairs well with vegetables, dals, and curries, making it a balanced addition to daily meals that supports overall health and well-being.

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Tsampa

In the Himalayas, soldiers and monks alike depended on tsampa - roasted barley flour mixed with butter tea or water. Tibetans introduced it, and Ladakhi and Sikkimese troops carried it across difficult terrain. High in energy, quick to prepare, and resistant to spoilage, tsampa kept bodies warm in mountain cold and became the original “ready-to-eat” food long before packets and sachets were even imagined.

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Curd rice

In southern India, curd rice became both comfort and practicality for armies and pilgrims. Rice cooled with yogurt plus is easily digestible, probiotic, and soothing in hot climates. Soldiers could eat it without elaborate accompaniments, and it travelled well when wrapped in banana leaves. Today, it’s a staple in every Tamil and Telugu household, but its wartime use was about sustaining the stomach when little else was available.

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Sattu

Across north India, sattu has been called the “poor man’s protein,” but in wartime it was survival itself. Roasted gram flour could be eaten raw with water, rolled into dough, or sweetened with jaggery. It required no cooking, carried no risk of spoiling, and kept soldiers marching. Even now, rural India swears by sattu drinks and parathas in summer - an echo of its role in older, harsher battles.

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Bajra khichdi

Millets were once the grain of soldiers, long before they were branded as “superfoods.” Bajra khichdi, millet cooked with lentils and salt, was filling, resilient in storage, and suited to arid zones where wheat and rice struggled. During times of war and famine, it fed both armies and villagers. Today, Rajasthan and Haryana keep the tradition alive, but its roots lie in scarcity turned sustenance.

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Dried fish curry

Take ripe bananas, dip slices in a light batter of flour and milk, and lay them on parchment. Cook at 190°C for 6–7 minutes until their coats turn golden. The bananas inside collapse into sweetness, the outside crunches lightly, releasing a warm, caramel-like aroma. A drizzle of honey, chocolate sauce, or a sprinkle of cinnamon elevates them further. Add a few chopped nuts or desiccated coconut for texture, or a pinch of cardamom for fragrance. For an indulgent twist, you can even pair them with vanilla ice cream or tuck them into warm crepes. They’re quick, homely, irresistibly fragrant, and best eaten hot, straight out of the kitchen, perfect for breakfast, tea-time, or an effortless dessert that brings comfort in every bite, reminding you how simple ingredients can turn into magic.

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Copyright © May 28, 2026, 12.28AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service