Independence Day 2025: 7 Dishes With Indian Roots That Became Global Hits
6 Min read
Posted on 13/08/2025
Quick Summary
Rich wine aunt who? Indian dishes, that’s who! Just like that elusive childfree rich aunt in most families, a handful of Indian dishes have managed to make their mark in different countries. They show up everywhere looking fabulous, everyone's excited to see them, and somehow they end up being more popular than the local dishes. Chicken tikka masala owns British palates, samosas rule African street food, and curry has basically adopted half of Southeast Asia. This Indian Independence Day, let’s take a look at these dishes that didn't just emigrate; they became the cool relatives everyone brags about.
Deep Dive
Indian food doesn't just travel with the locals, and history has been a witness. For aeons, it has travelled and settled in different corners of the world and integrated itself into the cultural fabric of the local country. It's like that exchange student who arrives for a semester and ends up staying forever because everyone loves them. These dishes didn't just adapt to local tastes; they became local favourites. It’s no wonder you'll find British people defending chicken tikka masala like it's their national treasure, while naan and chai have also crept into local palates like they belong. So, read on for some truly desi dishes, which have also found homes elsewhere and celebrate in the rich and varied culinary culture India has given the world.
1. Samosa
Samosa’s passport is stamped everywhere, and India, Central Asia and the Middle East claim it as their own. One of the many famous Indian dishes, today, it can be casually seen strolling the streets in Nairobi, tea stalls in London, and office parties in Toronto. It’s crispy, stuffed, and always the first to disappear, samosas are the starters that became main characters. In some places, you’ll find them filled with meat, in others, cheese, lentils, even mac and cheese (don’t ask). But the vibe? Always snack royalty. You don’t even need a chutney pairing; it’s good on its own.
2. Chicken Tikka Masala
This dish might have Indian roots, but it didn’t come from India; without us, it wouldn’t exist. Chicken tikka masala was born in the UK when Ali Ahmed Aslam, a Pakistani-Scottish chef and owner of the Shish Mahal restaurant in Glasgow, invented the dish after a local customer complained his chicken tikka was too dry (a similar story to potato chips). He remixed the dry tikka into a gravy dish, which to this day remains its national dish. You’ll find it on pub menus, in microwave meals, and fiercely defended in social media arguments about authenticity. Chicken tikka masala didn’t just adapt abroad; it became the blueprint for fusion cuisine, done right.
3. Curry
The British heard 'kari' in Tamil and decided everything with gravy was curry. What they missed is that India has a thousand curries, each with its distinct name, rules, and no patience for minimalism or shortcuts. Still, curry escaped the label and somehow took over the world. In Japan, it’s karē raisu and has variations such as curry udon, katsu curry. In Thailand, it takes on red, green colours and is dangerously good. The Caribbean gave it goat and more spices. Everywhere it went, curry shapeshifted, but always kept a piece of home. It might be misunderstood constantly, but loved anyway.
4. Biryani
Biryani never whispers or shies away; it shows up in layers, fully dressed, and expects respect. Born in Mughal kitchens and raised across India, it’s now a global comfort food. Gulf biryani is rich and nutty, Hyderabadi biryani has that masala punch, and even South Africa has its spicy take. It’s the kind of dish that can feed a wedding or fix a breakup. No matter the version, it’s always rice-meets-meat (or vegetarian) with masala in the middle and drama of onions on top. Biryani didn’t just travel; it took the throne with itself and made itself at home wherever it went.
5. Naan
If you've been on the internet long enough and desi enough, you might have been plagued by content on ‘naan bread’. Intrinsically, both mean the same thing, and a victim of the West’s adaptation, and unlike some of the other dishes, naan is typically made the same way in most parts of the world. You will find it everywhere, from British curry houses (the OGs) to grocery aisles as far as sunny California. Naan exists beyond just as bread: you will see it served as a wrap, pizza crust, and occasionally stuffed with garlic or meat. Naan has Persian roots, and courtesy of the Mughals, who found a home in India, it became a truly Indian dish.
6. Kheer
Originally a temple offering, kheer began as 'payasa', a sacred mix of rice, milk, and jaggery, often used in rituals across India. Over time, it adapted into regional versions, such as phirni, payasam and seviyan. But its story goes on, and as it crossed borders, it reached places like Mauritius, Fiji, Trinidad and Guyana. In these places, it uses condensed milk, cinnamon, and sometimes even raisins. Middle Eastern cuisine and Latin America have their versions of kheer. The West knows it better by the name of Indian rice pudding.
7. Masala Chai
‘Chai tea’ or ‘chai latte’, anyone? Long before the internet had a boom with chai tea (the irony: both words mean the same) everywhere, masala chai was ‘serving’ quite literally. Cradled between cold palms or gingerly balanced between fingers in the heat, it has been serving quiet respite to tired souls for the longest time. While not technically a dish, masala chai has been a staple over garma garam gossip, catching up or at work tables as creative brains battle it out, hard at work.
Truly Desi With A Videshi Kick
These dishes from home didn’t just travel; they went beyond desi food culture and took over the palates of each nation they settled in. Some adapted, some stayed true, and a few even got mispronounced into fame (looking at you, 'chai tea' and 'naan bread'). But every one of them carries that unmistakable desi flair with its pop of flavours, made methodically and with a whole lot of heart. So whether it’s biryani in Dubai, curry in Tokyo, or kheer in the Caribbean, these aren’t just Indian dishes abroad, they’re cultural icons in new zip codes.
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