Sri Lankan cuisine
Sri Lankan cuisine has been shaped by many historical, cultural and other factors. As a tropical island with an abundance of vegetation, the cuisine is known for a its use of a vast array of herbs, spices, fish, vegetables, rices, and fruits. The cuisine is highly centered around many varieties of rice, as well as coconut which is an ubiquitous plant throughout the country. Seafood also plays a significant role in the cuisine, be it fresh fish or preserved fish. As a country that was a hub in the historic oceanic silk road, contact with foreign traders brought new food items and cultural influences in addition to the local traditions of the country's ethnic groups, all of which have helped shape Sri Lankan cuisine. Similarities can be seen to the cuisines of other South Asian neighbouring regions, as well as to some South East Asian cuisines.
Sri Lanka was historically famous for its cinnamon. The true cinnamon tree, or Cinnamomum verum used to be botanically named Cinnamomum zeylanicum to reflect its Sri Lankan origins. This is a widely utilized spice in Sri Lanka, and has a more delicate, sweet taste in comparison to Cinnamomum cassia which is more common in some other South Asian cuisines. Contrasting the local cuisine with those of neighbouring regions, Sri Lankan cuisine is characterized by unique spice blends with heavy use of Sri Lankan cinnamon and black pepper, as well as by the use of ingredients such as maldive fish, goraka, pandan leaf, lemongrass, and jaggery made from the kithul palm syrup. Sri Lanka is also a consumer of many varieties of red rice, some of which are considered heirloom rices in the country. Tea is also an important beverage throughout the country, and Sri Lanka is known for producing some of the world's finest tea.
Regions
Sri Lanka is a very small island but with different regional cuisine that have individual traits. In areas located on the island's coasts seafood is a standard feature of the local dishes. Tamil cuisine, especially in Jaffna, shares many similarities with South Indian cuisine. Kandyan Sinhalese cooking is based on the local ingredients of the hill vegetables and fruits.Common ingredients
Spices: True cinnamon, black pepper, fennel, cardamom, cloves, fenugreek, nutmeg, mace, cumin, coriander, turmericHerbs: pandan leaf, shallot, goraka, lemongrass, tamarind, garlic, ginger, curry leaf, lime, cayenne pepper tabasco pepper
Fish: maldive fish, dried fish, mackerel, tuna, shark, sprats, fermented preserved fish
Grains: white rice, red rice, finger millet, hog millet, olu haal
Oils: coconut oil, sesame oil, cow ghee, buffalo ghee, mustard oil
Sweetners: kithul jaggery, coconut jaggery, palmyrah jaggery
Vegetables and greens: gotukola, green papaya, snake beans, bitter melon, snake gourd, luffa, pumpkin, winged bean
Meats: chicken, pork, goat meat, beef
Yams, roots and tubers: lotus root, purple yam, tapioca, kohila, Arrowleaf elephant's ear
Other: Coconut milk and grated coconut are ubiquitous in the cuisine, and are freshly prepated almost everyday in most households. Maldive fish is heavily used in vegetable dishes to add an umami flavour.
Fruits: bananas, mangoes, pineapple, soursop, guava, avocado, orange
Dishes
Rice and curry
The central feature of Sri Lankan cuisine is boiled or steamed rice, served with a curry of fish or chicken, along with other curries made with vegetables, lentils, or fruits.Dishes are accompanied by pickled fruits or vegetables, chutneys, and sambols. Coconut sambol is especially common, a paste of ground coconut mixed with chili peppers, dried Maldive fish, and lime juice.
Kiribath
Kiribath or Paal Soru is rice cooked in salted coconut milk until the grains turn soft and porridge-like. Generally eaten for breakfast, kiribath is also prepared on special occasions such as birthdays, New Years' and religious festivals. It is usually served with lunu miris, a relish made with red onions and chillies. There is also a method of cooking kiribath with mung beans. During Aluth Avurudu/Puthandu, the Sinhalese/Tamil New Year, kiribath is served with sweets such as kavum, kokis, mung kavum, "od iba" ''etc.Kottu
Kottu is a spicy stir-fry of shredded roti bread with vegetables. Optional ingredients include eggs, meat, or cheese. It was invented in Batticaloa and literally means 'chopped roti' in Tamil.Hoppers
Hoppers are based on a fermented batter, usually made of rice flour and coconut milk with spices. The dish is pan-fried or steamed. The fermenting agent is palm toddy or yeast. Hopper variants can be either savory, or sweet ''. Savory hoppers are often accompanied by lunu miris, a mix of red onions and spices.String hoppers
String hoppers are made from a hot-water dough of rice meal or wheat flour. The dough is pressed out in circlets from a string mold onto small wicker mats, and then steamed. This dish is typically not eaten plain and is often paired with a curry.Lamprais
A Dutch Burgher-influenced dish, lamprais is rice boiled in stock accompanied by frikkadels, a mixed meat curry, blachan, aubergine curry, and seeni sambol. All of this is then wrapped in a banana leaf and baked in an oven. Lamprais is ideal for special occasions with a large gathering of friends and family considering its richness and the time it takes to prepare. Lamprais is cooked twice; first the rice and the entrees are cooked separately and later what is already cooked is wrapped in a banana leaf and baked in an oven, which makes it a unique recipe.Kool
Kool is a seafood broth from Jaffna containing crab, fish, cuttlefish, prawns, and crayfish. It also contains long beans, jak seeds, manioc, spinach, and tamarind. The dish is thickened with palmyra root flour.Pittu
Pittu are cylinders of steamed or roasted rice flour mixed with grated coconut.Roti
Godamba roti is a simple Sri Lankan flatbread usually made from wheat flour.Variants of roti include thengappu roti, in which shredded coconut is mixed into the dough. Another variant is Uraippu roti, in which chopped onions and green chilies are used when making the dough.
Sambal
Sambals are enjoyed with many dishes including curry dishes and string hoppers. Sini sambal, Pol sambal, Lunu miris, Gotukola sambal and Vaalai kai sambal are common sambols found in the country.Malay Achcharu
Malay Achcharu also known as Sri Lankan Malay pickle or simply as Achcharu is a dish that originated from the local Malay community and is now widely popular among all ethnic groups in the country. It is a selection of veggies in a pickled sauce and blends sweet, sour and spicy flavours.Chinese chili paste
Chinese chili paste is a condiment eaten alongside Sri Lankan-style Chinese dishes.Babath
Babath or offal consists of the stomach of cattle or goats. It is cooked as a curry or deep fried and eaten with rice or more famously with Pittu. Its origins are associated with the Sri Lankan Malay community but it is very common among the Moor community as well. The preparation of babath also consists of Kodal or the in states of the animal.Sate
Sate is of Malay origin and has become a staple of the Sri Lankan diet. They are served with peanut and chili sauce.Ekor sop
Ekor sop or Ekor soup is a delicacy of the Sri Lankan Malay community.Nasi goreng and mee goreng
Nasi goreng and Mee goreng are popular street food dishes in the country, a result of cultural influences from Indonesia and the country's local Malay community.Sweets
A common dessert in Sri Lanka is kevum, an oil cake made with rice flour and treacle and deep-fried to a golden brown. There are many variations of kevum. Moong Kevum is a variant where mung bean flour is made into a paste and shaped like diamonds before frying. Other types of kevum include athiraha, konda kevum, athirasa, and handi kevum.Many sweets are served with kiribath milk rice during the Sinhalese and Tamil New Years.
Other sweets include:
Cakes and pastries:
- Aluwa - Diamond-shaped rice-flour pastries
- Bibikkan - A rich, cake-like sweet made from grated coconut, coconut treacle, and wheat flour. It is a speciality of coastal areas.
- Kokis - A savoury crispy biscuit-like dish made from rice flour and coconut milk.
- Pushnambu - A rich, cake-like sweet made from coconut treacle and wheat flour. Cinnamon/cardamom and sweet cumin is often added among the Christian population of Sri Lanka.
- Seenakku - a glutinous rice cake often served with grated coconut.
- Undu Walalu/Undu wal or Pani walalu - A sweet from the Mathale area, prepared using urad bean flour and kithul treacle.
- Aggala - Rice balls flavored with treacle
- Weli Thalapa - Made from rice flour and coconut treacle
- Aasmi - Made with rice flour and the juice of a leaf called Neolitsea cassia, deep fried and topped with pink-coloured treacle.
- Kalu Dodol - A solid toffee-, jelly-like confection made by lengthy reduction of coconut milk, thickened with rice flour and sweetened with jaggery.
- Watalappam - A steamed pudding made with coconut milk, eggs, and jaggery. First introduced by the Malay immigrants, watalappam has become a staple of Sri Lankan desserts.
- Thala Guli - Made from ground sesame and jaggery with finely grated coconut.
- Kiri Toffee - Made with sweetened condensed milk or sugar-thickened pure cow's milk. Cardamom/sweet cumin and cashews are added for more taste.
Short eats
Short eats include pastries, Chinese rolls and patties. Other short eats include:
- Vade - parippu vade, ulundu vade, isso vade, crab vade
- Chinese rolls or egg rolls, which often contain minced meats, potatoes, and vegetables
- Patties and pastries - filled with vegetables, meat, or fish
- Vegetable/fish roti - a flatbread with a filling rolled into a triangular shape and baked
Beverages
Beverages commonly served in Sri Lanka include:- Faluda - a mixture of syrup, ice cream, jelly pieces and basil seeds, served cold
- Fruit juice - including lime and passionfruit juice
- King coconut water
- Tea
- Toddy - a mildly alcoholic drink made from palm tree sap
- Arrack - an alcoholic spirit made from the fermented sap of the coconut flower.
- Wood Apple juice