The cuisine that neither China nor India could have made alone
Indo-Chinese food — chilli chicken, Manchurian, Hakka noodles, schezwan fried rice, gobi Manchurian — is India's second favourite cuisine after biryani according to multiple surveys. It is available in every Indian city from Srinagar to Kochi. It is eaten by hundreds of millions of people every week. And virtually none of it exists in China. Most Chinese people have never heard of chicken Manchurian. Gobi Manchurian — battered and fried cauliflower in a soy-chilli-garlic sauce — is an entirely Indian invention. This cuisine was created in Kolkata by a small community of Hakka Chinese immigrants trying to survive in a new world, using the stir-fry techniques of their homeland and the chillies and spices of their adopted country.
From a shipwreck in 1778 to Tangra's leather tanneries
The story of the Chinese community in Kolkata begins with a shipwreck. Yang Dazhao — known as Tong Achew — arrived in Calcutta in 1778 after a shipwreck and received land from Governor General Warren Hastings to establish a sugar mill. He became the first Chinese settler in India. Others from his region followed, drawn by trade and opportunity in British Calcutta — then the most important commercial city in Asia.
Hakka Chinese immigrants — primarily shoemakers, carpenters, dentists, and tanners — settled in Tiretti Bazaar in central Calcutta, then moved to Tangra on the eastern outskirts to establish leather tanneries. Tangra means "tannery" in Bengali. The community grew to over 20,000 at its peak. The restaurants they opened to serve their own community began attracting Indian customers — and the food began to change, adapting to Indian palates with more chilli, more spice, and Indian aromatics layered over Chinese technique.
Why wok cooking produces results impossible to replicate at home
The technical foundation of Indo-Chinese cooking is the wok — a cooking vessel that enables temperatures Indian cooking had never used. A carbon steel wok over a high-BTU gas burner reaches surface temperatures of 300-400°C. At these temperatures, the Maillard reaction happens in seconds, creating the characteristic charred, smoky flavour Chinese cooks call "wok hei" — the breath of the wok.
- The leather tanning industry in Tangra created a self-sufficient community with the resources to open restaurants
- Kolkata's existing cosmopolitan port culture was more receptive to a new immigrant cuisine
- The specific Bengali palate — more sour, more mustard-forward — may have shaped the cuisine differently in Delhi
- The 1962 Sino-Indian war decimated the community — its effects were specific to where the community was concentrated
Indo-Chinese food is a Kolkata creation. Its specific character — the vinegar note, the particular chilli profile — reflects the city where it was born.
The Chinese thickening technique that India made its own
The characteristic glossy, thick sauce of Manchurian and Chilli Chicken comes from cornflour (cornstarch) — a thickening technique from Chinese cooking that Indian cuisine had never used. Cornflour creates a clear, glossy, clingy sauce that coats each piece of food — completely different from the opaque, starchy thickening of a flour-based Indian gravy. The cornflour gelatinises at around 70°C, creating a sauce that thickens rapidly as it heats, clings to the food surface, and delivers concentrated flavour in every bite. The Tangra cooks who introduced this technique to India were bringing a food science tool that Indian cooking did not have — and it changed the texture vocabulary of Indian restaurant food permanently.