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absolutelyshafted t1_j5qqrb3 wrote

Makes sense because this is a Goan dish, “native” to a tiny part of india which was historically controlled by Portugal

The reason why people know about it is due to the British Indian variant becoming globally popular

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LeanMeanDrMachine t1_j5r9ce6 wrote

A large portion of the chefs on British passenger boats to and from India were Goan, as they tended to be Catholic and thus could cook with pork beef and alcohol (the original vindaloo was cooked with pork and wine). Hence why the dish became popular. When a broader range of Indians, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis started serving Indian food in Britain, vindaloo already had an association with upper class Indian food, though they couldn't cook with pork and wine, so it got changed to an almost entirely new dish.

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bolanrox t1_j5rjtdc wrote

That thumbnail is not vindaloo

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crestnest t1_j5sfd7f wrote

Before Chillies were introduced to India by the Portuguese, Indian cooks used mainly Pippali (aka also known as Indian long pepper) to provide pungency to curries. To a lesser extent, they also used black pepper). Before then, Chillies were not known in India.

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kupo-puffs t1_j5t9kxf wrote

>Before Chillies were introduced to India by the Portuguese, Indian cooks used mainly Pippali (aka also known as Indian long pepper) to provide pungency to curries. To a lesser extent, they also used black pepper). Before then, Chillies were not known in India.

As they say, it burns twive

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CharredCharizard t1_j5xuw5w wrote

That's really ignorant. Yes the tomato was already there but both countries are responsible for introducing unknown foods all over the planet thus defining world food now a days.
Plus discoveries is the right word literary and literally, if you know nothing about the South hemisphere and nothing about half the Northern even though there are people there you don't know about and you venture into the unknown you are discovering.

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soup2nuts t1_j5yc3mn wrote

Chilies are native to the Americas as are potatoes and tomatoes, which are part of the nightshade family. They were developed by the indegenous peoples as staple crops from their practically poisonous wild ancestors. There are over 2000 varieties of potatoes. When potatoes are first introduced to Europe some church authorities condemned them as Satanic because they are not mentioned in the Bible.

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soup2nuts t1_j5yd2er wrote

That only makes sense from a Eurocentric viewpoint. Europeans were equally as unknown to the Americans. Sure, Spaniards and Portuguese introduced these foods to the world but the Americans discovered and then developed these crops. Describing it as anything other than that is ignorant.

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