Food of the Peranakan Indians
Growing up as a Chetti Melaka (Peranakan Indian), Tanya realised her family was different when she was seven or eight years old. Her family spoke Malay at home, ate sambal belacan, and had huge parties with a lot of unusual food. In this episode, Tanya talks with pride about the rituals of the ancestor worship known parachu and the cookbook containing traditional recipes of the Chetti Melaka community.
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What Tanya Talked About
01:58 – Who the Chetti Melaka are, and where they are from
04:32 – How the Chetti Melaka are different from and similar to other
communities
05:19 – The importance of food culture especially in ancestor worship
known as parachu
10:04 – The language spoken by Chetti Melaka
10:37 – The musicality of the community and a version of the song Di Tanjong Katong commissioned
by the Chetti Melaka (Peranakan Indians) Association (used with permission)
12:10 – The local community in Singapore and origins of the Chetti Melaka
Association
15:00 – How the book Heritage Food of the Peranakan Indians in a Chitty Melaka Kitchen came
about
19:59 – Tanya’s background as a Chetti Melaka
23:11 – Classic Chetti Melaka dishes
24:44 – How the Chetti Melaka otak blangah is different from the
usual otak-otak
26:29 – Reception of the book
29:06 – A must-try and simple dish in the cookbook
29:30 – The importance of preserving heritage food
30:11 – Food is…
About the Guest
A Peranakan Indian, Tanya Pillay-Nair is the coordinator of the cookbook Heritage Food of the Peranakan Indians in a Chitty Melaka Kitchen (Peranakan Indian Association of Singapore, 2023). The book contains close to 100 Peranakan Indian recipes, from everyday dishes to festive fare.
Related Video
Cracking fish bones and throwing fish patties – making otak blangah is a workout! How does this uncommon Peranakan dish taste in comparison to the all-familiar otak-otak? Tanya Pillay-Nair from the Peranakan Indian Association of Singapore revives this old recipe with her aunt.
Resources
Peranakan Indian (Chitty Melaka) Association Singapore, Heritage Food of the Peranakan Indians in a Chitty Melaka Kitchen (Peranakan Indian (Chitty Melaka) Association Singapore, 2023). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 641.595951 PER)
Chantal Sajan, “Life Lessons in a Chetty Melaka Kitchen,” BiblioAsia 14, no. 4 (January–March 2019).
Dhoraisingam S. Samuel, Peranakan Indians of Singapore and Melaka: Indian Babas and Nonyas—Chitty Melaka (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2006).
Credits
This episode of BiblioAsia+ was hosted by Jimmy Yap and produced by Soh Gek Han. Sound engineering was done by One Dash. The background music "Di Tanjong Katong" was composed by Osman Ahmad and performed by Chords Haven. Special thanks to Tanya for coming on the show.
BiblioAsia+ is a podcast about Singapore history by the National Library of Singapore.