Tony Johor Kaki Travels for Food ยท Heritage ยท Culture ยท History

Food Explorer Storyteller with 63 million+ reads ๐Ÿ“ง johorkaki@gmail.com

Surprising History of Chili in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia Cuisine ๐ŸŒถ


In Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia, we eat chili pepper in our food since we are toddlers. We even eat raw chili pepper as a condiment. For many of us, we can't eat or live well without that addictive hot spicy kick. (That's my daughter enjoying spicy mee pok tah, by the way ๐ŸŒถ ๐Ÿ˜„ )


So, it may surprise some of us that chili pepper is a fairly recent addition to our cuisine and chilis are not native to our region. Even more surprising to some, chili was brought to us by
ang moh, specifically the Portuguese only in the 1500s when they finally found their way here from Europe. 


Chili peppers are originally from south America.
 

Long before the Europeans showed up in south America, the locals have been enjoying chili peppers since time immemorial - 8,000 years ago according to some sources.


The Europeans first encountered chili peppers when the Spanish expedition led by Italian Christopher Columbus landed in the Caribbean in 1492. The Portuguese were hot on his heels, arriving in Brazil in 1500. The Europeans were quick to realise the commercial value of chili peppers as after all, their voyages were in search of spices, land for colonies and other treasures.


From south America, the Portuguese brought chili pepper to their African colonies including Mozambique and Angola. Peri-peri is the Swahili word for chili pepper, hence we have peri-peri chicken today which is a Portuguese dish originally from Mozambique.


From Africa, next stop India. The Portuguese brought chilis to India where Vasco da Gama earlier landed in 1498, near Calicut on the Malabar coast. From then on, chili pepper gradually became indispensable to Indian cuisine adding heat to the formidable local arsenal of cardamon, nutmeg, turmeric, cinnamon, etc


From their base in India, the Portuguese captured Malacca in 1511. And so, chili pepper arrived in the Malay peninsula and the fiery spice conquered Malay / Indonesian cuisine.

The Spanish followed, arriving in Cebu in the Philippines in 1555 and brought them under the spell of chili pepper as well.


Centuries before the Europeans, Chinese traders had been in the Malay peninsular and archipelago (since 100 AD), buying local spices to bring back to Guangdong and Fujian to send to Europe via the overland Silk Route. 

However, by the time the Portuguese and Spaniards brought chili pepper to the Malay world in the 1500s, China's Ming dynasty had long withdrawn from its maritime interests and made private sea trade illegal. It was the vacuum created by the Ming dynasty following the death of Admiral Cheng Ho in 1433 that opened the door to Europeans in maritime Southeast Asia.


Chili pepper made its way to China overland via the Silk Road from India in the 1500s, landing first in the west in Sichuan, Guizhou and Hunan provinces. 
In China, chili pepper was first sought after as a decorative plant, then a medicine and eventually became synonymous with Sichuan, Hunan and Guizhou cuisine. 


Spicy chili pepper dishes conquered Chinese palates from Guangzhou to Shanghai, Beijing, Wuhan to the whole of China.


Today, we cannot imagine the Korean icon kimchi without chili. Here too, the Koreans did not have chili peppers until the Portuguese brought the spice to them in the 1500s. Chili was added to kimchi since then but did not become popular until the 1800s. Today, chili pepper is a definitive ingredient of kimchi and found its way into many Korean dishes including gamjatang.


So yeah, when we go really far back to the roots of Malay and Indonesian cuisine, the ubiquitous hot spice we see in our food today didn't feature in the dishes of Srivijaya (650 - 1377), Majapahit (1293 - 1520), kingdom of Singapura (1299 - 1398) and 
Malacca sultanate (1400 - 1511).


Though a late comer, chili found its way into almost every dish in maritime southeast Asia either as an ingredient or condiment. Chili crab is considered one of Singapore's national dishes along with chicken rice


Even in chicken rice, many people consider the accompanying chili dip equally important as the chicken itself ๐Ÿคท๐Ÿค”


And, what is Indonesian cuisine without sambal?! There are some 300 different types of chili dips (sambal) for different dishes in Indonesia ๐Ÿ˜ฎ Yes, in Indonesia, they have a different chili dip for different dishes.


Malaysia's national dish nasi lemak in its most basic (to me most delicious) form is simply rice boiled with coconut milk eaten with sambal which main ingredient is chili pepper 
๐ŸŒถ


Oh yeah, next time you want to ask your European friends in a well meaning way "Do you take spicy?", remember it was the Portuguese who gifted us chili pepper and Devil's curry ๐ŸŒถ


If Europeans taught us how to eat chili pepper, how come most of them are not as into spicy food as we are now? What is your insight on this question? ๐Ÿค” Please share in the comments ๐Ÿ™



Written by Tony Boey on 15 Jun 2021

References:

Image of spicy fish courtesy of flickr. Image of Aztecs courtesy of Wikipedia. Image of peri-peri chicken courtesy of Wikipedia. Image of Vasco da Gama's meeting with king of Kozhikode in Calicut courtesy of Wikipedia. Image of spicy chicken courtesy of WikipediaImage of junk courtesy of National Archives of SingaporeImage of Christopher Columbus courtesy of WikipediaImage of Majapahit warrior courtesy of WikipediaImage of chili pepper courtesy of Wikipedia.

3 comments:

  1. i enjoy reading this kind of posts! That little girl is so cute and she seems to enjoy her spicy noodles very much! Start them young!

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  2. .... I worked for many years as expatriate engineering consultant in Indonesia [a.k.a. "and love the traditional food - After much thought and research I tend to subscribe to the theory that South American Chili "Pepper" was introduced to the so-called "Spice Islands" in early colonial times by Portugese, Dutch, and English spice traders as a convenient and cheap trade goods exchange for the local indigenous true Black "Pepper" [Piper Nigrum] which was reportedly worth its weight in gold in Europe back around 16th Century - For those interested in the subject I highly recommend the book "Nathanials Nutmeg" about the battle for trade supremacy in the East Indies between the Dutch and English in the late 16th, early 17th century - See > https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/29386.Nathaniel_s_Nutmeg

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Peter. I think the same as you. Thanks for the recommended read. I checking it out now. Appreciate much.

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