There are some days when you crave something "chatpatta" and don't want to have the usual homemade food for dinner. In those days street food style dishes work the best. Street food includes dishes that a hawker or vendor sells ready-to-eat food or drink in a street or other public place, such as a market or fair. It is usually sold from a mobile food booth, cart, or truck and is intended for immediate consumption. While some street cuisines are regional, many have gone far beyond their origins. Most street foods are both finger food and fast food, and they are usually less expensive than restaurant meals. Distinct places and cultures around the world have different sorts of street cuisine. Indian street foods are famous around the world for their flavour, variety, and accessibility in places such as Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Bangalore, to mention a few. Kathi rolls, daulat ki chaat, chhole bhature, and misal pav are some of the most popular street foods. Every region of India has its own speciality, whether it is in the north, south, east, or west. Indian street food is unique in that it is made using a variety of unusual spices and ingredients. Apart from Indians, many foreign visitors rave about Indian street food.

Here are some street style dishes you can make for dinner and startle your taste buds-

Dabeli

Dabeli, which is said to have originated in Gujarat's Kutch region, is a unique combination of softness and crunch. When you arrive in Gujarat, you'll see wide streets and narrow lanes lined with dabeli stalls. This delicious vada pav cousin is made by putting spiced potato mixture into greased paos and grilling them on a tawa. This delicacy is made using a particular dabeli masala, as well as garlic and tamarind chutney. To give the meal more crunch, ample amounts of sev gathia and juicy pomegranate seeds are sprinkled on top.

Gujarat delicacy/ pinterest.com

 

Kathi Roll

There is no doubting that Kolkata and Lucknow are known for their kathi rolls. Served with a scrumptious mixture of kebabs and raw vegetables, kathi rolls are a visual and gustatory delight. The contents are stuffed inside a flaky and crispy maida-based paratha. It is usually served with onions and green chutney.

Mouth watering Mughlai delicacy/ pinterest.com  

Matar Kulcha

If you are a true street food lover, you must have matar kulcha, the ultimate street food speciality. The mix of boiled white chana or white matar and toasted kulchas will leave you wanting more. It offers a wide range of flavours and is best served with ginger juliennes and tomato slices on top. Matar kulcha is a typical Delhi street meal that is tangy and spicy and has everything you need to satisfy your hunger.

Typical Delhi street food/ pinterest.com

 

 

Pav Bhaji

Pav bhaji is popular street food for a variety of reasons. Pav bhaji, a spicy, peppery, and flavorful bhaji served with butter-oozing pavs, is a popular street snack in Maharashtra that is enjoyed by both residents and visitors. What sets this dish apart from the rest is the ideal combination of a wide range of vegetables and exotic seasonings. The generous portions of tomato and onion slices that are provided alongside give the dish a wonderful tangy flavour.

Tangy and spicy pav bhaji/ pinterest.com

 

 

Kachori

Kachori is a spicy deep-fried food that originated in the Indian subcontinent and is popular in places where there is an Indian or South Asian diaspora. Rajasthan's Kota Kachori is undoubtedly the state's most famous kachori. Also popular is the Pyaaj Kachori (onion kachori). The Mawa Kachori, developed by the late Rawat Deora, is another type of Kachori found in Jodhpur. It's a delicious dish with sugar syrup on top. In Gujarat, it is usually made with a circular flour and dough ball stuffed with yellow moong dal, black pepper, red chilli powder, and ginger paste. It's usually served as chaat in Delhi. Another type of kachoris seen in Delhi is Khasta kachori' or 'Raj Kachori.

Rajasthani street snack/ pinterest.com