Kin by Marie Mitchell
By Marie Mitchell
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About the recipe
Roti found its way to the Caribbean via indentured Indian labourers, a large Indian diaspora, with the biggest communities in Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana, who introduced foods like curries, roti and chutneys to the region. The name ‘buss up shut’ comes from the way the roti is beaten with wooden spatulas, spoons and hands after cooking, breaking up the layers until it looks like a ‘bust-up shirt’. Making roti is my therapy – my hands work and my mind rests. For that, I’m very thankful to Joe, who, for a number of years, was my (business) partner-in-crime with Island Social Club – if it weren’t for him, I doubt roti would have become so integral to my cooking.
Recipe From
450g bread flour, plus extra for dusting
½ tbsp baking powder
½ tbsp fine sea salt
½ tbsp light brown soft sugar
300ml hand-hot water, oat milk or whole milk
½ tbsp sunflower oil
About 100ml sunflower oil and 100g melted ghee (have a bit extra, just in case), combined
This recipe is from Kin: Caribbean Recipes for the Modern Kitchen by Marie Mitchell. Buy it now!