Lest you think that curry is a quintessentially Indian food, it is not. Curries are also found in Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, parts of South America like Guyana and around the Caribbean. They are also found in London where the term &lsquocurry shop&rsquo refers to an entire category of eateries where price was the attraction, rather than inspired cooking with prime ingredients. However, there is little doubt that curries in the British context had their provenance in India, where during the British Raj, a whole cuisine grew more or less out of jugaad between memsahibs who could not speak Hindi and khansamas who knew no English. During the period of the British Raj, according to Jennifer Brennan and her classic Curries & Bugles, there was a notion in the UK and probably among memsahibs in India too, that the core of a curry was a complicated mixture called curry powder that had to be blended with flour to make a roux and it resulted in a superior result if bought ready-made rather than being prepared from scratch at home. One recipe, given by the redoubtable Mrs Beeton, calls for coriander seed, turmeric, cinnamon seed (sic), chilli powder, mustard, ground ginger, allspice and fenugreek seed. There are references to allspice that does not grow in India and has never gained currency here, to &lsquocinnamon seeds&rsquo and the use of saffron while meaning turmeric. As for the transgression of grinding mustard seeds into a powder along with coriander seeds and sauteeing them or cooking them after making a roux with flour and water beggars the imagination. One fall-out is that, according to restaurant consultant Sudha Kukreja, the curry powder has been immortalised by at least one India-based company that blends spices together and aims at the export market. &ldquoBecause it is stabilised with flour and the heat is kept intentionally low, it has a distinctive flavour profile that is immediately recognisable.&rdquo She tells me how she has tasted the blend in Indonesia, Singapore, USA and Canada in products as disparate as Japanese curry, Indonesian samosa filling and Caribbean curry sandwich. According to Kukreja, curry is widely eaten in a number of countries that firmly believe that it is indigenous. &ldquoIt is difficult for an Indian to acquire a taste for Japanese curry during a short visit to that country it is only the name that is common,&rdquo Kukreja smiles at the memory of her meals in that country where her hosts insisted that the curry was a Japanese dish and had not come from elsewhere.