If there is one thing people in India never tire of debating, it is whether Mumbai or Delhi is the better city. More accurately, the argument centres around which metropolis has the better food. Delhi often comes up tops with its incredible range of street eats, but Mumbai trumps any competition when it comes to the sandwich.
The sandwich may have come to India through the British, but the people of Mumbai (as Bombay is now called) have added their own fillings and spices to make it their own.
The Bombay sandwich (it’s never referred to by the newer name of Mumbai) has a fairly simple recipe, where boiled potatoes, along with raw vegetables like onions, cucumber, tomato and peppers, are placed between richly buttered slices of bread – always plain white, no fancy brown or multigrain – and liberally slathered with chutney. This piquant green chutney made with fresh herbs and spices kicks up the flavour profile a notch, while the cooking method – using a rustic handheld toaster (called a chimta) over an open flame – gives it a soft centre with a crunchy crust. In recent times, a generous sprinkling of grated cheese is also added to the mix.
The iconic dish reflects the city’s ethos of welcoming outsiders and embracing them into its fold. Even before the British brought the sandwich to India, it was the Portuguese who introduced both potatoes and bread to the country. They used local toddy (fermented palm sap alcohol) to ferment and bake pav, the soft and fluffy bun that is the base for Mumbai’s other famous street dish, the vada pav.
“The Bombay sandwich likely developed as food for the migrant workers who came to work in Mumbai from various parts of India,” said cookbook author Sonal Ved referring to what historians have claimed. “Back then, in the 1960s, Mumbai had a booming textile mills industry. The labourers needed cheap meal options and that’s when this sandwich originated.”