Food or Tiffin Carriers - A Story

http://sarawakiana.blogspot.com/2008/04/food-or-tiffin-carriers.html

Food or Tiffin Carriers

















I have arranged all these tiffin carriers in a chronological order from antique (Raymond Kwok) to modern (source : ebay) in anti clockwise manner. They are as dear to my heart, as a Foochow or Chinese woman, as to any Asian woman in this world.

When a Chinese woman sees a tiffin carrier,like any of these, her heart would definitely miss a bit because it is one kitchen item that she cannot do without, unless she is totally unskilled in the kitchen.

Here are some stories I would like to share with you.

Once there was a young man who had sent his wife to the Lau King Howe Hospital to await their first born and then went to work. The hospital later telephoned his mother that the baby was soon to be born. His mother quickly slaughtered the best female chicken (must be female according to traditions)and boiled it in the simple Foochow style, which we call Bak Kong (Plain boil). This was very nourishing for a woman who had just given birth. She then placed the chicken soup in the bottom tray or layer of a tiffin carrier and placed some rice in another layer. she also placed two hard boiled eggs at the top layer. In this way, the chicken soup would keep the rice and the eggs warm. when it was known that the baby was just about to be born the mother sent the young husband to the hospital with specific instructions on how to "feed" the new mother with the chicken soup and the rice. He had to use a spoon and feed her. the new mother must not get up from the hospital bed.

Well, the young man arrived at the hospital and checked out his wife. When he heard her crying out in pain and still in labour, he took an about turn and cycled home with the tiffin carrier. when his mother saw him pale and distraught,she asked him what happened. He then realised that he had done the most embarrasing deed. His mother had to send the tiffin carrier to the hospital on foot herself as she did not know how to cycle and fed the daughter in law herself. She mumbled that she had a hopeless son.

But she was over the moon because she had a bouncing baby for a grandson!!

The story of the Hopeless Son spread far and wide and brought a lot of smiles to many understanding men and women.

My own stories were simple. The tiffin carriers would always remind me of how wonderful Foochow mothers were to their daughters and daughters-n-law from the moment the babies wereborn. It was such a comforting arrangement for mum to cook all the lovely confinement food and have them sent to the hospital. My mum would always carry the tiffin carrier to my hospital bed after I had been delivered . They would have the most important kampong chicken soup. This soup was a good anguish terminator. For generations they Foochows recomment this plain boiled chicken soup for the first few days of confinement.

So in a way I I had some very memorable meals out of these tiffin "trays" for my four babies who were all born in Sibu. My mum was different as she did not ask my husband to send the food to me. I often wonder if my husband might have committed some abominable acts by forgetting to send me the food or losing the tiffin carrier some where along the roads in Sibu!! Well, one never knows!!

One of my friends was fairly busy with her career. One day, her husband lovingly brought a tiffin carrier to her place of work. when she opened them happily, she was embarrased to find that there was nothing in the trays!! her embarrassed husband had brought the wrong tiffin carrier to her!! Some men don't even know the weight of an empty tiffin carrier!!

An aunt of mine used to carry a fully cooked meal of four dishes in a tiffin carrier to her bed ridden mother in law for years, every day, twice, by foot, until the old lady passed away. Her husband had actually left her and her six children. How much love can a woman have for her mother in law? My aunt is indeed an examplary daughter in law.

I believe there are lots of stories around the tiffin carrier, some are bitter, some are sweet but all are home stories which should be shared.

What's yours?



Kiara Kitchen daily food delivery

History of Tiffins

Tiffin is lunch, or any light meal. It originated in British India, and is today found primarily in Indian English.[1] The word originated when Indian custom superseded the British practice of an afternoon dinner, leading to a new word for the afternoon meal.[1] It is derived from the obsolete English slang tiffing, for "taking a little drink or sip".[2] When used for "lunch"; it is not necessarily a light meal.[3]:88 Notably, it is used in the name of MTR, Mavalli Tiffin Room. There are many eateries in Bangalore and Mysore called "tiffanys" which serve tiffin. The word Tiffanys has now come to mean Tiffin in this area. The movie Breakfast at Tiffany's is to have supposedly caused this confusion and word-transfer[1].

In South India and in Nepal, the term is generally used for between-meals snacks: dosas, idlis, etc.[4] Outside South India, like Mumbai, the word mostly refers to any packed lunch, often light lunches prepared for working Indian men by their wives after they have left for work, or for schoolchildren by their parents.[5] It is often forwarded to them by dabbawalas, sometimes known as tiffin wallahs, who use a complex system to get thousands of tiffin-boxes to their destinations.[6] Tiffin often consists of rice, dal, curry, vegetables, chapathis or "spicy meats".[3]

In addition, the lunch boxes are themselves called tiffin carriers, tiffin-boxes or sometimes tiffins. These service is now commonly knowned as daily food delivery.

Different Types of Tiffins

Latched Tiffins



Pyramid Tiffin


Lunch box Tiffin


Kiara Kitchen provides Latched 3-tier tiffins for their daily delivery service to Mont Kiara, Sri Hartamas & TTDI (Taman Tun Dr. Ismail).

Daily Meal Delivery: Let us do the work for you!

Daily Meal Delivery: Let us do the work for you!

With all of the things that you do on a daily basis, it is no surprise that you don't have time to cook healthy meals for you and your family. You work all day, transport your children around town for their activities, find time to exercise, and still manage to find some tome for yourself. Where in that kind of a day is there a chance to shop for, prepare, and cook meals? You should consider daily meal delivery!

Think of all the extra free time you will have with daily meal delivery. The average person visits the grocery store once per week, but how often do you find yourself heading back during the weak for one or two items to make dinner? After the groceries are bought, you have to plan the meals, count calories, weigh food, and scour through books of recipes. Then there is all the time spent in the kitchen, cooking, baking, frying, chopping, slicing, and dicing. Not to mention all the time standing over a hot stovetop. All of this takes time that keeps you away from your family or other interests that you have.

Call Kiara Kitchen today to find out more about our Daily food delivery service for Mont Kiara, Sri Hartamas & TTDI.