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Sunday, April 13, 2025

Serving Guyana's egg balls in Trinidad

by

Charles Kong Soo
906 days ago
20221023
James serves his egg balls to customers.

James serves his egg balls to customers.

CHARLES KONG SOO

charles.kong­soo@guardian.co.tt

When you see au­then­tic Guyanese egg balls, white and black pud­ding on James the Pie Man's ta­ble on In­de­pen­dence Square one can eas­i­ly mis­take the lo­ca­tion for a busy street cor­ner in his home­land of Guyana, where those two most icon­ic street foods can be found.

He brings some of Guyana's rich food cul­ture to Trinida­di­ans, his coun­try­men and food­ies alike at his lo­ca­tion on the Bri­an Lara Prom­e­nade, op­po­site the Capt Arthur Cipri­ani stat­ue, near the un­of­fi­cial Diego Mar­tin taxi stand.

Com­muters, peo­ple from all walks of life, school chil­dren, mo­torists, and taxi dri­vers all stop to buy from Mon­day to Sat­ur­day. Apart from egg balls and pud­ding, he sells a wide se­lec­tion of de­li­cious pies and gen­uine man­go sour/chut­ney.

Egg balls and white and black pud­ding are quin­tes­sen­tial Guyanese snack foods and are sold by many ven­dors in the South Amer­i­can coun­try.

The pop­u­lar Guyanese snacks take skill to make and James, who on­ly gave his first name, has mas­tered the culi­nary tech­niques. He is as­sist­ed some­times by his wife and son.

When the Sun­day Guardian vis­it­ed James on the Prom­e­nade, the in­ter­view was con­duct­ed with in­ter­mit­tent breaks for the pop­u­lar ven­dor to serve his steady stream of cus­tomers.

James said "Egg ball can be de­scribed as the health­i­er Guyanese ver­sion of the Eng­lish Scotch egg, their boiled egg is wrapped in sausage meat, coat­ed in bread­crumbs and then baked or deep-fried.

Egg balls

Egg balls

"The Guyanese egg ball us­es sea­soned cas­sa­va to wrap around the boiled egg, then deep fried un­til gold­en brown, and a good chef makes sure that the cas­sa­va is soft, tasty and melts in your mouth while the egg is not over­cooked.

"White pud­ding orig­i­nat­ed in Ire­land, Scot­land, then spread to Great Britain. Guyanese made white pud­ding their own, and in­stead of us­ing oat­meal or bread­crumbs, we use rice, sea­soned with a lot of fresh herbs like big and small leaf thyme, and some­times onion.

"An­oth­er dif­fer­ence be­tween Guyanese pud­ding and Trinidad pud­ding is that it does not in­clude blood; co­conut milk is sub­sti­tut­ed for the blood, it's cut up and served with man­go sour (chut­ney) that is paired with most Guyanese street food and is re­al nice."

He said Mar­tinique al­so has its ver­sion of white and black pud­ding, called Boudin Blanc and Boudin Cre­ole that us­es what the coun­try has in abun­dance; seafood.

James said that the Mar­tini­quan white sausage is made with­out blood and is stuffed with ei­ther prawns, crabs, conch, fish or veg­eta­bles while the Boudin Cre­ole is sim­i­lar to the Trinida­di­an black pud­ding made from pork, pig’s blood, onion, bread­crumbs and herbs.

He learned to make egg balls, white and black pud­ding and pies from home eco­nom­ics school, and the fam­i­ly used to have a cook shop run by his un­cle in Kit­ty in George­town, Guyana.

While many ven­dors raised their prices long be­fore the lat­est in­crease in flour and oth­er in­gre­di­ents, James on­ly re­cent­ly raised his pie prices from $5 to $6. How­ev­er, some­times he has spe­cials on his pies for peo­ple who are 'short' on cash or hard up, chil­dren and when it's get­ting late.

James said that he tried to make a small prof­it as he is aware that peo­ple are strug­gling and he tries to put him­self in their shoes.

Re­gard­ing the crack­down on vend­ing in the city, he said that he was out there on the streets sell­ing his prod­ucts for sev­er­al years. He wished that Port-of-Spain May­or Joel Mar­tinez could reg­u­larise most ven­dors will­ing to pay a min­i­mal fee to be able to sell in the city as he be­lieves that they can as­sist in keep­ing the cap­i­tal clean.


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