From the Archives … A Tale of Tiffins: One Person’s Doggie Bag is Another City’s Lunch Box

I reposted this in 2019 after the then-new California state law allowing customers to bring their own takeout containers for restaurant leftovers, which I’d been doing this for years thanks to my tiffins! In light of all the discussion about food waste and keeping things out of landfills, it seemed a good time to reach into the archives again. I’ve updated the purchase information below, so you can find your own tiffin.

I’d never heard of a “tiffin” until I saw them several years ago at Luna Red restaurant in San Luis Obispo. Now, I rarely leave home without it!

As you can see from the pictures, my tiffin is a round box that clamps shut so it’s perfect for transporting food. (Other shapes and sizes are available too.) As the wise knower of all things – aka Wikipedia – states: “Tiffin is an Anglo-Indian word, derived from obsolete English slang ‘tiffing’ (to sip), for a light lunch or afternoon snack, and sometimes, by extension, for the box it is carried in.”

My tiffin has two separate compartments. Obviously, larger ones would have more.

I use my tiffin for bringing home restaurant leftovers. Sometimes having it encourages me to eat less at the time, but at any rate, it saves on packaging, especially all the Styrofoam clamshells a lot of restaurants use. Also, the tiffin is easy-peasy to clean. It’s metal, so you can wash by hand or throw it in the dishwasher.

My tiffin’s appearance in a restaurant usually sparks some conversation, usually with the server. Perhaps initially they think I’m trying to steal the salt and pepper shakers, but once I explain the concept and point out that it saves their establishment from having to buy to-go containers, they usually think my tidy tin tiffin is pretty darn cool.

The Amazing Dabbawalas

Interestingly enough, while little ol’ me is using my tiffin as a doggie bag, one of the world’s most populous cities uses hundreds of thousands of them on a daily basis as lunch boxes. Each day in Mumbai, India, about 5000 dabbawalas (or “those who carry the box”) fan out across the city to carry home cooked lunches to some 200,000 urban workers.

Using trains, wagons, bicycles, and foot power, the dabbawalas not only deliver the meals, but also retrieve the tiffins and return them to the very home kitchens from whence they came, all within a three- to four-hour window each way. According to this slideshow from the BBC, the “system was first established about 125 years ago by a Parsi banker who wanted to have home-cooked food in his office.”

Many of the dabbawalas come from a particular rural region in Western India, and the position of dabbawala is often passed down through generations. Most dabbawalas are literate only to the level of an alphabet, so they’ve devised a coding system of colors and numbers to get the tiffins where they’re supposed to go.

Given our Western standards of modern technology, this seems incredibly crude and inefficient, but consider this – it’s estimated that the dabbawalas’ error rate is only 1:16 million. Yes, that’s one wrong lunch for every 16 million deliveries and that error is usually due to accidents or weather!

Tracking number, schmacking number. Watch these amazing dabbawalas at work.

(btw … Luna Red in San Luis Obispo and Robin’s in Cambria used to carry the tiffins, but not enough people understood their usefulness, so I now don’t know of a local place to find them. If anyone knows of somewhere else, let me know and I’ll post it on Fbook. For now, I’m going to give this company a try — Indian-Tiffin. They seem to have good values, and I’d rather support individual companies v. Amazon. )

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