Your Privacy is Important to us

We encourage you to review our Terms of Service, and Privacy Policy.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click "Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information" link in the footer of this page.

Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

We won't sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.

Continue on TOI App
Open App
Login for better experience!
Login Now
Welcome! to timesofindia.com
TOI INDTOI USTOI GCC
TOI+
  • Home
  • Live
  • TOI Games
  • Top Headlines
  • India
  • City News
  • Photos
  • Business
  • Real Estate
  • Entertainment
  • Movie Reviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Elections
  • Web Series
  • Sports
  • TV
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Events
  • World
  • Music
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • Tech
  • Auto
  • Education
  • Log Out
Follow Us On
Open App
  • ETIMES
  • CINEMA
  • VIDEOS
  • TV
  • LIFESTYLE
  • VISUAL STORIES
  • MUSIC
  • TRAVEL
  • FOOD
  • TRENDING
  • EVENTS
  • THEATRE
  • PHOTOS
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • MOVIE LISTINGS
  • HEALTH
  • RELATIONSHIP
  • WEB SERIES
  • BOX OFFICE

What did the Indian Railways’ menu look like in the 1990s?

etimes.in | Last updated on - Feb 13, 2026, 08:49 IST
Comments
Share
1/6

What did the Indian Railways’ menu look like in the 1990s?

Long before app-based ordering, QR menus, and sealed Rail Neer bottles became standard, eating on Indian trains in the 1990s was a far more tactile affair. Meals arrived on steel trays or melamine plates, chai sloshed in thick glass tumblers, and the smell of frying cutlets drifted in from station platforms. Catering was decentralised, run largely by zonal railways, pantry cars, refreshment rooms, and private contractors, years before the creation of the Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation.

Menus were often printed on simple paper slips or painted on boards near station stalls. Prices were modest, choices limited, and availability depended on the route and time of day. Yet there was a certain predictability to it all, a comforting familiarity regular travellers came to expect.

The result was a menu that felt regional and practical and was built around dishes that could survive reheating on a moving train. For millions of passengers, these meals became inseparable from the journey itself, as memorable as the scenery sliding past barred windows or the whistle that announced another halt in the night. Food was not an add-on but part of the rhythm of long-distance travel, marking time between stations and naps. So what did travellers actually find when the pantry car door swung open or a vendor called out from the platform? Here is what typically appeared on Indian Railways’ menus in the 1990s.

2/6

Veg sections: the backbone of the 1990s railway meal

Vegetarian food formed the most consistent and widely available part of onboard catering. Across long-distance Mail and Express trains, the staples were:

Standard veg thali
• Steamed rice or chapatis
• Plain yellow dal
• One or two vegetable curries - aloo-gobi, mixed veg, cabbage or beans
• Pickle and sometimes sliced onions

Rice-based comfort dishes
• Vegetable pulao
• Khichdi, especially on overnight runs, because it reheats well

Breakfast items (route-dependent)
• Aloo paratha with curd and pickle
• Upma
• Idli or pongal on southern routes
• Bread-butter or toast from pantry cars

Snacks between meals
• Samosas and kachoris
• Veg cutlets
• Grilled sandwiches
• Pakoras at major stations

Portions were practical rather than indulgent, designed to be filling without being elaborate. The flavours leaned mild, with familiar spices that appealed to passengers from different regions sharing the same compartment for hours.

Premium services like Rajdhani or Shatabdi trains generally offered a slightly more curated veg spread, but the heart of the menu remained simple, filling, and familiar.

3/6

Non-veg sections: limited but prized

Non-vegetarian dishes existed, though they were more carefully regulated because of storage and preparation constraints. Variety depended heavily on route, pantry-car facilities, and contractor capacity.

Typical offerings included:
• Egg-based dishes
• Omelette for breakfast
• Egg curry with rice or rotis
• Chicken preparations
• Simple chicken curry
• Chicken biryani on select routes
• Occasional mutton dishes
• Served more often at station refreshment rooms than inside ordinary coaches

In lower classes or on trains without strong pantry services, many travellers relied on platform vendors at large junctions for freshly cooked non-veg snacks rather than ordering onboard.

4/6

Extras and desserts: Practical and shelf-friendly

Desserts in the 1990s were not elaborate plated affairs. They leaned toward items that travelled well and stayed fresh for hours.


Common sweet endings or add-ons included:
Indian mithai
• Soan papdi
• Gulab jamun in syrup tubs
• Panjiri or besan laddoos
Packaged treats
• Cream biscuits
• Fruitcake slices
• Glucose biscuits
• Bananas, oranges, or apples sold by hawkers during halts

At major stations, refreshment rooms sometimes stocked regional sweets, giving passengers a quick sugar rush before the whistle blew.

These desserts were less about indulgence and more about comfort. A box of soan papdi shared across berths or a packet of biscuits passed around during long conversations became part of the journey itself. Sweetness, in those compartments, often tasted like companionship and time moving gently forward.

5/6

Beverages and water: Chai ruled everything

If one flavour defined railway travel in the 1990s, it was tea.
• Hot drinks
• Milky chai served in glass tumblers or steel cups
• Filter coffee on southern routes
• Occasional soups on long hauls
• Cold drinks
• Bottled sodas from station kiosks
• Lassi or flavoured milk on a few routes
• Drinking water
• Bottled water was available at big junctions, mostly from private brands
• A nationwide standard railway brand had not yet arrived
• Many passengers still carried their own flasks or filled bottles at stations

6/6

How catering worked then

Understanding the 1990s railway menu means understanding the system that powered it. Catering was not centrally uniform but managed through a patchwork of railway zones, pantry cars, station refreshment rooms, and private contractors. What you ate often depended less on a national template and more on geography, logistics, and the specific train you boarded. Some long-distance express trains had functioning pantry cars where meals were cooked in compact, swaying galleys. Others relied almost entirely on vendors at major station halts, where trays of rice plates, cutlets, and tea were loaded swiftly before departure.

There were no QR codes, no pre-booked meal apps, and no digital feedback forms to standardise taste or presentation. Orders were scribbled on paper pads, shouted across narrow corridors, and tallied mentally by stewards who knew regular passengers by face. The human element shaped the experience as much as the recipe did.

Supplies were sourced locally wherever possible, which meant ingredients reflected the state the train was passing through. A journey through the South might feature more rice-based options, while northern routes leaned heavier on rotis and parathas. Even tea tasted slightly different across regions.

Menus were shaped by constraint. Food had to survive heat, motion, and unpredictable delays. It needed to be cooked in bulk, reheated safely, and handed out quickly through narrow aisles. That decentralised ecosystem explains why journeys felt distinct. Unlike today’s standardised, app-based ordering systems, the 1990s experience carried regional quirks, inconsistencies, and a certain rough-edged charm that varied from route to route.

Start a Conversation

Post comment
Featured In lifestyle
  • Eid-ul-Adha 2026: How To Greet ‘Eid Mubarak’ In 15 Different Languages
  • ‘Bartan majne se toh accha hai auto chalana’: Female auto driver’s unexpected take on work and freedom goes viral
  • 7 summer foods Indian labourers eat to survive extreme heat
  • 7 everyday etiquettes every parent should teach their children from an early age
  • From Zomato deliveries to a top Delhi B-school: Haryana man’s comeback story is going viral
  • Chinese proverb of the day: “You cannot prevent the birds of sadness from passing over your head, but you can prevent their...”
  • Maya Angelou's wise words: 10 powerful quotes on love and life
  • Quote of the day by Mark Twain: “Focus more on your desire than on your...”
  • Optical illusion personality test: Lion, gorilla, tree or birds? What you see first reveals if you are logical, deep thinker, bold, or adaptable
Photostories
  • Why some birds decorate their nests with snake skin: The reason is brilliant
  • 5 signs you are the unofficial leader of your team
  • 7 summer foods Indian labourers eat to survive extreme heat
  • Thought of the day inspired by the Bhagavad Gita: "Patience is also a form of wisdom"
  • Save your visa fees and instead check out these 5 stunning Indian villages with European vibes
  • I usually laughed off ghost stories — until one freezing night in West Sikkim changed everything
  • 10 baby names inspired by stars and satellites
  • Can low vitamin D make Inflammatory Bowel Disease worse? Experts explain the hidden gut-inflammation connection
  • Lung cancer in England: NHS scanning spots 10,000 hidden cases, even in non-smokers ​— early signs one must not ignore
Explore more Stories
  • 4
    Why some birds decorate their nests with snake skin: The reason is brilliant
  • 8
    7 summer foods Indian labourers eat to survive extreme heat
  • 6
    Save your visa fees and instead check out these 5 stunning Indian villages with European vibes
  • 4
    Thought of the day inspired by the Bhagavad Gita: "Patience is also a form of wisdom"
  • 11
    10 baby names inspired by stars and satellites
Up Next
  • ETimes
  • /
  • Life & Style
  • /
  • Food News
  • /
  • What did the Indian Railways’ menu look like in the 1990s?
About UsTerms Of UsePrivacy PolicyCookie Policy

Copyright © May 27, 2026, 09.39AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service