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"I Love Roti" Serves the Street Food Of Malaysia

By / Photography By | August 28, 2018
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Donnie Ankudovich and Lauren Bravoco are at the 12th South Farmers Market every Tuesday

THE VIBRANT FLAVORS OF MALAYSIA ARE SERVED UP AT 'I LOVE ROTI' FOOD TRUCK.

In 1990, completely green as a young food editor, I found myself on a press trip to Malaysia. This was my first trip out of the country, with the exception of Mexico. Hot, humid, and a bit oppressive, the country was an explosion of unknown sites, scents, and tastes. Daily, we were confronted with exotic, unknown dishes that were unusual, salty, fishy, and hot. Very hot. If I had known of roti then, the flaky, buttery, fragrant bread, I would have been in heaven. I am now, after stumbling upon I Love Roti at the 12th South Farmers Market. —Jill Melton, Editor

I Love Roti is the brainchild of Donnie Ankudovich and Lauren Bravoco. Soon after meeting in 2014, the young couple from New Jersey left the States to see the world by working in different countries. They wound up in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, getting jobs in a hostel. Here, over the course of four months, they experienced their roti revelation, each morning dipping the fresh, flaky bread from a local eatery into a spicy bowl of curry. Not only was it the perfect Malay way to start the day, but -- some four years and twenty-five countries later -- the perfect way to start their new life in Nashville. With Donnie’s restaurant experience and Lauren’s passion for cooking, I Love Roti was born.

“I don’t want to say our relationship is based on food,” Donnie says with a smile. “But it kind of is.”

Photo 1: Similar to the Indian flatbread, chapatti, Malaysian roti (pronounced rod-ee) is a flaky flatbread that accompanies the spicy curries and dals of Malaysia.
Photo 2: Lauren making roti

The two form a solid team. Donnie focuses on the sauces while Lauren is in charge of the dough. In fact, she has something of a gift for flipping it on the griddle. “You want to do it so you get as many air bubbles as possible,” she says. “You also have to mix the dough just right, even taking into account the weather." Hot and humid is ideal for making flaky and crispy, Malaysian-style roti, perfect for serving with the spicy curries typical of Malay food. “We’re in love with Malaysian cuisinesalt, sweet, spicyit’s all there. It’s like the greatest hits album of an Indian, Chinese, and Thai band.” I Love Roti offers a wide variety of Malaysia’s “greatest hits” dishes, all vegitarian mind you.

Follow them @iloverotinashville on Instagram and iloverotinashville on facebook for truck locations.

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