Sunday, July 5, 2026

From Sanbosag to Global Samosa: A Historical, Economic, and Export Analysis of the World's Most Successful Triangular Snack

 

From Sanbosag to Global Samosa: A Historical, Economic, and Export Analysis of the World's Most Successful Triangular Snack



Abstract

The samosa is one of the most recognizable snacks in India and increasingly across global food markets. Despite its strong association with Indian street food culture, historical evidence suggests that the samosa originated outside India as the Persian sanbosag or Arab sanbusak, eventually reaching the Indian subcontinent through Central Asian trade routes and the courts of the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire. Over centuries, the product underwent significant adaptation, transforming from a meat-filled aristocratic delicacy into a vegetarian, potato-based mass-market snack. This case-cum-research paper examines the historical evolution, regional adaptation, consumer behavior, industrial production, frozen-food commercialization, and export potential of samosas. The study also critically evaluates five-year export trends and identifies opportunities and challenges for India's frozen snack industry.

Keywords: Samosa, Sanbosag, Frozen Foods, Indian Street Food, Export Trends, Food Processing Industry, Snack Market

 

1. Introduction

Few food products demonstrate cultural adaptation as effectively as the samosa. Today, samosas are consumed daily across India, particularly in states such as Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, and Maharashtra. They are sold by roadside vendors, tea stalls, restaurants, railway stations, airports, and increasingly through organized retail and frozen-food channels.

The samosa's journey spans nearly a thousand years, crossing continents, empires, religions, and economic systems. What began as a portable pastry for traders and travelers on the Silk Road has evolved into a multi-billion-rupee industry encompassing street vendors, quick-service restaurants, frozen-food manufacturers, exporters, and multinational food chains.

This paper investigates:

  • Historical origins of the samosa
  • Entry and adaptation in India
  • Regional consumption patterns
  • Frozen-food commercialization
  • Export performance during the last five years
  • Future opportunities and threats

 

2. Research Objectives

  1. To examine the historical origin of the samosa.
  2. To analyze how the samosa became a mainstream Indian snack.
  3. To evaluate regional consumption patterns.
  4. To study industrial production and frozen samosa manufacturing.
  5. To assess export trends over the last five years.
  6. To identify future growth opportunities and challenges.

 

3. Research Methodology

The study is based on:

  • Historical literature review
  • Secondary data analysis
  • Export statistics from trade databases
  • Industry reports
  • Food processing sector reports
  • Company information from major snack manufacturers
  • Consumer behavior observations

Analytical tools used:

  • Trend Analysis
  • SWOT Analysis
  • CAGR Estimation
  • Comparative Regional Analysis
  • Supply Chain Assessment

 

4. Historical Evolution of the Samosa

4.1 Persian and Central Asian Origins

Historical records indicate that the earliest form of samosa was known as:

  • Sanbosag (Persian)
  • Sambusa (Central Asia)
  • Sanbusak (Arabic)

The snack emerged between the 10th and 11th centuries among merchants and travelers.

Characteristics included:

  • Triangular shape
  • Meat fillings
  • Nuts and dried fruits
  • Long shelf life
  • Easy transportation

These features made it suitable for caravan travel along the Silk Road.

 

4.2 Arrival in India

The samosa entered India during the Delhi Sultanate period.

Notable references include:

Amir Khusro (13th Century)

Described pastries filled with:

  • Meat
  • Ghee
  • Onions

Ibn Battuta (14th Century)

Recorded the serving of stuffed pastries at the court of Sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq.

Initially, samosas were luxury foods consumed by nobility and royal courts.

 

5. Indianization of the Samosa

The greatest transformation occurred after the introduction of potatoes into India by Portuguese traders during the 16th century.

Major Changes

Original Samosa

Indian Samosa

Meat filling

Potato filling

Royal food

Mass food

Baked

Deep fried

Expensive

Affordable

Elite consumers

All income groups

This adaptation made the samosa accessible to the broader population.

 

6. Why Samosa Became a Daily Snack

Economic Factors

Low-Cost Ingredients

Typical samosa ingredients include:

  • Potatoes
  • Peas
  • Wheat flour
  • Cooking oil
  • Spices

These ingredients remain among the cheapest food inputs available.

High Profitability

Example:

Particular

Approximate Value (₹)

Cost per samosa

4–7

Selling price

15–30

Gross margin

50–75%

Consequently, samosas provide attractive returns for small vendors.

 

Cultural Factors

The rise of tea culture significantly increased samosa consumption.

The combination of:

  • Chai
  • Samosa
  • Chutney

became deeply embedded in Indian social life.

 

7. Regional Variations

Madhya Pradesh

Cities:

  • Indore
  • Bhopal
  • Gwalior
  • Ujjain

Popular pairings:

  • Poha
  • Jalebi
  • Samosa

Indore alone consumes thousands of kilograms of potato filling daily through organized and unorganized vendors.

 

Uttar Pradesh

Characteristics:

  • Large size
  • Thick crust
  • Potato-pea filling
  • Tamarind chutney

Cities:

  • Lucknow
  • Varanasi
  • Agra
  • Kanpur

 

Maharashtra

Characteristics:

  • Smaller size
  • Quick-service format
  • Office-snack positioning

Major markets:

  • Mumbai
  • Pune
  • Nagpur

 

Rajasthan

Characteristics:

  • Spicy variants
  • Onion-based fillings
  • Tea-shop culture

 

8. Industrialization and Frozen Samosa Market

Evolution

The frozen-food revolution changed samosa production from a handmade activity to industrial manufacturing.

Production stages:

  1. Dough preparation
  2. Filling preparation
  3. Automated filling
  4. Shaping
  5. Partial frying
  6. Blast freezing
  7. Packaging
  8. Distribution

 

Major Players

GCMMF (Amul)

Frozen range includes:

  • Punjabi samosa
  • Patties
  • Parathas

Bikano

Exports frozen samosas globally.

Haldiram's

Expanding frozen snack portfolio.

ITC Limited

Participates through convenience food products.

 

9. Export Trend Analysis (2021–2026)

Because samosas are exported under broader categories such as frozen snacks, prepared foods, and ethnic convenience foods, exact global samosa-only statistics are often unavailable. Industry estimates indicate continued growth.

Year

Estimated Export Value (USD Million)

2021

95

2022

108

2023

126

2024

145

2025

167

2026*

185

*Estimated based on current market trends.

 

CAGR Calculation

CAGR=(185/95)1/5 -1

Estimated CAGR:

≈ 14.2%

This indicates strong growth in international demand.

 

10. Major Export Destinations

 

Tier-1 Markets

  • USA
  • Canada
  • United Kingdom
  • UAE
  • Australia

Tier-2 Markets

  • New Zealand
  • Singapore
  • Malaysia
  • South Africa
  • Germany

Emerging Markets

  • Japan
  • South Korea
  • Netherlands
  • France

 

11. Statistical Analysis

Demand Drivers

Factor

Impact Score (1–10)

Indian Diaspora

10

Convenience Foods

9

Frozen Food Infrastructure

9

E-commerce Grocery

8

Ethnic Food Popularity

8

Health Awareness

-4

 

Correlation Analysis

Observed relationship:

Positive Correlation

Growth in:

  • Urbanization
  • Working population
  • Frozen-food retail

results in higher samosa demand.

Negative Correlation

Growth in:

  • Obesity concerns
  • Air-fried food preferences

may reduce conventional fried samosa consumption.

 

12. SWOT Analysis

Strengths

  • Strong cultural acceptance
  • Low production cost
  • High profitability
  • Easy customization

Weaknesses

  • High oil absorption
  • Short shelf life (fresh)
  • Health concerns

Opportunities

  • Air-fried variants
  • Frozen exports
  • Vegan products
  • Gluten-free versions

Threats

  • Health-conscious consumers
  • Regulatory restrictions
  • Competition from international snacks

 

13. Case Study: The Transformation of Samosa

Stage 1

Persian caravan food

Stage 2

Royal Delhi Sultanate delicacy

Stage 3

Mughal cuisine

Stage 4

Indian potato-based adaptation

Stage 5

Street food revolution

Stage 6

Industrial manufacturing

Stage 7

Frozen-food exports

Stage 8

Global ethnic snack

 

14. Critical Discussion

The success of the samosa highlights an important lesson in food innovation: products rarely remain unchanged. The samosa survived because it continuously adapted to local tastes, ingredients, religions, and economic realities.

India did not invent the samosa, but India transformed it into a globally recognized product. The substitution of meat with potatoes significantly reduced production costs and expanded consumer acceptance. Modern frozen-food companies have further extended the samosa's reach into international retail chains and diaspora markets.

However, future growth will depend on addressing health concerns associated with deep frying. Air-fried, baked, low-fat, and millet-based samosas may represent the next phase of evolution.

 

15. Conclusion

The samosa's journey from Persian sanbosag to globally exported frozen snack illustrates one of the most successful examples of culinary adaptation in world history. While its origins lie in Central Asia and Persia, India transformed the product through ingredient innovation, street-food entrepreneurship, and mass-market acceptance. Today, the samosa represents not only a cultural icon but also a significant economic opportunity within India's processed-food and frozen-snack industries. Rising exports, expanding diaspora demand, and organized retail growth indicate that the samosa will continue its global expansion, although future success will require balancing convenience with health-conscious innovation.

References (APA 7th Edition)

·         Beyhaqi, A. F. (11th century/translated editions). Tarikh-e-Beyhaqi.

·         Battuta, I. (2004). The Travels of Ibn Battuta. Routledge.

·         Khusro, A. (Various translated historical compilations). Court Chronicles of the Delhi Sultanate.

·         Panagariya, A. (2021). India's Trade and Food Processing Sector. Oxford University Press.

·         Government of India, Ministry of Food Processing Industries. (2025). Annual Report on Processed Food Exports.

·         Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority. Export promotion reports and processed food statistics.

·         Food and Agriculture Organization. Global food trade and processed food market reports.

·         Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry. Frozen food industry reports and market outlook studies.

 

Appendix A: Timeline of Samosa Evolution (1000–2026)

Period

Major Development

10th Century

Persian Sanbosag and Arab Sanbusak emerge as portable pastries for traders and travelers.

11th Century

Mention of Sambosa in Persian historical writings.

13th Century

Arrival in India through Central Asian traders and the Delhi Sultanate.

14th Century

Descriptions by Amir Khusro and Ibn Battuta of stuffed pastries served in royal courts.

16th Century

Introduction of potato to India by Portuguese traders.

17th–18th Century

Transition from meat fillings to potato and pea fillings.

19th Century

Popularization through bazaars and tea shops.

20th Century

Emergence of organized snack manufacturers.

2000–2015

Frozen-food industry expansion and export growth.

2016–2020

Online grocery platforms increase frozen snack sales.

2021–2026

Global demand rises through diaspora and ethnic food markets.

 

Appendix B: Regional Samosa Variations in India

State

Common Filling

Special Features

Typical Serving Style

Madhya Pradesh

Potato, peas

Medium-sized, spicy

With poha and chutney

Uttar Pradesh

Potato, peas

Large size, thick crust

Tamarind chutney

Rajasthan

Potato, onion

Highly spiced

Tea-time snack

Maharashtra

Potato, peas

Smaller size

Tea and coffee accompaniment

Gujarat

Sweet-spicy potato

Slightly sweet flavor

Green chutney

Punjab

Potato, paneer

Rich and heavy filling

Chole-samosa combination

West Bengal

Potato, peanuts

Known as Singara

Tea snack

Jammu & Kashmir

Mutton, vegetables

Influenced by Central Asian cuisine

Festival food

 

Appendix C: Estimated Indian Frozen Samosa Export Trend (2021–2026)

Year

Estimated Export Value (USD Million)

Growth (%)

2021

95

2022

108

13.7

2023

126

16.7

2024

145

15.1

2025

167

15.2

2026*

185

10.8

*Projected

CAGR Calculation

CAGR=(18595)1/5−1

Estimated CAGR ≈ 14.2%

 

Appendix D: Frozen amosa Manufacturing Process Flow

Raw Material Inputs

  • Refined wheat flour
  • Potatoes
  • Green peas
  • Cooking oil
  • Spices
  • Packaging material

Production Flow

Raw Material Procurement

Sorting and Washing

Peeling and Boiling Potatoes

Preparation of Filling

Dough Preparation

Sheeting and Cutting

Filling and Folding

Partial Frying

Blast Freezing (-18°C)

Metal Detection

Packaging

Cold Storage

Distribution

 

Appendix E: Consumer Satisfaction Questionnaire (Likert Scale)

Instructions: Rate from 1 (Strongly Disagree) to 5 (Strongly Agree).

Statement

Rating (1–5)

Samosa is my preferred tea-time snack.

I consume samosa at least once per week.

Taste is more important than nutritional value.

I prefer freshly prepared samosa.

Frozen samosas provide adequate convenience.

I am willing to pay extra for premium quality.

I would try baked samosa options.

Packaging influences my purchase decision.

I trust branded frozen samosa products.

I would recommend my preferred samosa brand.

 

Appendix F: SWOT Analysis Matrix

Strengths

Weaknesses

Low production cost

High oil content

Strong cultural acceptance

Limited health image

Easy customization

Short shelf life (fresh)

High profitability

Dependence on frying

Opportunities

Threats

Frozen exports

Health-conscious consumers

Air-fried products

Competition from global snacks

Millet-based samosas

Regulatory restrictions

Vegan variants

Rising raw material costs

 

Appendix G: Major International Markets for Indian Samosas

Region

Countries

North America

USA, Canada

Europe

UK, Germany, Netherlands, France

Middle East

UAE, Qatar, Oman, Saudi Arabia

Asia-Pacific

Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia

Africa

South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania

Key Demand Drivers

  • Indian diaspora
  • Ethnic food popularity
  • Frozen-food retail growth
  • Restaurant and catering demand
  • Convenience food consumption

 

Appendix H: Major Indian Samosa Brands

Brand

Product Type

Market Presence

GCMMF (Amul)

Frozen Punjabi Samosa

India and selected export markets

Bikano

Frozen and ready-to-fry samosa

India, USA, UK, UAE

Haldiram's

Frozen snacks

Global ethnic stores

MTR Foods

Convenience snacks

India and exports

ITC Limited

Frozen food products

Organized retail

Deep Foods

Frozen samosas

USA and Canada

Tasty Bite

Ready-to-eat snacks

International markets

 

Appendix I: Financial Feasibility of a Small Frozen Samosa Unit

Assumptions

Production Capacity:

  • 5,000 samosas/day

Working Days:

  • 300 days/year

Annual Production:

  • 1.5 million samosas

Estimated Investment

Particulars

Amount (₹ Lakhs)

Land & Building

20

Machinery

35

Freezer System

18

Packaging Equipment

10

Working Capital

17

Total Investment

100

Annual Financial Projection

Particular

Amount (₹ Lakhs)

Revenue

225

Operating Cost

165

Gross Profit

60

Net Profit

32

Estimated Payback Period

Approximately 3–4 years

 

Appendix J: Emerging Innovations in the Samosa Industry

Innovation

Purpose

Air-Fried Samosa

Reduced oil consumption

Baked Samosa

Health-conscious consumers

Millet Samosa

Nutritional enhancement

Gluten-Free Samosa

Special dietary requirements

Vegan Samosa

Plant-based market

Protein-Enriched Samosa

Fitness consumers

Ready-to-Eat Microwave Samosa

Convenience market

Smart Packaging

Extended shelf life

Organic Samosa

Premium segment

Export-Specific Variants

Regional taste adaptation

 

Appendix K: Sample Interview Schedule for Vendors and Manufacturers

For Street Vendors

  1. How many samosas do you sell daily?
  2. What is your average profit margin?
  3. Which season generates the highest sales?
  4. What are the major challenges faced?
  5. Do customers prefer spicy or mild variants?

For Manufacturers

  1. What is the average production capacity?
  2. Which export markets are most profitable?
  3. What quality certifications are maintained?
  4. What are the major raw material costs?
  5. What innovations are being planned?

 

Appendix L: Porter's Five Forces Analysis of the Samosa Industry

Force

Intensity

Threat of New Entrants

High

Supplier Power

Low

Buyer Power

Moderate

Threat of Substitutes

High

Industry Rivalry

Very High

Major Substitutes

  • Kachori
  • Vada Pav
  • Patties
  • Spring Rolls
  • Sandwiches
  • Burgers
  • Pizza Slices

 

Appendix M: Research Model

Independent Variables

  • Price
  • Taste
  • Availability
  • Convenience
  • Brand Trust
  • Packaging

Consumer Satisfaction

Purchase Intention

Repeat Purchase

Brand Loyalty

 

Appendix N: Future Research Areas

  1. AI-based demand forecasting for frozen samosas.
  2. Consumer perception toward baked samosas.
  3. Export competitiveness against global frozen snacks.
  4. Nutritional enhancement through millet flour.
  5. Sustainable packaging solutions.
  6. Carbon footprint analysis of frozen snack exports.
  7. Digital marketing impact on snack consumption.
  8. Comparative study of samosa and global stuffed pastries.
  9. Street food formalization and quality control.
  10. International acceptance of Indian ethnic snacks.

 

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From Sanbosag to Global Samosa: A Historical, Economic, and Export Analysis of the World's Most Successful Triangular Snack

  From Sanbosag to Global Samosa: A Historical, Economic, and Export Analysis of the World's Most Successful Triangular Snack Abstract...