Showing posts with label Food Trip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Trip. Show all posts

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Onam in my memories


I do not remember what day, date, or month it was. I do not clearly remember how old I was too, maybe 5 or 6, but I do remember the events of that day and its succeeding day very clearly.

It was a rainy day, and on our way back from the school bus stop to our house, I had removed my raincoat hood off and splashed muck all over my sisters’ socks. The events that followed included an unceremonious welcome into the house, coupled with a lengthy and severe reprimand in Malayalam (most of which we did not understand) from Amma, especially for my elder sisters who had not taken care of their little brother while in transit. As my sisters stood in the corner making gestures at me which suggested ‘Let Amma move aside, we will make you pay for all this’, Amma  vigorously patted my head dry using a traditional Kerala thorthu, the intensity of which kept modulating in tantamount to the intensity of her reprimands. By the end of the head-drying project, my sisters were burning with vengeance and my neck ached terribly, but I smelt good. Amma had just applied a pinch of rasnadi podi on my scalp, neatly combed my hair and left for her chores as she grounded us for the day, and punished my sisters to read out loudly from their school textbooks. I kept myself posited on the kitchen window within safe distance of Amma as she cooked lunch, lest my sisters would find me alone, and hand out their retribution, which usually ended up with pinch marks on my thighs and arms.

Later, my sisters chanted out loudly from their textbooks, while intermittently checking for a leeway to vent out their revenge, I kept sulking, yet smiling as I gazed out of the kitchen window of our third floor apartment.  Down below, my local Gujarati friends were playing Chain Tag, skidding, sliding and rolling in the slushy, puddled ground strewn with cow dung here and there. That is when I saw Pappa zip in in his bicycle with the acrobatic alacrity of a professional bicycle stuntman.

It was just noon, and Pappa never came home from work so early. Usually by the time he came back, after his full day at office, followed by his part time work elsewhere, we kids would be sound asleep. The only time I saw my Pappa during those days was in the early mornings and on the weekends. That day, his speedy arrival, which comprised of deft maneuvering of his bicycle to avoid the potholes and dungs, followed by a skillful parking stint, a hop off the bicycle, swift locking and quick dash into the staircase well told me that he was today, a man on a mission. For a moment, I kept staring agape and wide eyed at the Hercules bicycle that he had just parked and then jumped off the kitchen window proclaiming loudly ‘Pappa came’ .

My sisters threw off their books on the bed, unlocked the main door and the outer steel grille with marked dexterity and rushed out of the house to be ahead of me in order to present their case about my misdemeanors and appeal against Amma’s biased judgment. I ran out too; all I wanted to know was, why is home so early?

Pappa rushed in, and informed Amma ‘The stuff has arrived. Pilla had sent a message. I need to rush now. You go get me the big vegetable bag’ he said and rushed into the bedroom leaving a pair of very dejected sisters on the main door.  I followed him monitoring his moves closely. He quickly opened the cupboard, and removed some cash from under the cloths in the top shelf, tucked it into the secret pocket in his pants and darted out of the bedroom, grabbed the bag from Amma’s hand and ran out. I wore my slippers and ran behind him.

As he was about to hop on to his bicycle, I begged ‘’Pappa, I want to come too’, in return of which he gave me a stern look that seemed to say: Move away kid, I am on an important mission. No time for kiddy rides today, but I persisted and eventually won my seat on the cross bar. I hopped onto the crossbar and sat with both feet on the left and clasped on to the handle bar, put on my raincoat hood and glanced upwards to wave my bye-byes as my Amma looked on gleefully and my sisters stared down, gnashing their teeth and fuming with vengeance.

The ride was a long ride, three and a half kilometer in all, from the Gujarat Housing Board Colony in Gorwa to the Main Market adjacent to the Vadodara Railway Station. On the ride, I kept bombarding my father with questions to get a clue of our assignment, but Pappa was busy and focused on riding the bicycle, just riding it as fast as he could. I knew I had to just keep mum and wait for my answers.

By the time we reached our destination, my legs were numb and I could barely walk, but it was an adventure worth the pain. Pappa parked his bicycle at the stand and ran hastily dragging me behind him, as if we were about to miss a train or were visiting someone on the deathbed with the soul holding on to the body just waiting to wave the last goodbye to us.

We jostled past the crowded market and finally reached our destination, nestled in between the kirana and masala shops, a tiny little 2ft x 2ft shop  that sold multi colored lungis, pure white towels and men’s undergarments. For a moment, I looked up to Pappa with a bewildered look on my face that asked, Did I come all this far, travelling on a crossbar, in the rain to buy underwear? Shucks! That is when a tiny baldhead with spectacled eyes appeared from under the table and called out ‘Ah Cheta, you arrived! It is all lying here, just for you’. That was Mr. Pillai, my father’s agent, and from under his table, he got the stash out. A collection of some very exotic vegetables that I had never seen before, some whole coconuts, plantain leaves, banana chips, Palada and Sharkara Uperi all packed in old Malayalam newspapers. Pappa gave him the money, which included his commission and we rode off, back to home.

On my way back, Pappa explained how difficult it was to procure our very own Kerala’s homegrown vegetables and other foodstuff and how he had arranged for these to be delivered through someone travelling on the steam locomotive train which arrived once a week from Kannur, travelling 3 days in all via Shornur, Madras, Vijayavada, Sholapur, Bombay and Surat. That, all this stuff was required for celebrating Onam, which was tomorrow. Tomorrow, we would be hosting some of our Malayalee friends who would join us in cooking and savoring an elaborate Sadya. My father was super excited, and I could sense that in his moist eyes and from the descriptions that he gave me about Onam. On our way back, we stopped at some of our family friend’s houses, where he informed with much enthusiasm that ‘The stuff has arrived, all of it. Come tomorrow. Come early morning itself, and don’t forget to bring the bottle’

Next day we celebrated Onam with much traditional fanfare. We Fraud Mallu kids conversed in broken Malayalam and although being Christians, we siblings applied Chanda kuri on our forehead. Elders donned traditional Kerala dresses. The men lazed while discussing Kerala politics over a smuggled bottle of brandy as the women cooked a sumptuous Sadya. For the first time in my life, I had food served on a banana leaf and savored the manna called Pappadam-Pazham-Payasam. Drinking Payasam off a banana leaf required special skill, and most kids really struggled with it; but we endured it to preserve whatever was remaining of our Malayalee identity. That was the first Onam celebration that I can remember of; that was somewhere in the late 1970’s.

This year, that is, 2013 some 35 odd years later, I found my little 5-year-old lad Yohan at the same point where I was then. We were in Kerala for our usual Annual vacation that falls in July-August. It was also the time that most of my cousins from various corners of the world landed at Kannur for their respective staycations. Whatever it was, it was not time for Onam yet; this year Onam fell on 16 September and by the time Mahabali arrived, we cousins would have left for the land where we worked for a living. Nevertheless, my mother had conjured up a surprise for all of us. Under her leadership, she organized the first ever potluck Sadya in our house. Each family prepared a set of vibhavams and for the first time, Yohan and along with him many young kids in my extended family had a full course traditional Kerala Sadya off a Banana leaf sitting on the floor. They struggled, but just like my sisters and I, who endured scooping yummy payasam off a Banana leaf many years ago, these little kids did too, and I am sure that, just like us they too enjoyed it.

Amongst all this festivity and commotion called Onasadya where the men cracked clamorous jokes and lazed over duty free liquor and Rummy, where women jostled kids running around creating havoc as they served food, I realized one thing. In all these years that we celebrated Onam, we never had all the traditional ingredients of a standard Onam day. In our celebrations, there was no Ghoshayatra, no Mahabali, no Pulikali, no Chandamelam and no Pookalam even. Nevertheless, we did enjoy it, and by God, we did enjoy it to the fullest. I guess, the reason why we enjoyed it most and carried good memories of it, was because we were in the company of good people; people who genuinely loved us and cared for us, and that, I believe is the most important ingredient of all.
 

 
That day, as I watched little Yohan having his Onam meal, I was transported back to my childhood, to that long ride on the crossbar, to my first Onam Sadya, to my little pranks for which my sisters always received the rebuke and to the memories that I share with my childhood Fraud Mallu friends, who are long lost in time. I wished them well, and hoped that somewhere they too were having their onasadya and reminiscing those good old days and wishing me well in return.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

My Mango Cheesecake

Exactly 10 years ago on this very day, that is, 8 June 2003 something wonderful happened. Something wonderful that changed my life forever.

It was a Sunday, and I along with my parents took an hour plus long afternoon journey from Nerul in Navi Mumbai to the Domestic Terminal of Mumbai’s passenger Airport at Santacruz. There, very near to the Airport, at the Orchid Ecotel Hotel in a nice cozy hotel room we met Mr. John Paul Moolayil, who was there along with his beautiful wife Mrs. Valsa John Paul and their only daughter who was still pursuing her final year in Architecture from Satyabhama University in Chennai.

After a brief introduction, the seniors reminisced their good old forgotten days, most of which they vaguely remembered and talked about some common family friends from their past life in Baroda which, was followed by a string of modest unidirectional bragging by my dad, which instantly elevated me to superhero status. Notwithstanding my embarrassment at imagining myself flying with my undies over my trousers, which almost ended up with me burying my head into my shoe soles, the chubby, bearded and cheerful Mr. John Paul who was dressed in a silk white Kurta and Kerala Mundu allowed me to take his daughter down to the lobby for a ‘private’ chat.

Down at the lobby, we stopped by the Cake Shop and picked up a Mango Cheese Cake and two spoons. We found a table in the corner and posited ourselves there. On that table, I found out that she had three names, Elizabeth, Thara and Unni and she found out the Sweety was not just a pet name! There, we also talked about our college life, our friends, our religion, our aspirations and the movies that we loved.

As we talked, and she narrated on how her parents conned her into making this visit to Mumbai, I got lost in those eyes, taking advantage of which, she proceeded with raiding the Mango Cheesecake using both the spoons.




That day, I don’t know if it was her used spoon or the Chef’s handiwork, the Cheesecake tasted awesome. That day I fell in love with Mango Cheesecake. Somewhere in the days that followed, I fell in love with that girl.

Monday, April 29, 2013

Chicken rolled in Lettuce


After many days, I am back with a food blog. Which means that I was back in the kitchen; nevertheless, it is not yet time for the bachelors party. Yes, my wife has not gone to India. My family won’t be leaving for India till end of June this year, which means that I am still captive, which is good, because it also means that I am still being taken care of well.

So how did I end up in the kitchen? Blame it on my big mouth …. errr …. blame it on my fast fingers! We were on one of our usual familial chat sessions on whatsapp and I happened to poke fun at her. It was a routine humble poke by a husband, not offensive at all, but her fast fingers promptly typed “No dinner for you tonight”. In addition, since her relatives got involved, it became a prestige issue and she found it hard to back out. That was it! Anyways, she was kind enough. She did take out a frozen chicken breast and leave it in the sink for thawing and left upstairs after promptly reminding me of my diet for the day, which was limited to fresh vegetables.

Now this is how this dish was born, out of a piece of chicken thawing in the sink, my dietician’s instructions, a peg of Jack Daniels, some salt, a generous load of pepper, a few pinches of spice from the jars lying on the kitchen counter (names of which I don’t remember) and my laziness to chop a few vegetables.

Actually, the cooking and arranging time for this dish is only around 5-7 minutes, which means it is easy to cook. Most of the time consumed is for thawing (around 90 odd minutes) and marinating (around 30 odd minutes).

Cooking this dish is as simple as Agent Oso’s project and requires just three special steps:

1.    Cut the chicken breast into small pieces and marinate it in a base made up of a peg of Jack Daniels, plenty of pepper, some salt and some mixed Indian spices. Then, leave it in the fridge to marinate for around 30 minutes.
  




2.    Pan fry the chicken, which hardly takes 2-3 minutes.




3.    Roll the fried chicken in strips of Lettuce and secured each one with a toothpick.



That’s all.


Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Chinese Fish Chilli with Noodles

Serves One 

Preparation time:

Cutting/Chopping – 5mins
Preparing the marinade & marinating time – 35mins
Cooking time – 7-10mins
Ingredients:

Chinese Egg Noodles – 100gms
Fish – Sheri (local Qatari fish) – 100gms
Spring Onion – 2no
Capsicum – Yellow – 1/6
Capsicum – Green – 1/6
Tomato (small) – 1no
Ginger chopped – 1tbsp
Garlic chopped – 1tbsp
Green Chilli – 1no
Red Chilli Paste – 4tbsp
Ground Black Pepper – 1/8tsp
Corn Flour – 3tbsp (1 for the marinade and 2 for the sauce)
Sesame Oil – 2tbsp (1 each for frying the fish and for the main cooking)
White Wine – Chardonnay – 2tbsp
Sugar – 1tbsp
Salt 
How I cut them:
I cut the fish into small pieces.
The vegetables were cut into large size pieces having rough dimensions of 4cm to 5cm each. For the spring onions, I chopped the white part into diskettes and the green part into long tubes of around 4cm to 5cm each.
I chopped the chilly, garlic and ginger into medium sized pieces. 
How I cooked it:
Red Chilli Paste
I used the Red Chilli Paste that I’d got during the weekend along with the barbequed chicken from Rotana Restaurant. However, making one is not difficult at all. All it requires is to soak 3-4 dried red chillies in 3tbsp of water and then grind it into a paste. When it is done, just add ½tsp of vinegar to it. 

Chinese Fish Chilli
In a bowl, I added the fish cubes, corn flour, Ground Black Pepper, 1tbsp of the Red Chilli Paste, 1tbsp Corn Flour and 2tbsp of Chardonnay and mixed them well.

When I saw that the fish cubes were coated well in the mix, I covered the bowl with a plastic wrap and left in the fridge for half an hour.

While this mix was being marinated, I copped/cut all the vegetables and cooked the noodles.
By the end of 30mins, I heated sesame oil in a skillet and fried the fish. When the fish was done, I left it aside on a plate lined with tissue paper.

Then, I heated sesame oil in a wok over high flame. I swirled the wok around to ensure that the oil had coated the wok well till the top, rather than just staying settled at the bottom.

When the wok was hot and ready, I tossed in the chilli, garlic and ginger.
After around 30secs or so, I added in all the vegetables in the wok and cooked them by tossing intermittently which, went on for a couple of minutes or so.

Later I added in the Red Chilli Paste, Sugar and Salt and, cooked the contents mixing and tossing them over a high flame.

When the mix was turning brown, I added 2tbsp of corn flour into a bowl of the water that I had retained after cooking the noodles. I poured this mix into the wok added the fried fish and let it cook.
I cooked the mix by continuously stirring it. In about 3-4mins the watery mix had coagulated into thick gravy. The dish was ready!

 
Plain Noodles
Cooking noodles was the easiest part. I used a packet of authentic Chinese Egg Noodles of the brand 'Pearl River Bridge'

Instructions for cooking the noodles were provided on the packet itself and it hardly took 7-8mins to finish cooking it, which was done while the fish was put to marinate. The packet contained 4 sets of noodles of 100gms each since I was cooking only for one person, I used one of the four.

 
The experience:
Fast to cook and good to eat! Lived up to its name ‘Fish Chilli’.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Cheese Sandwich & Scrambled Eggs

Serves One
Calories 500 


Preparation time:
Cooking time – 5-7mins 

Ingredients:

Eggs (medium size) – 2nos
Evaporated Milk– 1 packet (15g)
Milk Bread – 4 slices
Ground Black Pepper – 2tsp
Salt
Butter – 20gms 

How I cooked it:

Cheese Sandwich
I first sprinkled some ground black pepper on the milk bread.
Then I place a cheese slice.
On which I again sprinkled another layer of ground black pepper.
Then I sandwiched the cheese with another slice of milk bread.
On a Skillet, I heated 5gms of butter.
I Pan toasted the cheese sandwich on the Skillet frying it on both sides till the sides turned brown and the cheese within had melted. 

Scrambled Egg
In a steel glass I beat two eggs into a frothy evenly coloured mix using a fork.
I later added a small packet of evaporated milk to it and whisked the mix for around a minute adding a teaspoon of ground black pepper and a pinch of salt in between.
When it was whisked well, I left it aside for some time.
In a Skillet, I heated around 10gms of butter and when the butter had melted, I spread it throughout the Skillet and then poured over the egg and milk mix.
When the egg the omelette was almost done, I scrambled it. 

The experience:

This is a very basic breakfast, which can be cooked in a jiffy. It is also one dish that requires more time to eat than to cook!

This is also one of the first meals I cook for myself when I am left home alone. It is simple, easy and fast to cook.

A pucca bachelor’s dish!

Bread Chicken Kotthu

Inspiration for this dish comes from the famed ‘Motta Kotthu Parotta’ one of Tamil Nadu’s most loved non veg street food. I remember having Kotthu Parottas for dinner from one of the many Pandi Restaurants that do brisk business during evenings under the Chembur Bridge bang next to the Central Railway line. Those days I was a bachelor and used to binge extensively on the Mumbai Streets and in its many bars. This was my attempt to create something similar albeit, this one uses bread and barbequed chicken.

During the last weekend I had a drinks session with one of my very good friend and, when he came down, he got with him some of those barbeque chicken from Qatar’s famed Rotana Restaurant, which is famous for its very suprapungentopepperochillionimically spicy barbeque chicken. Since we couldn’t have all of it, he left some of it in my fridge. Two days later, I came up with this idea to use up this chicken. Here’s how I did it.
Serves Two
Calories 1450 (725 per serving) 
Preparation time:
Cutting/Chopping/Shredding – 15mins
Cooking time – 10mins 

Ingredients:
Barbeque Chicken breast (from Rotana Restaurant, Doha) - 1no.
Eggs (medium size) – 2nos
Milk Bread – 5 Slices
Tomatoes (small size) – 3nos
Onion (medium size) – 1½nos
Ginger chopped – 1tbsp
Garlic chopped – 1tbsp
Green Chilli – 2nos
Curry Leaves – 15nos petals
Coriander Leaves – 15nos petals
Whole Black Pepper – 1tsp
Ground Black Pepper – ½tsp
Cumin seeds – 1tsp
Red Chilli powder – 1tsp
Turmeric powder – 1tsp
Oil – 5tbsp
Salt 

How I cut them:
I shredded the chicken using a fork and separated it from the bones. It was easy to break off the chicken from the bone as it was still cold.
 
I cut the bread into medium size pieces.
I chopped the onions, ginger, garlic and tomatoes finely.

How I cooked it:
Firstly, I heated a wok with 2tbsp of oil and added in it cumin seeds, whole black peppers and half of the ginger, garlic and green chillies.

When the peppers started to crackle, I added the bread pieces into the wok.

I fried the bread pieces till it had flattened and formed lots of bread crumbs. When it was done, I moved the bread and its crumbs into a plate, wiped the wok with a tissue and prepared it for cooking the Kotthu.
I put the wok back on the fire and poured in 3tbsp of oil, added mustard seeds, green chillies, ginger, garlic and onion into it.
When the onion was turning brown, I added the curry leaves, tomatoes, red chilli powder, turmeric powder and salt.

I cooked the mix till it became a paste like the tomato chutney.
In this paste, I added the shredded chicken.
I mixed the chicken so that all the chicken pieces were coated with the masala and cooked it till the chicken pieces became tender. (Remember, I had taken the chicken out from the fridge and they were still cold)
I added the fried bread pieces and its crumbs.
I mixed well and cooked the mix for two minutes till the bread pieces became soggy and soft.
.

In a glass I beat two eggs and poured in the beaten eggs into the wok, spreading it over the Kotthu that was being prepared.

I mixed all the contents for 1- 2mins till the egg started to thicken.
When it was almost done, I turned off the fire, added the coriander leaves, covered the wok with a lid and left it like that for a minute or so. The dish was done! 

The experience:
I had it with a large dollop of curd topped with some of that very spicy red chilli sauce from Rotana Restaurant.


It did take me back to the street.
Similar to ‘that yesterday’s leftover rice’ which makes excellent Fried Rice ‘yesterday’s leftover barbeque chicken’ makes excellent Kotthu.

In fact, for all my friends who unlike us gulfies don’t have the luxury of that ‘around the corner mallu cafeteria’ which gives you ready supply of parottas; the Bread Kotthu is a great alternative to the Kotthu Parotta. 
If you have a tongue for street food, I’d suggest you try this recipe. I am sure, you’ll like it.