There is a lot more to food than just tingling our taste buds.

Lily Swarn

The best people I’ve ever known are those who light up like Diwali at the mere mention of their favourite foods. A glazed look of euphoric satisfaction illuminates them. Food is not just something one fills one’s stomach with. Debilitating hunger pangs and low energy disjointedness aside, food is a need that falls just short of love. Mahatma Gandhi explained,

“There are people in the world so hungry, that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread.”  Strangely, a sluggish human may well be a glutton or a pauper.

 

Food has the power to enslave us with its come-hither’ coquettish advances. The aroma sets up a tantalising haze, fogging our besotted brains long before it makes an appearance. A whiff of filter coffee from a neighbour’s kitchen in a Cantonment could easily transport me to the much loved  Indian Coffee House in Shimla in a jiffy. Hot on its heels would come memories of carefree days of bonhomie shared with loved ones. Food has the power to nourish souls as well as the body.

 

Let’s begin by talking about paranthas. If words seem inadequate then food becomes symbolic of love. Easily beating others to the top of this chart are these discs of satisfaction. What greens, corn bread and fried chicken were to Maya Angelou, paraanthhas are to folks in our parts.

 

Paranthas

See, if you are born somewhere close to the Himalayas in India

Here I mean in the sprawling plains of the North 

You are bound to have gobbled  down a fairly crazy number of “Paranthas”

Made of whole wheat or refined flour depending on which state you live in

 

Round, four cornered like miniature squares 

Triangles rolled to perfection by folk song crooning grandmas or mamas 

Smeared with clarified butter 

Rolled and re rolled with layers of milk fat 

Made on griddles turned upside down 

With halwa in Nauchandi Mela 

With kebabs in Lucknow 

Or baked in mud ovens,the tandoori versions !

 

Lachhedaar slices of heaven 

Stuffed till they burst their voluptuous sides 

Potato, cauliflower,radish,lentils, cheese,sugar crystals,onion 

Fenugreek or spinach 

Crunched up into” choori”

With a lump of jaggery or unrefined brown sugar after a meal 

Or simply your maternal love laced,carrom seeds and salt sprinkled 

 

Mushy with the nostalgia from tiffin boxes in school lunch break 

Or on a lethargic Sunday 

Accompanied by home made mango pickle 

Dipped in rich creamy clay pot prepared yoghurt 

A sliced mango on the side 

Hypnotically offering itself to be devoured 

 

Paraanthhas for the turbaned gent with dollops of white butter oozing love 

Or the top of the milk cream “malai “

Doused in cholesterol laden joy 

 

Chocolate stuffed ones for the fusion crazed youth 

Desi fundamental comfort food jazzed up with the west 

Eat them anyway , they helped you grow 

Remember ?

 

Ghalib’s avatar

At about this time of the year I become like Mirza Ghalib and wait for the mango parties he was known to be partial to. The slight difference being that mine are solo indulgences sitting in surreptitious corners and slurping with manic concentration , letting the juice dribble with an unladylike abandon, much to the worthy colonel’s frowning amusement.

 

I’m eternally indebted to the Universe for letting me be born on Oriental soil. It would have been a huge loss to remain unfamiliar with the wealth of spices that line our kitchen shelves. The panacea for most ills, if we still listened to our grandmas. They spice up our lives with that extra punch of goodness.

 

pees raha hai waqt mujhe masaalon ki tarah

tai hai ke mehek meri lajawaab hogi (~ Rajesh Raja)

I imagined this conversation which I’m sharing with you. It was initiated by an endearing Punjabi four liner that my dad recited to me with dramatic voice modulations:

 

Laung te laachi naavan chale 

Laachi maari tubbi 

Laung dhadadhad pittan laga 

Hai saheli dubbi

 

It loosely translates thus:

 

clove and cardamom went for a swim 

cardamom decided to dive 

clove started weeping loudly 

alas! My girlfriend has drowned! 

 

The Spice of Life 

 

the nutmeg whispered to the mace 

do you know we are cousins?

 you are the slivers of the lacy outer covering and I am the fruit 

 the cinnamon and Clove are great pals 

they are dunked into the smoking oil together 

 the cardamom , small and pale green nudges the big black one 

are we related, she asks daintily 

 turning up her expensive nose at her more gawky looking relative with an identical name 

why ever did our mothers name us both cardamoms ?

you look nothing like me!

racist spices! O my lord in heaven 

 the cumin spluttered and let off an aroma 

the star anise all starry eyed !

 while the asafoetida could be smelt for miles around 

how even a minuscule bit can set up a stink!

don’t be upset , she said , I am great for your flatulence !

 the mustard seeds flirted with the curry leaves 

 as the red chilly coloured in embarrassment 

 the turmeric had everyone dyed in her yellow hues 

sunny and golden antiseptic 

 the pepper sneezed as she was put through the mill 

she was in love with her own spiciness 

 the bay leaves somber and sedate 

loomed large above the pot of rice 

 if only life would retain the flavours 

of all these magic transformers 

 for what is life bereft of spice?

your chilly red and mine green?

 (Lily Swarn is an internationally acclaimed poet, author and columnist who has won over fifty national and international awards and whose works have been translated into seventeen languages.)

 

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