When it Rains, Some Foods Reigns!
The monsoons
arrives with a waft of mud smell that brings memories galore, something triggers
the brain’s “memory of food” section and you start craving for typically Rainy
menu. It is just like when you smell aroma of some food being made or think of
the food you have eaten in earlier years and the taste is almost felt in
mind....the power of taste buds n mind combined don’t forget certain foods. It
gives a rise to nostalgic food memories and we start looking at our mother or
wife to make the delicacies so wanted in the season. We have emotional ties
attached with monsoon, bitter sweet memories resurrect and there is surge of
emotions. Body temperature drops in rains and due to need of calories and
change in our chemistry with rains we star craving for food !!
The most popular
demand is for Pakodas (fritters), Hot Chai adrakwali (tea) and shorbas (soups).
Depending on the region in India, in North India it is Moongdal Pakodi, Samosas,
Bhutta (corn on the cob)
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Bhutta |
while in South
India it is Rasam (hot pepper soup), Bondas, hot Filtered Coffee, Karakadaka
Kanji (njavara rice gruel cooked with coconut milk & herbs) and Tamilnadu’s
popular Sundal (spiced up chickpeas).. The eastern regions serve Aloo Chap (a
version of batatawada), steamed or fried Momos, Hilsa Fish, fried Tapioca
Chips, Kakrol Bhaji (spiky teasel gourd) and the west thrives on Onion Pakoda, lilva
kachori, fafda chutney, Alu wadi,
|
kanda Bhaji (onion pakoda) |
Thalipeeth, methi na gota, wild greens Shewla
& Phodshi bhajis while sipping on hot ginger tea.
|
mutton ghee roast |
The meals in
north India mainly are rich in fatty foods during monsoon & winters so ghee
Parathas (pototo or raddish or cauliflower or mutton mince) served with dollops
of butter, dal makhani, non-veg delicacies like tawa fried chicken or gizzards,
laal maas, mustard oil cooked mutton biryani are famously eaten in households
as well as eateries. Common street food like mutton seekh, hot chana (gram)
chaat, samosa chaat, poori aloo, jalebi are gorged upon by the people.
The east India is
diverse with hilly & sea side regions. They have fatty Pork dishes, Hingi
Maas Jalukia (catfish peppery), fish curries are cooked with fiddlehead ferns,
spiced up brinjals, Bengals Hilsa from Ganga river in any form, Khichuri (rice,
roasted moongdal, whole garam masala, ginger, gr chillies, mustard oil).
|
kabab |
South India
savours its Dosai with variety of sambhars, masala dal Wadas,
|
Dosai |
Mosuru Kodubale
(rice flour & yoghurt fried rings), vegetable bhajjis variety (includes gr
chillies, tapioca, raw banana, potato, cauliflower), Milagai Bhajji of Kerala
(gram flour and spices), Hyderabad’s Punugulu a type of fritter (made from dosa
batter mixed with curd, chillies & onions). The non vegetarians like Kari Wada (minced
meat patties), Naada Kozhi Varythathu (chicken fried in coconut oil, its
spice), Hyderabadi meat potli with a bowl of haleem (broken wheat, lentils,
ginger & spices).
The western
region has stark contrasts within the regions with pure vegetarian and
sworn non vegetarians. The Gujarat gives
the vegetarian flavours with the common vegetables like turned into delicacies,
hot yoghurt kadhi, patra (colocossia leaves steamed with spices)
|
Patra |
, bardoli ki
khichdi, dal dhokli. The Maharashtra food is my favourite and from break fast
to dinner I can name them. Breakfast popular dishes are hot ghavane (rice
pancakes) with coconut chutney or sweetened coconut milk, thalipeeth (flat
fried bread with mixed lentils, spices & herbs), missal (variety from
Kolhapur to Puneri to Nagpur)
|
Misal |
, Poha with chana rassa (puffed rice with red
whole gram curry), Hot Bhataji Pez (gruel) ani pickle. Lunch all time I can eat
can be hot Besan or Kulith Pithale with brown rice, vatana ussal (black gram in
coconut curry), non vegetarian fare includes dried Bombay duck bhujane or Javla (dried shrimp) koshimbir. For snacks the evergreen Onion Bhajji cannot
be replaced so also Mirchi Thecha (crushed green chill, rock salt, garlic) with
all food. Dinner is normally heavy with Nachani-Kulith Shorba, Vade Kombdi
(fried rice pancakes with coconut cooked chicken)
|
Vade Kombdi |
, tawa fried chicken liver,
bhakri (rice or nachani). Go north in Maharashtra you cannot miss Khandeshi
Mutton, Warli chicken and variety of bhakris.
|
Javlaa Bhakri |
With these
delicacies available all thru the country, one can travel all monsoon and come
with satisfied taste buds, a few kilos added to your weight and memories of
different regions taste & languages. Just like language in India changes
every few kilometres, the food eating habits also change. That’s Indian food
for you......this covers only monsoon !
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