Saturday 7 February, 2009

Bangalore Food Fiesta - The first glimpse!!

My earliest memories of Bangalore was when I came with my parents and sister for a vacation, sometime in 1983, and I was very small then, but I faintly remember the trip and some what in bits and pieces. Apart from Brindavan Gardens and Bannerghata National Park, what etched my mind rather lingered on my taste bud was the excellent food at Sukhsagar in majestic. It was probably the only Sukhsagar in Bangalore then, but the food though being veg it created a benchmark for veg food all through my adolescence. 

My next visit, was while I was in Bschool, and came over from Hyderabad, where my taste buds had been seasoned with the moghlai food and biriyani's and haleems of the world. The visit was to meet with friends from school days who were doing their engineering here. With limited budget and the new aquiantace to lager the motive of the visit was to enjoy "3W's" Bangalore was famous for. 

It started with some snacking at Fanoos, – a great place for some quick rolls. A small corner joint on Hosur road, before the Vellara junction, which in earlier days only served Baddi Gosht rolls, especially the Mambo & Jambo rolls; today serves a good range of kebabs. A nice snack pick joint for parties at home. Only issue, No Parking!!

With the sunseting it was like a pilgrimage time, visiting Pecos, only because I was tired of hearing about this place!! A very odinary pub on Church Street off Brigade road. Look wise nothing special here, but what you get is chilled beer, great Jazz, some awesome dosas & non-veg curry, not to miss their chilli non veg starters. The Nostalgia  comes for free!! 

Midnight eating has been a habit of pub goers in Bangalore!! After a couple of drinks and rock music, its time to indulge in some Grilled Chicken, Ghee Rice and Butter chicken at Empire!! To be honest the butter chicken is nowhere near, to what you get in North India, but it’s just the traditional menu which has been followed through generations of pub goers. Today you get some fancy dosas as well, but trust me, it is better to stick to the basics; you may opt for kerela parathas, if you are not a rice eater!!

To cool off the spice, its time for some sweets, and what better than Corner House, a traditional ice-cream joint in Bangalore, I guess known to all. “Death by Chocolate” or DBC as it is better known is a desert of a life time. It’s got all to make you run a couple of kilometer extra the next morning, but its heavenly and a signature dish at Corner House.  A word of cautious, share it else, you may land up with “Chocophobia” 

That was my indulgence of local Karnataka cuisine. For me the non vegetarian cuisine has a lot of influence of different parts of Karnataka, especially the costal kind of Mangalore and the Coorgi style which at time you may feel borrows its ethnicity from parts of Kerala. The Tipu Sultan factor brought in some taste of the mughals into the traditional non vegetarian cuisine and created a fusion. If you take my advice, never try the biriyani at a local joint. Its is a concoction of a poor man’s pulao laced in some meat and ghee rice.  The fried chicken kebabs (unusual to be called kebab) is something I liked apart from the grilled chicken, which is overly spiced if you compare is to a copy book grilled chicken recipe from the west.

This journey of my first glimpse continues with my new found taste bud in these five years I have been living here… 

Wednesday 20 August, 2008

Flavours Of India!!!


Food is my passion, and being a hardcore foodie, I can appreciate the varied flavors that are available in my country India. Having traveled most of the country, and tasted local food, I could not resist my self in putting us this amazing collection of Indian food associated with its state I found through a friend. If you are foodie… you need to Click the illustration and view it!!

Disclaimer: Compiled and not original

Saturday 25 June, 2005

Kolkata - Kahawadawa

Indian Cuisine


Kolkata - the city of Joy and Food too. This is a compiled list of all availabilities in Kolkata :


1. Kabiraji Cutlet from Regent (S N Banerjee Road)
2. Moghlai Porotha from Anadi Cabin (S N Banerjee Road)
3. Kosha Mangsho from Golbari (Shyambazar)
4. Phulkopir Shingara from Mrityunjoy (Lansdowne)
5. Double Egg Chicken Roll from Kusum (Park Steet) / Campari & Nizam (a close contender!)
6. Chicken Rezzala from Sabir's (off C R Avenue)
7. Steak at Olypub (with beer!)
8. Chello Kebab at Peter Cat (Park Steet)
9. Lobster Thermidor at Mocambo (Park Steet)
10. Ujjala's Chanachur (no comparison anywhere else)
11. Telebhaja from Putiram (College Street)
12. Daab Chingri from Kewpie's (Elgin Lane)
13. Chicken Cutlet from Baked 'n' Fried / Mukherjee Sweets (BallygungePlace)
14. Bijoli Grill's Fish Roll
15. Mochhar Chop Dhoka from Aapanjan (Sadananda Road)
16. Boudir Lebu Cha (Deshapriya Park)
17. Kochuri Aar Tarkaari from Tasty Corner (Mandeville Gardens)
18. Phuchka/Churmur/Dahi Phuchka from Bilas or Boudi (Southern Avenue)
19. Chicken Cutlet near Samur (Bhowanipur)
20. Mishti Doi & Rossogolla from Mithai (Beckbagan), Baanchharam, Ganguram, Chittaranjan
21. Paradise'r Shorbot
22. Skyroom's Prawn Cocktail & Mixed Grill (Park Steet; unfortunately, no more! Though Peter Cat is a . considerable contender)
23. Nizam-er Kebab Paratha
24. Satay Sticks at China Haus, Tangra
25. Kosturir Morog Pulao

==========

SOME MORE:
1. Radha Ballavi and Mishti Doi from Mouchak, Beckbagan
2. Chanachur and White Dhoklas from Saurashtra Nimki House, Elgin Road
3. Egg-Chicken roll from Mayuri, Tollygunge Circular Road (opp. Hindustan sweets, New Alipore)
4. Paapdi Chhat from 'Khidki', G Block, New Alipore (literally a hole-in-the-wall)
5. Kosha Mangsho from Bhojo Hari Manna, Gariahat
6. Mutton Biryani at Royal, Chitpur or Shiraz,Park Circus
7. Nole gur-er Chhena Payesh from Mrityunjay sweets (Lansdowne) ... This place figures in the original list for Singaras
8. Chicken Cutlet at Shenaz, Middleton Street
9. Fried Chicken Wontons at Bar-be-cue, Park Street
10. Tom Yam Soup at Twinkle Fung Shwey, Dover Lane
11. Fish Florentine at Taaja's, Dover Road
12. Abaar Khabo (a Mishti) from Gupta Bros, Chetla
13. Devilled Crab at Mocambo, Park Street
14. Butter Garlic Crab at Porto Rio, Park Circus
15. Nolen gur-er Kada Pak Sandesh at Balaram Mullick, Jaggu Bazar
16. Pepperoni Pizza from Domino's (Sorry, couldn't resist)
17. Chicken Bharta at Azad Hind Dhaba, Ballygunge Circular Road
18. Chicken Sweet Corn Noodle Soup, GPO Footpath (not sure if its still there)
19. Momo's at Suburban Hospital Road (Any of the 3 places there)
20. Ice cream at Scoop, Princep Ghat
21. Malai Lassi at Ganguram's, Chowringhee
22. South Indian Veg. thali at Banana Leaf, Lake Market
23. Prawns at Kim Ling, Tangra
24. If you're very hungry, very non-veg, and feeling very rich, the unlimited Grill at West View Grill, ITC Sonar Bangla
25. At the other end,if you know someone in Writer's Building, ask for a Gourmet Tour of 'Street Food' avialable in the corridors of Writers!

Monday 21 April, 2003

“Cuisine ~ Crusin' in the city of Nawabs”



I was born and brought up in Kolkata but my roots lies in Lucknow & having spent a greater part of my childhood in this city of minnarets, azans, tehzeeb – and more important of mughlai cuisine & the dumpukht, I have naturally become snobbishly contemptous to what other Indian cities had to offer in terms of ambience & culinary delecacies. Trips to various region in the country had further reinforced what I had known all along – namely, that the all round flavour of Lucknow was par excellence. But all that was before I came to Hyderabad. Once I was here I realised that finally I was in a city which could give my ol' home town a run for its money.

At a first glance, Lucknow & Hyderabad have many things in common. The respective muslim ruler of both the cities have left their marks indelibly on the skyline, and though students of ancient architecture would shudder if I compare the Imambara & Baradari of Wajid Ali Shah to the Charminar & Falaknama palace of the Nizams, they both evoke a nostalgia of a glory past that India may never experience again. The mosques, minnarets, narrow bylanes, the sonoric call to the evening namaz , with the sun setting behind the gumbaj's wouldn't know whether you are in Hyderabad or Lucknow.

But I am rambling. History & architecture are not my fortes – good food is. And here, too, the similarities are striking. The roadside eating joints look quite similar in both the cities – the large blackend metal pots of biriyani, the skewered chickens the sheek kebabs – all look the same. But mughlai & nizami food tastes poles apart. You need to taste both to realise this – and since I am exquisitely qualified in that respect, I will henceforth give you my free & frnak appraisal of the comparitive merits of the two type of cuisine. I must point out however that views expressed below are those of my taste-buds alone.

Firstly, no self respecting Lucknowite would ever invite you to dinner & serve chicken – mughlai dishes are ideally prepared of mutton. Hyderabad on the other hand sits of the richest hatchery belt of the country, and nearly all ceremonial dishes have chicken as their base. Infact, the Hyderabadi fashion statement of the topping a plate of biriyani with boiled eggs will not find many takers in Lucknow – chicken biriyani is considered second-grade fare there!!

The taste of the two schools of biriyani are also poles apart. Bay leaves are an important ingredient of the biriyani in this city – I was thrilled to learn that the leaves are actually called “biriyani patti”here but not in Lucknow. The Lucknavi biriyani is spicy, oily and resplendit with keora water & food colours. It is a meal in itself, and has no accompaniments other than the sour “raita”. The Hyderabadi biriyani, on the other hand, is less oily, gentler on your taste buds, and unlike a Lucknow meal, doesnot necessitate anta-acids after dinner. There are more options regarding accompaniments,too, one of them being the “salan”- prepared of brinjal & chillies – thats is served along with the biriyani. The meat accompanying the biriyani is bland, thus not interfering with the flavour of the biriyani per se. Personally speaking, Hyderabad gets my enthusiastic vote in the biriyani category.

Kebabs, however , are a different ball game. Even the best selling joints in Hyderabad donot offer you much variety in kebabs. Lucknow on the other hand has an awesome 64 possibile types of kebabs, and I have not yet tasted shaami kebab here like they used to make back home. Probably the prediliction to mutton explains this superiority – you just cannot have good kebabs without good mutton. At the polls Lucknow defiantely gets my Kebab vote.

Regarding breads, the honor are even. Lucknavi rumali roti's are better, while Hyderabad scores on the tandoori roti segment. Naan's are comparable, and the multi layered paratha is prepared the exactly the same way and tastes the samein both cities.

As far as various chicken preparation, the scores are again probably tied. Personal opinions would play a much greater role here, though Lucknow's kali mirch chicken & dumpukht, and Hyderabad's Nahari & chicken 65 probably have no counterparts in the rival camp.

Finally, the dessert. The much talked about Lucknavi “Zarda Pulav” is actually quite bland, not that you really need do develop a taste for it to enjoy it. The “khubani ka meetha” here on the other hand, is absolutely divine, and the guy who had first thought of adding a dash of vanilla ice cream to it should receive some kind of civilian honor.

A last word of advise to all ye who have recently landed in this city – the Hyderabadi penchant for green chilies is worth watching out for. Go easy on the gravies till you are used to fire within. And till that time it may be prudent to condition your tounge over “Mirchi-Bhajjies” & order chilli-less food even though that is hardly suited for weak stomachs.


Arghaya Palit April -2003