Thursday, February 9, 2006

the almost there vegeterian


'almost there' vegeterian..... person who eats non vegeterian food in the absence of good vegeterian choices.
its funny cause when i was in India, I used to love, love non vegeterian food... in my case this means chicken , lamb and fish, did not have pork till i came to the US and beef is out of the question due to deep rooted religious reasons.
its kinda hypocrtical to eat chicken, lamb and fish and then frown on eating beef, but that never really came into question in India where the only beef i have ever seen was at Muslim weddings and those were rare occassions.But still my mind just hits a blank wall when it comes to eating beef.... i can see my ancestors frowning with displeasure every time i even contemplate the possibility.
with meat being eaten mightbe once in two months, i can say i was ' an almost vegeterian' quite safely!!
however after coming to the US, all this changed.R is an avid non vegeterian who can easily live with two meat meals a day... uh oh, i tried it and rapidly lost weight to regain it all within no time as soon as my body realised what was happening. so back to carb rich and bountiful vegeterian diet. these days i try and look for the spiciest veggie option on the menu. Naturally have to be creative and inventive while planning meals without meat for R. Thankfully R is a total maharashtrian varan bhat batata bhaji boy at heart. which is good for me in a way, but i get bored and listless eating same chapati, bhaji, amti bhat every day. dont get me wrong, i love the maharastrian food, but like it even more if i dont have to cook it every single day myself!
so scour the internet for recipes , pester my mom to send me recipes of half forgotten childhood treats and try and convert R to being an "almost there vegeterian".

Sunday, February 5, 2006

the why???

I recently discovered the world of blogs, while searching for a recipe to make banana walnut cake.... people who know me for a considerable while might be a little taken aback... banana walnut cake is not what they would envision me doing with some spare time.... read yes, go for a long walk, watch a movie, go shopping,,,, perhaps even paint... but cooking is not an activity i used to indulge in unless absolutely forced.
But after coming to the US and being forced to live without Mummy's food and the nearest udipi and irani restaurant, made me resort to surviving on my non existent cooking skills. R still remembers occassions when he came home for lunch to a teary eyed me with burnt cabbage bhaji and rice.
thank heavens those days are over, well almost!!!

anyway this blog is a way for me to keep in touch with my old friends and family, people who I used to meet and chat with regularly , but now am seperated by atleast a few hundred kilometers.
Email and regular phone calls cannot compensate for the age-old institution of 'manapasun gappa' ( long conversations , for lack of better translation skills).
So heres to my family and PP in London, JB in Ithaca, AS in Pune, AK in Mumbai, VS in Florida, RK in Pune, MD in Mumbai , RB in Singapore / Pune, DL in Mumbai, AS in Dallas and JG in Austin.

Those cups of coffee and uttapams at Vaishali, the long walks on the tekdi - gazing at the pollution tinged horizons, short walks over Law College grounds, sharing the batata wada sambhar at the IMDR canteen behing Fergusson, the absolutely oil soaked but delicious bread pattice in the college canteen, window shopping on Main Street... all my favorite activities i can no longer indulge in.
Even with a longggg trip to India, however long, all of us are scattered too far and wide to ever relive those days again.

So hopefully this blog serves as a virtual gappa session and u guys hopefully respond to my updates!!! :-)

Friday, February 3, 2006

eating in Peru


just back from an awesome trip in Peru, " Land of the Incas" according to Discovery channel . The food was completely different from what I had ever had... Indian, Mexican, Thai, American.... this is avocado stuffed with chicken in green sauce. The chicken was lightly steamed and tossed with salt and pepper and the green sauce tasted like it was made of coriander and spinach.
We ( me and hubby R) also had a really great dish called Papa Relleno which is potato stuffed with meat. The boiled potato was cut in half, stuffed with a boiled egg, some dates and raisins, and the minced meat. It was then breaded and deep fried , and served with a really hot, kicking chilli hot salsa verde!!! sorry no pictures, but it all looked so good i did not want to cut it open.

This is roasted Andean corn served with little bits of cheese, made in Peru. The corn was realllly yummy and was tossed with salt and cayenne pepper, the cheese complimented it with its milder and mellower flavor.










Dinner at " Ami Manera" a restaurant in Cuzco... chicken with mole sauce , rice served with spinach and the same local cheese mentioned before and chicken stew served with yucca.... so delicious.
 
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.