Food for thought.
I am a true blue Kannadiga with my ancestors hailing from a hamlet called Sosale in the heartland of the erstwhile Mysore state. The gastronomical inputs in my growing years were such Mysore delicacies like Maavinakaai Chitranna, Nuchina Unde, Hulitove Majjigehuli with a reward of Gasgase Payasa on festival days.
I am a true blue Kannadiga with my ancestors hailing from a hamlet called Sosale in the heartland of the erstwhile Mysore state. The gastronomical inputs in my growing years were such Mysore delicacies like Maavinakaai Chitranna, Nuchina Unde, Hulitove Majjigehuli with a reward of Gasgase Payasa on festival days.
I presumed that one day I would marry a pretty damsel from T Narsipur
or Arsikere and my food preferences would be taken care of in the manner I was
accustomed to. In fact I would have encouraged my bride to add Gojju Avalakki to the menu.
However, fate had something else in store for me. I ended up marrying
an Iyer girl from Palghat. Since then the dining table is full of dishes with
tongue twisting names like Keerai Moologootal, Maangai
Araitchukalakki, Vazhakkai Mezhukkuvaratti, Nendrapazham Pulissery, et al. In
fact my wife goes gaga over something call Olan.
Once she made light brown chutney which I sort of liked. She quickly corrected
me that it was Parippu Thogayal and
not chutney. I retorted that I knew chutney when I saw one. This argument went
on for several years till the well known writer V. Gangadhar (also from
Palghat) wrote in his column, “Slice of Life” that Thogayal and chutney were
two different items. That newspaper cutting, now yellowed occupies pride of
place on our fridge door under a magnet.
However, being an eternal optimist I put all my hopes on my two sons
marrying dainty girls from Narasimharajapura or Hosagrahara. I was confident
that our dining fare would be become a cheerful congregation of delicious Hurli Saaru, Kosambari and Kayi Hollige.
Thanks to
the machinations of my wife and her crony my elder son married an Iyengar.
Now the dining table repertoire
includes Kandathippili Sathamudu, Vazhaikai Kariamudu and
Akkaravadesil .It was
rather confusing in the beginning when my daughter-in-law referred to something
called Thirumadapalli. I
later found out that was the Iyengar reference to the kitchen.
To rub salt on my wounds I had to utter et tu Brute when my younger son
somehow persuaded a Gujarathi girl from Kutch to marry him. With the addition
of Bajra no rotlo, Guvar nu
Shaak and Dal Dhokli our household
menu reads something like the one in the Indian cuisine restaurant at the Taj.
I have somehow survived my sacrifices over the years. Unfortunately my
culinary skills are limited to heating food in the microwave so I could not
really overcome the deficiencies in my diet. Driving all the way to Malleswaram
to eat Akki Roti at New Krishna
Bhavan is not practical. It is particularly stressful for me when the Avarekai season arrives. Imagine a life
without Avarekai Uppitu or Saaru…..
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