| Hot Stuff By Hema Nair
Review of Monsoon Diary.
Monsoon Diary
A Memoir With Recipes
by Shobha Narayan
Villard Books,
New York, N. Y.
2003, pp. 223.
Shobha Narayan is no stranger to the readers of Little
India. Her memories of a cross country road trip from
New York to Los Angeles that she took with husband
and her grandmother, a strict vegetarian, was published
in the magazine a few years back and resonated with
many readers. How many of us have not stood glumly
in the midst of yet another bustling reststop food
court debating between the indigestion quotient of
eating (yet again) a slice of pizza or French (Oops!
Should that be Freedom?) fries or going the healthy
but tasteless route and buying a plastic box of soggy
salad?
In her essay, Narayan humorously related her grandmother’s
gradual acceptance of “outside” food and her serendipitous
discovery of edible items, among them : French crueller
from Dunkin Donuts as a substitute for jilebi and
the chain’s coffee as a perfect step-in for filter
coffee; and mixing ketchup, from Wendy’s, with hot
water to make rasam that she poured over the plain
white rice that Chinese restuarants throw in with
a regular order. It was to become a favorite meal
that sustained her all the way to California.
This time around, Narayan has brought out a memoir
on her personal journey, from a carefree, indulged
childhood in South India, to her college days in Connecticut,
leading up to her present life as a mother and wife
in New York City, all laced together with mouthwatering
descriptions of home-cooked Inji-curry, Rasam, Pav-bhaji,
Idlis, Potato Masala, Pongal, and Upma. The rich,
nutty scent of ghee ( a detailed recipe is given on
page eight) mingled with creamy coconut milk and tangy
tamarind seems to waft through the chapters and it
is very hard not to give into the urge to drive to
the nearest Udipi and order the special thali with
all the works.
A winner of the 2001 M.F. K. Fisher Award for Distinguishedº
writing (Narayan won it for her story, “The God of
Small Feasts,” which orginally appeared in Gourmet
magazine), and a frequent contributor to NPR’s All
Things Considered, Narayan retraces her personal history
by examining the role food plays in her family’s daily
rituals. Gifted with a sharp eye and a understated
style of writing, Narayan brings alive the people
and place that populated her life with with frank,
gentle humor.
One of the most delectable chapters in the book is
a description of travelling on the train in India
and encountering food and people from around the country.
During her trips Narayan gets to taste kadi from a
Marwari matron, rajma from a Punjabi family, and rosgollas
and sandesh from another Bengali family - all fellow
passengers sharing their home-cooked meals. As the
trains wind through different states, there is not
only a steady stream of vendors offering a range of
snacks and coffee or tea but also the regional specialites
offered by each station: different kinds of mangoes
in Renigunta, oranges in Nagpur, pedas in Agra, and
yogurt served in tiny terracotta pots in Delhi. Each
little treat is like snatching little bits and pieces
of India, brief visits to each region, before running
back to one’s seat to continue the journey.
Narayan’s narrative is full of references to the cultural
nuances of her upbringing in South India, beginning
with the first food she ever ate: rice and ghee at
six months old, when she was fed a mouthful of it
in a formal ceremony called, choru-unnal (rice-eating),
at a ceremony held at the famous Guruvayur temple
in Kerala.º This is a very traditional event that
celebrates the first taste of solid food by an infant
and it is usually held at a well-known temple where
grandparents and uncle and aunts congregate to take
their turn and place bits of mushy rice into the child’s
mouth, while a priest stands by reciting mantras.
In a typically witty observation, Narayan muses that
because most Indians do not understand Sanskrit, the
meaning of the mantras are obscure. “It is presumed
that they will nudge the baby into a lifetime of healthy
eating. This particular presumption must be wrong,
for I know of no Indian child with good eating habits.”
Narayan spends the first years of her life with her
pious Hindu grandparents in Coimbatore, a small town
in the foothills of the Blue Mountains. Here she picks
up the rhythms of a traditional Tamilian household:
seeing her grandfather doing the tharpanam (ancestor
worship) every new-moon day, eating pongal ( rice
and split mung dal spiced with ginger, pepper and
turmeric) every time the seasons changed andº hunkering
down with the women of the household on bamboo mats
every afternoon to watch them chew betel leaves and
make raunchy jokes. Each year, before the monsoon
begins, her grandmother sets out to make vatrals,
(dried, dehydrated, pickled vegetables) and vadams
(wafer-thin rounds of sun-dried rice flour that are
deep-fried into crisp fritters) to be eaten during
the winter months when fresh vegetables are scarce.
The making of these treats is a family activity. On
the day the vadams are to to made, the entire household,
including the maid servant and four-year-old Narayan,
are up on the terrace before the sun rises, swiftly
spreading spoonfuls of vadam paste on cloth. Her grandmother’s
“intent face and rapid, calligraphic movements as
she cajoled, rolled, and shaped a simple rice-flour
mixture into a delicous treat,” is something that
Narayan can still conjure up each time she bites into
a vadam or vatral.
Nalla-ma (“good mother) as Narayan’s calls her grandmother,
also instills in her the secrets of culinary skills:
“Carrots with ghee for growth, potatoes with ginger
to soothe, beans with garlic to rejuvenate, onions
or asafetida to balance.Ӽ
Narayan goes to live with her parents when she is
five,º in a suburb of Madras, and becomes increasingly
aware of belonging to the TamBram (short for Tamilian
Brahmin) community. Narayan glancingly notes that
while the word caste is shunned in India and America,
it continues to play “an important part of the way
Indians define themselves.” An important defination
of being TamBram, for Narayan, is of course, food,
specifically, soft idlis and fragrant, filtered coffee.
In the Catholic school she goes to in Madras, (Narayan
gives us her hilarious version of the Lord’s prayer
as she understood it in second grade: “Ah father,
Charty Nevin, ah low be thy knee. Thy kin dumb come
thy will bidden north cities in heaven...” ), lunch
hour is the most anticipated time of the day. Narayan
gets to sample the contents of her friends lunch boxes,
especially Amina’s, a Muslim girl whose mother makes
the most fragrant chicken birayani. Narayan is forbidden
to eat meat, so she just picks out the delicious,
spice-drenched morsels of rice. She also loves her
Syrian Christian friend, Annie’s spicy potato, onion,
peas and coconut milk stew, and her Telegu-speaking
friend Sheela’s red chilli-spiked mango pickle. Food,
Narayan, unwittingly reveals, can be the perfect bridge
between religous and linguistic differences For Madras
aficianados, Narayan’s descriptions of places and
landmarks will revive fond memories. She talks lovingly
of breakfast at Woodlands, the cultural talent at
the Mardi Gras held every year by the Indian Institute
of Technology, the college cafeteria at the Women’s
Christian College or WCC, as the locals call it, and
shopping with her mother for vegetables in Pondy Bazaar,
spices and appalams (fried lentil wafers) at Ambika
Appalam Depot, or for lingerie at Naidu Hall, famous
for “airy nightgowns made from the softest cotton.”º
Her mother also offers Narayan insights into the intricacies
of South Indian cooking: “Cumin and cardamon are arousing,
so eat them only after you get married. Fenugreek
tea makes your hair lustrous and increases breast
milk, so drink copious amounts when you have babies.
Coriander seeds balance and cool fiery summer vegetables.
Mustard and sesame seeds heat the body during winter.
Asafetida suppresses, cinnamon nourishes, and lentils
build muscles.” In spite of her reluctance to stay
in the kitchen while her mother lectures her on the
niceties of food combinations, Narayan clearly picks
up a few skills. When she wants to go to college in
America, her uncle throws her a challenge: cook a
vegetarian meal for the family. If everyone relishes
it, she gets to go. Narayan stuffs and fries okra,
slow-cooks tender spinach into a velvety curry, stirs
up some tangy rasam and serves it all up with fluffy,
separate grains of basmati rice. She wins that challenge
hands down.
At age 20, she enters Mount Holyoke, Connecticut as
a Foreign Fellow, and begins her American journey.
She stands in front of the breakfast choices in the
cafeteria unable to decide between varieties of breads,
pastries, cereals, fruits and milks, feeling the impatience
of the others in the line behind her. But soon, her
job at the cafeteria opens her palate to the delights
of pastas, pizzas, enchiladas, falafel, potato pierogis,
and vegetable fried rice. Still, when she needs comfort
food, its a tub of yogurt and plain cooked rice that
comes to the rescue. She sits cross-legged on her
dorm bed, eating balls of the bland, familar food
because, “I needed Indian food to ground me.” Later,
after her master’s degree is revoked by Memphis State
University because the school’s adminstrators don’t
approve of the changes that Narayan makes to her thesis,
she returns to Madras seeking the solace and support
of her family. And she agrees to their suggestion
that she have an arranged marriage. Narayan writes
of this whole experience with marvellous restraint,
conveying the pain of the Memphis experience and the
doubts she has about arranged marriages and the ordeal
of being inspected with the potential of being rejected.
Her parents invite Ram and his parents to a tiffin
where they serve the traditional tiffin meal for a
boy-meets-girl occasion: sojji (warm, semolina and
milk pudding) and bajji (vegetable fritters). Sojji-bajji
is such a staple of these prospective meetings that
Narayan states the words have come to mean that one
is thinking of getting married, as in: “Now that you’re
thirty, you’ll probably be eating a lot of sojji-bajji.”
Narayan and Ram hit it off and make a match of it
after all and the wedding tiffin included carrot halva,
saffron-sprinkled sojji, and almond payasam, complemented
byº savory vadas with spicy coconut chutney and onion
sambar, fluffy idlis, and dollops of upma, all served
on shiny banana leaves.
As a student in Boston, Narayan once decided to make
an ambitious dinner: a dish from every continent,
except for Antartica, because she could not find a
vegetarian dish from that region.º But the dinner
spiced with Japanese, Italian, Ethiopian, and South
American ingredients was a disaster. Guests were either
allergic to something in the food or each other. In
desperation, Narayan found some cream of wheat in
the cupboard and rustled up an upma studded with onions,
peas, ginger, and green chillies. Everyone polished
off their servings, and Narayan was finally granted
her wish to make a dish “that would surprise and delight
my guests into prayerful silence.” In this well-written,
lively, evocative memoir, she has produced a work
that is as piquantly entertaining as her rasam recipe.
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