Thursday, October 13, 2016

FOODIE SPECIAL..... Not just North Indian

Not just North Indian

Will ‘pan Indian’ be the next big thing for Indian restaurants? As Neel Indian Kitchen Bar joins the club of diners keen to showcase India’s regional food diversity under one roof, Pooja Bhula traces the roots of this promising trend
North Indian and Mughlai—just jog your memory back even a decade, and this description comes to mind when you think ‘Indian food’ and ‘restaurants’ with North Indian largely alluding to Punjabi cuisine (read butter chicken, tandoori roti, koftas and kebabs). But isn’t there something odd about one region’s cuisine representing ‘Indian food’, given that our country has as much culinary diversity as it does linguistic?
Is this is a British legacy, terming the popular cuisine of the north as ‘the cuisine of India’? Perhaps. Was the world first introduced to Indian food through of North Indian NRIs? Partially true. But there’s more, says Chef Harpal Singh Sokhi: “Various factors played a role—the restaurant culture caught on in Delhi before the rest of India as North Indians love grandness and celebrations. Also, back then, most restaurateurs were North Indians, glad to showcase their cuisine and adapt it to local influences wherever they travelled. South Indians also opened chains, but while we marketed our restaurants as ‘Indian’, they marketed theirs as ‘South Indian’”. Interesting, no?

The age of regional relishes
That said, regional and community cuisines finally getting their pride of place, previously shadowed by our awe of international ones – especially American, Italian and Mexican – is welcome. This has opened us up to less-explored cuisines of India and also allowed us to relish the intricacies of mainstream ones. Now we don’t look at Maharashtrian food from a single palate lens, but know that Kolhapuri is different from Konkani food. As Nishek Jain, owner of 29 States, says, “You can divide each state into many culinary states’’. In fact, with his book Anna He Apoornabrahma, Shahu Patole has added one more dimension to the food debate—the food of the dalits. And for all this exposure, we have to thank home chefs and those instrumental in pushing the trend of pop-ups. Pointing us to a precurser, Kalyan Karmakar of finelychopped.net says, “Somewhere the food blogging wave that started here around 2006—inspired by Indian expats in the UK—played a role. We weren’t thinking ‘regional’, but our writings became that, as they centred around home food and recipes. This led to the next phase three years ago, where pop-ups boomed to give foodies what restaurants didn’t. Many who conducted them, like Geetika Saikia, were bloggers”.

The unifying factor
As we know, it didn’t stop there—regional restaurants mushroomed as standalones and in established hotels and then we got Bombay Canteen. As its partner Sameer Seth says, it was conceptualised to “celebrate India through its space, food and even drinks, which we serve as chota, bada and Patiala, the kind of thing we grew up with. But we also wanted to make it relevant and contextual to people today. So while some dishes are authentic recreations of traditional recipes, others are our versions inspired by state cusinies.’’ In its one-and-half years, The Bombay Canteen has served cuisines from 16 states.
Still heady with the recent opening of Neel Indian Kitchen Bar, Chef Jayadeep ‘JD’ Mukherjee says, “People have always been receptive to community eateries. The demand was there, but restaurants didn’t take it up as they’ve been playing safe.’’ But Karmakar, Jain and Seth unanimously disagree that such concepts would be received with such enthusiasm 10 years ago. “Today, people are far more curious about the food because of exposure—through food shows, travelling and social media’’, Seth says.
In fact, having litti chokha on a trip to Bihar is what inspired Nishenk Jain to start a vegetarian diner that would serve cuisines from 29 states. Jain adds, “People are tired of eating the same old things repackaged as new. They know the neglected north-eastern states have a lot to offer in the culinary space and the novelty of Italian, Mexican, Lebanese has worn off since one can look up recipes online and make them at home’’.
While it is a joy to see a Bengali mochar chop next to an Uttaranchali buransh on the same menu, those like Karmarkar rightly ask, ‘’What’s the need for all Indian cuisines on one menu? I prefer going to places that do one cuisine well’’. The solution? Using authentic ingredients and changing menus frequently—while at Neel Indian Kitchen Bar it will mean a to-be-introduced ‘Day’s special menu’, 29 States serves cuisine-specific menus for four weeks, in addition to the regular menu. And at The Bombay Canteen, it’s simply about changing the menu every season. “Litti chokha should be cooked under earth and mixed with cow dung, but 29 States is near a hospital, so I can’t do it,” Jain candidly shares. “For such reasons, I manage to stay 60-65 per cent true to the roots.’’ That said, these restaurateurs, who believe the pan-Indian wave is here to stay, are just as keen as Kalyan Karmakar to see restaurants specialising in a single region’s cuisine.
The debate of specialised-versus-multi-cuisine spaces can go on, but it’s almost a historic time for Indian food. We are finally acknowledging and celebrating our food diversity, and broadening the definition of Indian food to be inclusive. In this regard, pan-Indian cuisine reminds us that we are individually beautiful and are yet part of a whole. And the influence of one regional cuisine over another is proof that there’s an organic unity in our diversity.
pooja.bhula@dnaindia


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