FOOD SPECIAL When Does A Roti Become A Biryani?
Answer:
When a British chain sells a vegan wrap and calls it a biryani! Understanding
the mislabelling of Indian food abroad
We have been talking
about biryani on these pages again and again, over the last couple of months.
And while we have had the usual squabbles (Indian or Central Asian origin?
Vegetarian or meat-based? Dry or wet) we seem to have come to a mesure of
agreement.
A TOTAL MISFIT Marks & Spencer made a vegan wrap, and called
it a ‘biriyani’!
Biryani, we have
concluded, is a collective noun. It includes many dishes from all over India.
There is no one recipe. A biryani from Calicut will taste totally different to
one from Lucknow. The spices can be different. The rice can be different.
(There is not much call for basmati in South India.) Even cooking methods can
vary. So it is not a good idea to define biryani too closely, though some
general rules may be useful: it should be wetter than a pulao, the spicing
should be more elaborate than the stuff that goes into a pulao, the meat and
rice should (usually) be cooked separately and not together as it is in pulao,
etc.
What we did not know was
that while we were trying to pin down the elusive biryani here in India,
dramatic new biryani-related developments were taking place in the UK.
Ever since Marks &
Spencer arrived in India over a decade ago, we have become familiar with the
company’s clothing ranges. But what we may not realise is that while the
clothes side of the business has frequently been the cause of some turbulence
in the UK company’s balance sheets, Marks & Spencer is generally respected
around the world for its food division. Unfortunately, Marks & Spencer
either does not want to or is not allowed to sell food in India, so it’s only
the clothes we know here.
In the UK, however, the
food is respected for its consistent quality. It is imaginative and good (if
you steer clear of the ready meals, as I do) and the ideas (and products) come
from all over the world.
Any Indian who goes to a
large British supermarket will be astonished by the packets of readyto-eat
chicken tikka masala on display. The product will not look recognisably Indian,
often it will take on a lurid sheen and once you taste it, you will recognise
that anyone serving it at a restaurant in India would either lose his job or
get sent back to the pantry to wash the dishes.
As far as I am concerned,
that’s fine. It is not an Indian dish. It is British. And they can do what they
want with it. (As long as I don’t have to eat it.) I imagine that Chinese
people might feel the same way if they were served chicken Manchurian in India.
It’s not their dish. It is ours.
And I do believe that
most foods gain from cross-cultural influences. Lets take the Scotch egg. As I
wrote some months ago, the dish dates back to Raj adaptations of the Nargisi
kofta. Of course, a good Nargisi kofta has nothing in common with the terrible,
plastic-wrapped Scotch eggs they sell outside petrol pumps in the UK. But even
that is fine. Dishes change as they travel the world; the Brits don’t call it a
Nargisi kofta so why should we grudge them for what they have done with our
original dish? If they like it, if it is tasty (which it can be sometimes) and
if it does not pretend to be anything else, then how can anyone object?
On the whole, therefore,
though I am sometimes astonished by what Brits have done with Indian dishes –
kedgeree, anyone? – I recognise that this is a natural process, which must be
allowed to flourish. And Indian food has fared better in Britain than American
(remember the Wimpy burger?) or Italian (spaghetti on toast!). Anglo-Indian
cuisine is a legitimate food category.
But there comes a point
when this culinary interchange becomes plain old stupidity.
That point was reached
last month when Marks & Spencer began selling “Sweet Potato Biriyani” for
£2.80 a serving. This was not a biryani (or even a ‘biriyani’) that any Indian
would recognise. It was a wrap stuffed with buckwheat, red peppers, sweet
potatoes, a small amount of rice and curry powder. All this was wrapped in
bread.
I have no idea which
genius decided that a glorified sandwich/wrap could be sold as a ‘biriyani’.
Certainly, Marks & Spencer, which has a reputation for spending money on
research and pays good salaries to its food experts, should have known better.
My friend, the chef and
food writer Maunika Gowardhan, a Maharashtrian from Mumbai who has lived and
worked in London for years, was among the first to notice it. Maunika uses
@cookinacurry as a Twitter handle and she tweeted something mildly reproachful
to the effect that she preferred her biryanis when they were made with rice.
And that should have been
that. Somebody at Marks & Spencer should have recognised that it was a
mistake to have called the dish a ‘biriyani’ and either changed the name or
taken it off the shelves entirely.
Instead, all hell broke
loose. The Times did a story and nearly every other paper followed that. The
stories began reasonably enough, some quoting Maunika (and then, just her
tweet, after she decided she did not want to be the face of the controversy).
Asma Khan, the highly regarded London chef, also weighed in, saying much the
same sort of thing as Maunika had: it is not a biryani, so why call it one?
After that, with social
media amplifying each point of view, the debate swung wildly out of control.
The Marks & Spencer response was management-speak (i.e. gibberish) and this
encouraged others to go beyond the simple issue that Maunika had raised. Could
a biryani ever be vegan? Did it have to contain meat or fish? Wasn’t this an
act of cultural appropriation?
There was even a response
from an Indian chef based in London which, though largely incoherent, made the
curious point that M&S in borrowing an idea “no matter how badly executed
or weird – triple carb – rice and potatoes in bread? may actually be paying
India a great compliment.”
Wow! Really? Thanks so
much. We had no idea that we were being honoured on the shelves of Marks &
Spencer.
I found this approach
slightly bizarre but I found another kind of reaction worrying too. I have
always had problems with the currently trendy concept of cultural appropriation.
It is a onesided concept. Nobody will accuse me of cultural appropriation
because I am writing this (and you are reading it) in English.
Cultural appropriation
apparently occurs when people in rich countries adopt things from poor
countries. So, Coldplay was accused of cultural appropriation when it shot a
video in India. And now Marks & Spencer is being accused of cultural
appropriation for serving this biryani wrap.
Frankly I don’t get it.
Was it cultural appropriation when George Harrison began playing the sitar and
the Beatles brought Indian music to wider audiences?
If the term had been
around, I guess that it would have been called that. George would have been
accused of appropriating our culture. Was the spread of the chicken tikka sandwich
cultural appropriation? I could go on.
Personally I am mystified
by the idea of cultural appropriation – at least in food. It is just as stupid
as someone telling me that a biryani wrap is a great compliment to India.
One of the problems with
controversies is that as they run on, people need to find new things to write
to keep the furore going so this kind of nonsense gets thrown at the issue.
The problem was simple.
Marks & Spencer made a vegan wrap. They didn’t think it sounded exciting
enough so they added ‘biriyani ’ to the name. Perhaps it was a way of
indicating that the wrap contained curry powder.
It was foolishness, but
market-led foolishness. They were not paying us a compliment and they were not
appropriating our culture.
HTBR17FEB19
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