Meme, Meal Meme.

13 October 2009 at 10:14 pm (Conversations..., Cuisine, Drinks, Gorgeous people, Journal?, Love?, Milestones, Non-fiction., Places...) (, , , , )

Ms Narcotic has tagged me to do a Meal Meme!

“Five memorable meals ever eaten: It could be anything that makes the meal memorable – the food, the place, the place you were in your life when you ate, the company, the weather, the ambiance – heck, the guy who served the food!”

Alright then, here goes.

1. Mutton Curry and Rice, Summer Vacation, Class V (I think)

This was the year I fell in love with spices. My mother is the world’s best cook, and yes, I know everyone feels that way about their mothers. But seriously, my mother is the best cook in the world. The food this gorgeous woman serves makes you fall in love with food, with life, with yourself and her. The mutton is cooked to perfection – first, it is sealed in searing hot oil; then, it is added to the masala of caramelised onions and khada masalas, spices in their purest form possible; then, it is cooked over low heat till it is perfect.

This particular meal was prepared with onions chopped by me. I was allowed to sit and observe in the kitchen, and the tips she talked of have stayed with me till today. Once the food was cooked, I was asked to go change and be ready to eat with everyone. After a shower, I sat in the large, cool kitchen on a hot summer day and devoured the mutton curry with rice. That was also the summer I realised that curries and rice should be eaten, not with forks or spoons, but with your hands! Yum!

2. Lunch at The Belvedere Dining Room, Tollygunge Club, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Sumer Vacation, Class VI

I was asked to wear a skirt and a pretty top that my Massi (Aunt) gave me. We drove in a chauffeur driven car through Calcutta and I loved every bit of the crazy traffic for it took me through enormous gates and lush greens of the Tollygunge Club. We were seated at a beautiful table, with silver cutlery, white and blue crockery and crystal glasses! Everything was exquisite and reminiscent of the luxury of “the Raj”, I felt like I had been transported to a time long forgotten. I remember eating tiny morsels of baby shrimp, followed by a gorgeous chicken au gratin as the main course. I had never felt more grown up and elegant – ‘playing the part of a lady’. I loved the way the maitre d’ waited for me with a smile to make up my mind and place the order. The creme brulee at the end of the meal made me crave a second helping! It was a wonderful afternoon, and I don’t think any other creme brulee or fine dining restaurant has matched up to my first…

3. Dessert at The Big Chill, College 1st year

The first year at college was coming to and end, we had ‘em groups and people we would hang out with. But this particular dessert was special. It was 4 girls attacking this enormous chunk of ice cream pie, the Mississippi Mudpie! We grabbed our forks/spoons and giggled over it. we talked and shared, smoked and had ‘em discussions. It was fantastic. Yes, we all fell in some sort of love that day. Yes, I love them, still (!)

4. Finishing an entire Watermelon (one of those crazy 4-5 kilo ones) at my house, 2003

I don’t remember what we ate for lunch, I don’t even remember drinking that day. I do distinctly remember sitting in my room and eating watermelon and cursing the seeds and still eating some more with Led Zepp, DT, Maiden, and others playing in the background. Even Lizzy was there, my pet Labrador, and my friends kept on requesting Thin Lizzy songs or Black Dog over and over again. It was one of those days when everything seemed so right and comfortable and fun, without even trying. Ah, miss that house. Miss those days when ;having fun’ didn’t need so much planning.

5. Nihari at Ballimaran, October/November 2007

I remember parking at CP, taking the Metro, then the rickshaw ride. It was one of those beautiful dark nights with a sliver of the moon gleaming against the cloudless dark sky. We walked on, crossed Ghalib ka darwaza, walked some more and finally made it to this tiny shop like restaurant. We were served Nihari, Marrow and Brain all cooked to perfection, garnished with copious amounts of butter, with chillies and ginger! I ate so so much that night! We all did! We even ate habshi halwa on our way back. I distinctly remember Asif Bhai telling me how proud he was of my abilities to consume insane amounts of food! Hehe!

Special mentions -

Sushi, sushi and more sushi, China Town, Sydney – I fell in love! I also realized sea urchins are not my thing. Not. At. All.

Breakfast in bed: cheese omelette, butter toast, chai and apple cake – I fell in love, all over again!

***

People, do share your memorable meals! You know who you are..!

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how to avoid evident demise?

25 September 2009 at 10:26 pm (*Sigh*, Journal?, Love?, Musings..., Random thoughts)

No. We are not going to discuss death or life or how all of us will die one day and so, what’s the point of it all while you live. No, no. We are not going to ramble on about global warming or eternal damnation or impending doom/ Armageddon. The title just stands for the slow death of this place. Yes. This. Place. Or space. Call it what you will. Heh. It’s dying. And I know not how to revive it. Any ideas?

Well. We can quit job to ensure we write here. That won’t sit well with anyone, not even me, for the moneys are needed. So, we can just type whatever comes to mind. But nothing, absolutely nothing comes to mind. I can think of nothing to write about. I have stared at this “Add New Post” page and just continued staring till I got a call or had to get something done or the cab arrived to take me to office or home or somewhere away from here. Yes. We cannot write. How does one save a place like this without being able to write? Suggestions? Suggestions are welcome.

So, this state of intellectual dead has led to me resort myself to being on the receiving end. There’s work, there’s more work and then there’s no scope left for anything but bleh. So much so, that I am now obsessed with another sitcom, One Tree Hill. Yes, I’ve finished Sex and the City, How I met your mother, Gilmore Girls and 5 seasons of One Tree Hill. Yes, it’s disturbing. Yes, I read too, and watch movies as well. I need to watch Bruno and savour this collection of borrowed books. Despite all this, I cannot write. Each sitcom, each book, each movie is ridden with the idea of love, true love, the one… finding the right person, your soulmate for the night, for the month, or for life. I cannot write: how different would my words be from the gazillion words written on the subject already? Right?

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sing sing

13 September 2009 at 4:30 pm (I rant, Journal?, Love?, Random thoughts)

Today, yesterday seems forgotten. You smile as if yesterday never happened. I decided to let it go a long time ago. It slipped away, slowly and steadily, sometimes I had to push it away while holding on to you. I was always a terrible swimmer, you knew I couldn’t hold on for the both of us. You knew. And you jumped in anyway. What were you trying to do? Rescue me while I tried to save you? Didn’t we both just survive this? My heart was in the right place, all throughout yesterday. It was, all right.

Today, belongs to me. It does. And if you can’t pretend to smile or act like you are here today, please tell me how it ends. I need to stop traveling this road, I’ve done my time, I wish to sing along now, even if I don’t hit each note. So, smile for me. And smile with those eyes each time you feel yesterday lurking nearby.


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of times past and waiting.

8 September 2009 at 4:46 pm (Conversations..., Fiction..., I write., Love?, Non-fiction., Short Short Stories)

The sunlight sneaked in through the jute blinds, casting soft, lazy patterns on her face. A face which had braved many suns and slept through many nights. A face lined with laughter and tears and a good amount of worry. Her silver grey hair was tied in a neat knot and she was leaning in a chair far too enormous for her. She looked at me with eyes fading from age, dark eyes turning blue; eyes so full of life and so honest, I had to look away.

She smiled a beautiful smile, pushing away years of pain. I didn’t talk much when I was around her, I liked looking at her, listening to her, just sinking in the enormous chair and letting her smile wash over me. Today, she was in the mood to reminisce. Today, was the anniversary of her marriage. She took the cup of tea I offered and took a tiny sip. She looked at me and smiled again, her eyes glistening with un-shed tears. I looked away and waited. I heard her sigh and take another sip of the tea. I exhaled without realising.

“Did you know I was seventeen when my mother told me about my to-be-husband? It was a rainy day and I felt that the news was… hmmm… unwelcome. I wasn’t happy, there was nothing special about the day and Maa, she looked tired. She looked relieved and tired. I felt disappointed.”

“Disappointed?”

“Ah, well… I had read enough stories and enough history to know, no, to understand what was in store for me and what wasn’t. But I was a hopeless young fool, now, now, don’t raise that eyebrow at me.”

“Sorry, I didn’t realise…”

“So, I had hoped for someone who would love me and write for me, I had wished for someone beautiful, a partner. Someone who wouldn’t find my ability to read English, Hindi, Urdu and Gurmukhi a waste. I wanted someone who wouldn’t care that I enjoyed baking more than making rotis, who would tell me stories, write me stories. I love stories, and once upon a time I loved them as much as you do.”

“But he liked stories, he was even published…”

“Shh… let me continue.” She tugged at my ear and winked. I smiled back and put my finger on my lips in mock seriousness. “I wanted to be special, to have a life different from that of my sisters and mother. I wanted to read and continue reading, I wanted to learn more… I wanted to love, sing, laugh and even be allowed to dance.”

“Allowed?”

“It was different then, we weren’t even free in our own country, and women… well, as I said, it was different then. We have a long way to go… But you can choose. You have the freedom to make your own choices, your own mistakes, learn your own lessons. So, as I was saying, they told me about my husband-to-be. He was thirty-two. Shh… no interruptions!”

I stared at her, the words dying on the tip of my tongue.

“He was a business man, he was rich, had a huge haveli and was my father’s friend’s younger brother. It was a suitable match. I was to be happy, I was to take care of his house, supervise a small army of house-help and what not. Understandably, I was terribly upset. So, I sulked in my room and didn’t do anything but read my ‘useless’ books. After about a week of being left alone, I was finally tricked into leaving my room by my brother. He was home from the University. Yes, Lahore University. He was home with a friend and they were being pampered by the entire family. He tricked me with books…” she giggled like she was seventeen again and continued, “he left a trail of books and many clues, the grand prize was a copy of Jane Austen’s Emma! I ran out of my room and followed the books, solved clues, some were silly and some, tough. I had to recite the appropriate Kabir’s doha to my Grandmother and only then would she give me the next clue, which led me to the kitchen. There I had to finish an entire meal before my mother told me softly to look up the forbidden page number 1024 in the study. Oh! Milton would’ve been proud of me! Yes, he was a funny one, my brother… but he got half these ideas from that friend of his. His beautiful, mild-mannered friend, who wrote poems and stories in his black notebook. Well, we had not really seen each other but I had caught glimpses of him from behind the blinds that separated the guests from the women of the house…”

“So, you were in the same house and you didn’t even see each other? How is that possible?”

“Well, it was a big house, with separate rooms for guests, and curtains behind which we were confined. I was engaged, after all, I was to keep to myself… he had seen me walk from a room to another, he had seen me through the lattice, through the purdahs and curtains… but we had never really seen each other… Until that exceptionally hot afternoon; my mother was feeling faint and had asked me to prepare Khus sherbet for everyone. I offered some to my brother and him, that was the day he saw my feet. That night he wrote me a letter, it was a beautiful letter. He talked of my voice, which reminded him of silver, strong and beautiful. He wrote about my exquisite feet,” she looked at her tiny, beautifully arched feet and sighed, “he wrote, well, let me try and translate, hmmm… yes, ‘your slight frame, proud chin and all-seeing eyes could not be hidden behind a flimsy curtain. Your unafraid feet daring to break free of confines have captured my thoughts. I will speak to your brother and confess my love for you, if you will have me. Yours.’”

We fell silent, I stared at her beautiful feet and she closed her eyes. I could hear her breathing, I heard her sigh and shift in her chair. She put her soft hand on my wild unruly hair and cleared her throat.

“You must understand, I never wished to hurt my parents or my brother. I never wished any harm to the business man either. I was young and in love. That night, I read and re-read that letter in candle light. I left my room twice, only to return halfway. I finally gathered the courage to write ‘Yes’ on a piece of paper, I folded the thin sheet 6 times! My lucky number… to be young is quite something, sweetheart, you should enjoy it while it lasts.”

“I do!” I exclaimed.

“Yes, yes, with those cigarettes and that American whiskey. Must be fun”

Sometimes, its best to keep quiet and stare at your own feet, and hope they were prettier. Sometimes, you may utter a tiny whisper to change the topic, “Did you elope?”

“Next morning, my mother asked me to take some breakfast to my brother. I tiptoed into my brother’s room and put the heavy plate on the study table my brother had overloaded with books. I tiptoed to the bed and slipped the folded sheet of paper into his hand, he instinctively closed his hand on my anonymous note. I ran as fast as I could to my room and didn’t step out till my brother came to see me.”

Behna, he had said, in his clear deep voice. I didn’t have the courage to look him in the eye and stared at the floor. His voice, kinder somehow, announced, he’s a poet, a writer. Poets don’t earn. Businessmen do. Even babus do. He is a dreamer, dreams won’t feed you or keep you warm. I kept quiet, but I couldn’t control my ridiculous, weak tears. He stood there, tall and wise. My elder brother. He had taken care of me since our father had passed. He had paid his teachers extra to teach me on the sly. He had given me books, convinced my mother to let me read them. He had taught me how to dream and now, now he was delivering a lecture against dreams and happiness, my happiness. I couldn’t utter a single word. I sat there in shock and confusion. After what seemed like a very long time, my brother cleared his throat and asked, if he gives up his poetry, his writing to take care of you, will you be happy? I shook my head. Ah! But he’s adamant. He has already procured a salaried position, he claims, he can write in his free time. I jumped up and hugged him, he laughed and asked me to stay out of line of fire, while he dealt with Maa.”

“Yes, it was quite a day. My mother stopped talking to me and the business man’s family severed all relations with us. Your Nana and I decided to have a small wedding ceremony once things got better.”

“Your mother didn’t talk to you?”

“Well, not forever! She knew I wouldn’t stop trying and she realised he wouldn’t either! She had to accept or else I would have stayed home even after my nineteenth birthday”

“You waited for two years!”

“Yes, it wasn’t that long… oh! even the business man convinced his family that all was well. He claimed I was too bookish and boring for him!”, she laughed happily and tried to tame my wild hair.

“Naani, your life is like a fairytale!”

“Not all of it… he never wrote me a story.

But certain moments, some memories make it seem like one. Oh! Don’t you worry, my little one, yours will be too. You simply have to wait for the right time…”

And I wait.

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An engagement, a trip to the hills III

11 August 2009 at 1:44 pm (*Sigh*, Gorgeous people, I recommend, Journal?, Love?, Places..., Wow.) (, , , )

Here, click to read part I and II.

The black Swift carried us to Kufri, which by the way, is a place with no soul. It has been plundered and colonised by the tourism industry. It’s overcrowded, it’s dirty, it’s full of ridiculously dressed north Indians who simply want a cooler climate with the same snacks, the same facilities and the same stench. Everything is for sale in Kufri. Everything. To them, we were hopeless, aimless souls who wanted to go to Chail, where “nothing happens”. We were heading for ‘em luxury tents in a village called Alampur near Chail. We somehow left Kufri behind, despite all its attempts to hold us back: traffic jams, fights with idiotic rude cab drivers, oh! even a Yak spotting! But we carried on, undeterred, we HAD to get out!

Fairy creatures guided us, they made it rain for us. The world was far far away and we were driving on a beautiful narrow, curving road through a pine forest. The sun couldn’t touch us, the air was intoxicating and washed over us in soft waves, we were staring in awe and amazement. The road to Chail was a pathway to surreal yet haunting gorgeousness.

The drive ended, we parked and sent our luggage off to our tent! The plan was to get away from people: the hordes of tourists who had found this little paradise. So, after a steaming cup of tea, some directions and discussions, we headed off for a trek in the hills. I did so in my floaters and socks! Impromptu trips are so much fun! We walked, people… we did. We walked right into a dance practice for a cultural function! We had inadvertently walked in on a group of teenagers practicing a group dance for a mela, where they were to perform a folk number the very next day. A cassette player played forgotten tunes, the boys stood in one row and the girls in another. They danced, we watched and applauded, tried to click photographs with our camera phones, wished them luck and walked on.

The path was welcoming and well trodden, it beckoned us, inviting us to sing songs, to listen to stories; stories of visitors before us, tales of dusty footsteps that created the narrow path over the years. The golden sun played hide ‘n’ seek, disappearing when needed, re-appearing when we least expected. I winked at the gorgeous sun and forgot meaningful warnings, ‘Careful, the recently shed leaves might be slippery’ and I sulked and crawled in faulty footwear.

That’s when we saw him, a not-so-tall, lanky fellow; we peered and tried to focus on what was hoisted on his thin shoulder and exclaimed, “Is that a rifle?”; “Oh my God! He’s carrying a rifle!”; “Is he going to shoot the monkeys!”. While we tried to follow him, he sprinted on the slippery slope, rifle in one hand, a tree branch in the other, he slid from one slope to the other shouting orders at his pet langoor! Guiding him, egging him to attack other monkeys. We stared, rooted to our spots, for we were shocked and curious! We had to know what he, the hunter, was up to. This mowgli meets bounty hunter kept us spell bound, he was guiding his watch-monkey (dog?!) to guide the wild monkeys away from plantations and gardens. He slithered away with a few yells and we, the city walkers, could do nothing. Not even click a decent photograph.

Fairy creatures guided us with wild strawberries, lady bugs and rambling roses – promising us spectacular views. We crossed barriers meant to dissuade leopards and tigers from entering tiny pastures and villages. We could see Shiva’s silhouette against the burning sun, we could see the trishul soaring high above. We could feel a chill creeping on us, it was not an ordinary temple, not a place of worship. It was built for sacrifices and fire and smoke. Three concentric circles contained two over-fed calves that stared and dodged us. The Shiv Mandir was fearful, negative and nothing like any other building I’ve seen before. It celebrated and revered the Destroyer, not the merciful Lord.

I started recalling all the stories I’d heard of him, had he ever been merciful? Was this really what he stood for? Scared sacrificial beings, chillums, bongs and firewood? In order to love him, to submit to him, do they really need the opium, the bhang and the hash? Does it make it easier to kill? To celebrate destruction? While we tried to lighten the mood, by calling the temple, “Psycho Mandir”, a huge bone spotted near the temple didn’t really help! We were silent, contemplative and trying very hard to get away when we saw, a congregation of monkeys! Apparently, they meet, rather collect to celebrate births and mourn deaths (for their sake, I hope it was a birth). Now we had to rush and get away from the monkeys and psycho mandirs!

While the fairies giggled at our flight, we decided to rest. We sat on milestones and tiny boulders and stared at the azure skies bowing in greeting to the tall Himalayas. We saw the valleys celebrate the rains in joy and we saw the lush green preening, adorning it all. We sat in silence and stared. The silence in the hills is warm, comforting and palpable. The silence keeps a million secrets, hides many stories and tales, tucks them away in the many layers, trails and paths that make the hills. It is this silence that makes you breathe, lets you forget and compels you to smile. It makes you wonder, makes you step out of a cosy tent and huddle around a bonfire to hear whispers of unfinished, ever evolving stories. It makes you notice the trees pregnant with lush fruit. It was the silence that made us nibble on almost ripe apricots and plums, in the golden hue of candle light, and think of nothing but the twinkling of many, many stars strewn across the utterly dark skies.

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