I was waiting at the bus
stop, for my ride home. The streets as crowded as ever at the bustling Crawford
Market. The “Drive Time Gangsters” were keeping me entertained on Fever 104FM.
Suddenly I turned to my left and I saw a pani-puri wala, and a guy eating the
freshly made pani puri from a steel dish. A smile crossed my face. It wasn’t
that guy anymore, it wasn’t a steel plate anymore, and it wasn’t Crawford
Market anymore. It was me in Kolkata’s Salt
Lake City (Sector 2) or Vardhaan Market and it wasn’t
a steel plate at all.
PUCHKA :
The Puchka was being prepared
and a container made of stitched dry leaves was handed to me. The puri was
filled with the sumptuous filling which consisted of boiled potatoes along with
red masala, black ground pepper, chaat masala, some beans, a bit of coriander
and fresh mint leaves and ofcourse a dash of green chillies along with some chatkila
water. All mashed to perfection by the vendor with this bare palms, the mixture
oozing out from between his fingers every time he pressed into the potato and
all the ingredients. Then with the other free hand, he would punch a hole in
the puri with his thumb, fill it with the potato filling and dip it in the
chatkila water, then lift the overflowing Puchka and shove it in your leaf
plate. Then between the forefinger and the thumb I negotiatied with the puchka
till it reached its destination. BLISS!! After a days work (would not call it
hard work, would never call it hard work), after the tiring shared rick journey
from office to my place, the Puchka thela would be my regular hunt.
Kolkata!! Oh how I miss
it. Specially the food there. I never thought I would ever feel this nostalgic
about Aamar Kolkata! Its strange how little things can suddenly put your
thinking in a completely different tangent. It was just turning my head to the
left and the sight of a normal Pani Puri thela. That was it. The entire bus
journey, I was in Kolkata.
As far as food is
concerned, well Kolkata is a non vegetarians delight. Veggies don’t crib, as
there are some options for you’ll too. Am I missing something?? Well I sure am.
It’d be a non-bailable offence if I don’t mention about Bengali sweets in this
paragraph! They are the JAAN of the bhadralok.
ROLLS :
There is one item there
which is as popular as the Vada Pav here in Mumbai. Its cousin is called “Frankie” in Mumbai. I am
talking about Rolls. You get them in a variety. Starting with my favourite, the
“double egg chicken roll” to the ghaas phoos laden vegetarian roll. This had
literally been my lunch for about a week. Rolls come in all sizes and types and
they are easily available in most parts of Kolkata. A hot favourite joint has
to be the Hot Kati Roll, bang opposite the Park Street Metro. BEST PLACE FOR
ROLLS!!
A word of caution though,
rolls are literally floating in oil whilst being cooked. So if you are a health
freak this ones definitely not for you.
SWEETS :
Bengali Sweets are like
manna from heaven. Mishti Doi, Malai cham cham, Sondesh, Rasmalai and the
evergreen Rosogulla. I have a sweet tooth and Bengali Sweets were an everyday
affair. Must have tried almost every sweet on display. Malai Cham Cham is
always going to remain a hot favourite. Followed by Rasmalai and Kesar
Rosogulla.
Recommended joints, well
cant point out any one, as each Sweet shop is worth the sweet you have. But ill
always remember the charming old world ambience of K.C.Das, opposite Esplanade
metro, and ofcourse the Radha Ballabi, which is a stuffed puri and a kinda
sweet cholar dal combination, I used to have there. Just used to love those
stuffed puris. And having a hot Radha Ballabi, in the chillingly cold January
evening was an experience in itself.
Haldirams, opposite
Rabindra Sadan metro, is another cool place to hangout and treat yourself to
delicacies ranging from sweets to chaats to what nots!! If you feel like
spending some more bucks then head to Flurrys at Park Street. The first thing that
captivates you here is the ambience, and ofcourse the mouth watering delicacies
on display. The aroma will make you wanna spend on pastries, breads etc. And if
you are an early riser, then the breakfast at Flurrys should top your priority
list. Kookie Jar is another hot favourite for dark chocolate cakes.
And last but not the
least, would make a definite mention of a sweet shop on Russell St. named Gangaur (yeah I am
advertising the place). This place used to be my breakfast joint as my office
was just a 2 mins walk from the place. A hardcore Bengali sweet lover would
never recommend such a place as it not “traditional” in the true sense of the
word, but the sweets and delicacies will force you to go that extra mile. I
still remember the first time me and my roomies had “accidentally” entered this
shop assuming Russell Street
to be Park Street,
we had spent close to 45 minutes, tasting one sweet after another, till we were
left with just enough cash to take us back to Salt Lake City.
CHAI n SHINGADA :
“Ooo Dada duto cha aar duto shingada”. This
had become an everyday mantra for me and my colleague as we headed to the tea
joint just outside our office. The speciality of the tea is the container in
which it is served. Move over cups, Kulhads (earthen cups) still rule!! The hot
steaming chai mixed with the earthen cup, would have its own unique essence. To
an outsider it may seem weird drinking tea from an earthen cup, but trust me, the
taste will be something different. I was addicted to that tea being served in
the Kulhad.
Unlike Mumbai here Kulhads are used as containers for almost every
food item imaginable. No wonder it has such a flourishing pottery industry in
Kumartuli.
And ofcourse the companion to Duto cha would most probably be Duto
Shingada ie. Two cups of chai with two samosas. Goes without saying that the
rounds were repeated twice by my colleage and thrice by me. This tea break
would actually rejuvenate us.
Recommended joints, any
street or any damn tea stall you see. Insist upon a clay cup. Plastic kulhads
are a definite no-no. And well one place I would recommend for tea would be Tea
Junction at City Centre, SaltLake. At 10 bucks you get
a chai worth every paisa you pay. It’s a cool joint with straw chairs and an
always crowded atmosphere. The cartoon painted on its walls, vintage Kolkata,
with a river of people bubbling out aamar bangla bhasha.
FISH :
Mention Bengali Cuisine
and its almost synonomous with fish. Here I got to taste a different variety of
fish. Being used to sea water fishes like Pomfret and Makarel in Mumbai, it was
quite an adventure negotiating the lake water fishes like Ilish mach (Hilsa
fish), Pabda and the very bony Rui Kalia. My roomies and me used to haunt a
place in Salt Lake City,
where in we used to get some really lip smacking fish delicacies. The Machher Jhol (curry)
accompanying Pabda mach and Dehradun Rice made a terrific combination. Rui
Kalia was a favourite as it took little time to cook, only hitch was that it
was very bony. But then for a true Bengali worth his fish, Ilish Mach is the
big boss!! Available everywhere and quite delicious too.
STREET FOOD :
Street Food!! Now coming
from Mumbai I was very well acquainted with street food. Having literally grown
up on vada pavs, bhaji pavs, grilled sandwich, bhelpuri, cutting chai, etc
here, I was well prepared to take on the Kolkata street food. But when I first saw
the street food culture here, I was shocked!! I cringed a hell lot when I first
witnessed the bhadralok eating their way to glory amidst such congested
footpaths. The cooking conditions that made even the worst vada pav carts in Mumbai look
decent enough. I was glad that I would never have to eat this food as initially
my office was in Salt Lake City,
a pretty sophisticated area, food wise.
But after a couple of
months my office had shifted in the city. Most of my colleagues were from
Kolkata itself. Lunchtime for them meant going to the nearest street food
vendor. I was cringing at the thought, but then the adventurous side of me took
over and I decided to try my hand at the Kolkata street food.
I started off with Puri
and cholar dal and slowly but surely graduated to the more filling chicken
kassas, chicken biryani, mutton masala, the works. There was no cringing
anymore. No wonder, street food in Kolkata was the unanimous choice of the
masses. It indeed tasted real!! I know most of the health freaks reading this
may be cringing at the thought, but as a street food fanatic I really
appreciated the Kolkata street
fare on offer. Moreover its easy on the pocket and filling at the same time.
Regarding recommended joints, well theres no such choice here. Just head to any street. But beware, again, not for the health concious. Karunamoyee junction in Salt Lake City, very famous place in entire Salt Lake has some good street food kinda joints. There is the very famous Jai Jawan Stall,
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