Saturday, February 7, 2015

FOOD SPECIAL ...................... Sweet, Sour and Spicy


Sweet, Sour and Spicy



The famous Goan cuisine is steeped in history dating back to
 centuries and has a dash of religion, too

Xacutti. Recheado. Xeque xeque. Ambot tik. Feijoada. Sorpotel. 
Never before have I been so semantically food stumped. 
Amidst the whiff of coconut, the hiss of an oven and 
the sizzle in a wok inside Goa Marriott Resort & Spa's colos sal kitchen, 
I was faltering with inflexion and diphthong of typical Goan dishes.
“It is spelt with `x' but xacutti is pro nounced shacuti. It stems from
 Portu guese chacuti,“ Rajdeep Singh, chef de cuisine, was being 
my pronunciation master for the day. “Recheado in Portu guese 
means `stuffed' and sorpotel is lit erally `confusion' in Portuguese.
“ Every thing was getting lost in translation. I immediately clung 
to sorpotel. Not the dish sorpotel. But the noun! I really was 
confused; that moment in Marriott, Goan food was a mish-mash 
in my head like the sorpotel which is a muddle of pork heart, liver 
and pork blood.
Executive chef Anupam Gulati stepped in. Not with recipes. 
With histo ry, instead. The Portuguese introduced chilli, potato, 
tomato and pineapple to India, reigned over Goa for nearly 400
 years and rustled a new cuisine for the locals. Kinda. The Portuguese
 shunned yeast and introduced palm toddy as a fermentation essential;
 vinegar a must keep, pao an everyday breakfast and cut lery acquired
 a customary stance -knife on the right, fork on the left, spoon in front.
 Pork and beef were luxuries for the rich new converts and the Anglo
 Portuguese Treaty of 1878 gave the locals a taste of tea and coffee. 
The decree of Afonso de Albuquerque, Goa's conqueror, permitting 
mixed marriages between Portuguese men and local women, melded 
the ancient Hindu cuisine with traditional Portuguese Christian food.
That balmy October afternoon, in the bustle of a five-star kitchen, 
history was being rustled. Suddenly, Anupam's voice was drowned 
in the whirr of a grinding machine. Jecinta Fernandes (everyone 
calls her Aunty) was roasting cloves, fat fennel, red chillies, pepper 
corns, fenugreek, scraped coconut, ginger and garlic in a flat wok 
to make the perfect xacutti masala. Every alternate day, Aunty 
walks into Goa Marriott, ties a black white striped apron, fixes the 
toque, measures the spices, switches on the automated 10kg capacity
 grinder and churns the xacutti masala for two hours. Non-stop.Two
 hours continuously? I dropped a jaw. “That's to make the masala really
 smooth,“ Aunty put it simply. “Spices for peri-peri take longer. 
Three hours, at least,“ Aunty added hastily. She'd know best. Call her 
Goa Marriott's spice headmistress.
It was in the clatter of the grinding machine that Anupam's voice 
faded and my Goan food history lesson ended. Abruptly. And a lavish 
meal was laid in the Waterfront restaurant which sits coquettishly by the
 Arabian Sea. On the banana leaf was poi (whole wheat bread, hollow inside and dusted with bran), sannas (spongy rice cakes; almost like idli); pao (Goan bread); cafreal (spicy chicken dish); balchao (curry made with shrimp paste), 
xacutti and a bowl of Goan brown rice called ukade. So much? I 
 marvelled. It could feed a hungry town. “There's dodol and bebinca 
as dessert.“ Rajdeep tempted me with those melt-in-mouth layered 
bebinca which is a modified version of bibingka made in Malaysia, 
the Philippines and Indonesia.God forgot to pack a sweet tooth for me but as the salty breeze flirted with my long hair, I almost defied the meal protocol -I wanted to have the 16-layered bebinca first which was named after Sister Bebiana 
who accidentally invented the dessert. Or so the story goes.
I stuck to the meal protocol. In the main course, I was eyeing the 
xacutti; its gravy fiery red. The original Portuguese xacutti is dark 
brown (`chacuti' literally is dark brown in Portuguese) but the Goan 
 xacutti is bright red. The xacutti spices include freshly roasted coconut,
 dry red chilli, cumin and mustard seeds, cloves, green cardamom and 
palm jaggery. To get the perfect xacutti, Rajdeep walked into local 
homes to pick the secret of the best xacutti in town. 
In a xacutti-making cook-off, an old Goan woman ran away with 
the trophy. Her trick: To add freshly ground coconut and coriander 
just before serving. Trust me, this xacutti could satiate a hungry god.
I am not sure about the gods but satiated in the green red upholstered 
Waterfront restaurant, I returned to questions. And to the Portuguese 
reign (1510 1961), when many traditional food habits were discarded, new ones added and recipes modified to suit the needs of the rulers and the ruled. Not surprisingly, religion stepped into the kitchen. While the new Christian 
converts took to using vinegar for taste and as preservative, the Hindus 
and Muslims never used vinegar in cooking. While the Christians used
 tomatoes by the dozen to make scrumptious dishes such as
 tomatieache bhaji, chillifries, curries, Goan stew, there was no 
tomato in a Hindu household until second half of the 20th century. 
History tells us that it was a typhoid epidemic that compelled Hindus 
to eat tomatoes -typhoid patients were prescribed cod liver oil. 
The taste was so unpleasant that the doctors advised mixing cod 
liver oil with tomato juice. That's how tomatoes entered the Hindu
 kitchen! That October night, curled in the Room 215, I dreamt 
I was a Goa Marriott chef -a black white apron around my waist, 
a crisp toque as a crown and countless errand boys scraping, 
grating, cutting, chopping and slicing ingredients for a lavish 
Christmas meal. The Xa cutti masala simmering in a wok, cafreal 
spices getting smoothened in the grinding machine, egg yolks 
beaten fluffy, red chillies shrivelling in smoking hot oil; coconut milk 
and jaggery blending for the dodol, the pao puffing proudly in the oven.
The guest list: Angels were trooping down from heaven. Suddenly,
a shriek tore through the kitchen. I had lost the bebinca recipe. 
I woke up startled. I rubbed sleep -and dream -off my eyes. 
Reality returned. Anupam Gulati, Rajdeep Singh and Aunty
were in the kitchen layering a perfect bebinca.
I waited by the door. Greedily.


Preeti Verma Lal
 ETM1FEB15

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