At 2am on a cold, damp weeknight, the highway that connects Washington, D.C. to its Virginia suburbs was nearly empty. I had the run of its deserted lanes as I hurtled through the darkness towards home with this single tantalizing thought on my mind – a bowl of hot rice, ghee and spicy mango pickle.
The past several
days and nights had been one unending blur at work and the next few weeks didn’t
promise any better. To add to my misery, none of the standard take-out places
around my office in Washington, D.C. offered the one quality I sought in the dinners
I was forced to eat at my desk – they were not comfort food. Not to me.
Once
home, I headed straight into the kitchen to put a pot of rice on the stove –
one cup of basmati rice rinsed clean and two cups of water in a small sauce pan.
As soon as the water came to a boil, I turned the flame nearly all the way down
and closed the pan with its tight-fitting lid. In the ten minutes it took the
rice to cook, I washed up and changed, and got the pickle and ghee jars from
the pantry.
A
gentle crackling from the base of the rice pot was the reassuring sound I’d
been longing for, the signal that the rice was perfectly cooked, soft, plump
and fluffy. I lifted the lid off, letting the steam escape and I caught a warm,
moist, starchy cloud on my face.
As
I breathed in, I felt the wrinkles on my forehead give way. The creases around
my eyelids softened and my cheeks eased back to their original stations. I
could try to describe its aroma in culinary terms, but in its swirls the steam
held the rustle of mom’s sari, it held the twinkle in dad’s eye as he told us
one of his jokes, it held my brother’s cackling laughter – all of which I’d
left behind in India. At that moment, that aroma was home.
Too
impatient to let the rice cool as it should, I scooped some up into a bowl with
a wide, nearly flat spoon (known in literal translation from Kannada, my mother
tongue, as the ‘rice hand’) I’d brought from India for that purpose.
Then,
on top of the rice, a swirl of a teaspoon of ghee, its color and bouquet
betraying its origin in butter.
Finally,
my pickle of choice, the mango pickle. A couple of teaspoons did nicely for all
of the rice in my bowl.
Chunks
of raw mango nestled in a thick sauce of oil and pickling spices. The deep red
of the chili powder (made from a special type of dried red chili prized for its
intense color, called Byadgi, native
to central India) combined with the rich yellow of the turmeric and powdered
mustard seeds to form a tint and taste all their own.
Bright
red with flecks of black. Tangy with the muted bitterness of roasted fenugreek
and asafetida. Spicy with layers of heat from the chili and the mustard. Salty.
Unmistakably
pickle.
I
held the bowl in my left hand and – in true South Indian style – dug the fingertips
of my right into the bowl, working the ghee and the pickle around and into the
rice. There is a premium on serving and eating hot food in South India, and my
fingers were proof of having lived up to that standard for years – they hardly
felt the heat of the just-cooked rice.
That
or the endorphins popping in my brain at the sight and smell of the ghee and pickle
numbed my fingers.
Aided
by the moistness of the ghee, rice and pickle came together in perfect union. The
heat of the pickle, tempered somewhat by the ghee, and the now-warm rice blazed
their way past my ravenous taste buds. Simple, starchy, buttery rice infused
with the salty, spicy, sour, slightly bitter flavors of the pickle. The mango
chunks, having marinated in the pickling spices for a good long time, provided
sudden, crunchy bursts of intense flavor.
It
was sublime.
On
any other day, late night infomercials would give me company through a bedtime
snack, but that day, with the occasional swish of a car whizzing past the house
for company, I stood barefoot in the kitchen and polished off the entire bowl.
Not for the first time, I wondered what it was
that drove me to seek this particular combination of foods in times of
distress. I didn’t bother then to press for an answer, just content in the
knowledge that for the moment all was right with the world.
It is only
recently, when dad was irretrievably lost to me, that my mind made the
connection.
Memories of dad flicker
in and out these days, the rumble of his guffaws, the way he would fling his
towel over his shoulder, his relentless haggling with the vegetable vendor, the
games he would make up for our gang of cousins and friends, his voice when he
called my name. I bounce around, in my mind, through the many homes we
lived in at various points during my childhood.
Some recollections,
however, refuse to leave, waiting patiently until I acknowledge and examine
them. One of those is of our mealtimes when we were growing up.
Dinner was the
one meal during the weekday when everyone sat together. We ate on steel plates,
in the kitchen, on the floor. All of the plates had raised edges so they could
contain the many dishes of South Indian cuisine that had the consistency of
gravy. Mine was oval in shape, my brother and parents had circular plates. Even
after all these years, when I go back to mom’s home I still reach for ‘my’
plate.
My brother or I
would lay out the plates in a circle on the floor with enough space in the
center for the containers of rice, Rasam
(a soup-like lentil and tomato dish), a vegetable curry, assorted condiments
such as pickles and spice powders, ghee, and curd (yogurt).
If dad was
particularly hungry, he would get started as soon as he sat down. He could
never resist the temptation of hot rice, ghee and pickle. He would mix them in
his plate and feed us siblings first, then mom and then himself, repeating the
cycle until mom, who would still be bustling about the kitchen trying to get
all the dishes on to the floor, was done. She would protest that she was busy but
it fell on deaf ears. Everyone would then settle down for the second course of rice
with Rasam and curry (beans, cabbage
or eggplant curries were staples), ending with rice and curd or buttermilk. Juicy family and work gossip served as an ever-present accompaniment. Dinner was a raucous affair.
It still was,
every time I traveled back to India with my own children in tow. My brother and
I would promptly revert to our roles as children and there would be at least
one re-enactment of our dinner ritual from our childhoods, complete with dad
feeding us. Over the years, the circle on the floor grew wider and noisier
with more plates and more voices. Until the loudest link in the circle was no
more.
In my own home,
in my own kitchen so far away in time and space from the kitchens of my
childhood, my bowl of rice and pickle is my ticket, the only way I know to transport
myself, in an instant, back to that circle of my childhood.
It is magic.
20 comments:
It amazes me how much simple comfort foods bring back strong memories of home, for us NRIs. It is buttermilk rice and pickle for me - and mango pickle (aavakkai) is my favorite. Good writing.
Thanks, Nithya.
What a lovely evocative piece of writing about something so simple. But it is the simple things that drive us to do the more complex things in life don't they? On another note, thanks for making me feel hungry at 6 AM when I'm up with the baby :-) I am *not* a morning person.
oh God Suj, you made me nostalgic for home and I'm not even so far from it.
Hugs.
Teary-eyed. Thanks for the lovely post.
Jawahara, I hope that's a good thing! Probably not, sounds like.
MM, thank you.
Raghava, I just took a quick peep at your site. It felt so good to read that Deepavali post all in Kannada. Please do write more. Thank you for reading.
Choxy, deleted your comment by mistake! Argh! Copying it here from comment notification: "Goosebumps Suj. Food memories from childhood are stronger than we realise, till we move away.
Hadn't realised you were blogging again. E-mailing, have nyoos. Heard you heard Sangi today :)"
Lovely post, Suj. It is the small little routine things that make home when we are far away. At my parents' home, the first course used to be menthedittu anna or uppu thuppa anna, with bits of pickle mixed in. Feel like telling dad to kalasu some for me now!!
BEV, the menthedhittu anna is totally from my husband's side of the family. :) And do ask your dad to make you some.
Missed you :) Thanks for the heart-tugging post. Keep writing more. Muah.
What a lovely post ! I enjoy the same comfort food, but its curd rice instead of ghee. And I could actually taste the stuff, as i read through your post....
Great having you back in the blogosphere again ! (And whats with the swimmer and ballet dancer ? )
Oh I know what you mean. For me, its jeera tadka dal, hot rice and mango pickle. Sadness, stress - anything negative has me reaching for that magic combination that just makes me feel better after a bite.
Welcome back Suj. You were sorely missed, especially in a particular circle <3
-Nitya
Subhs, Nitya, thank you. :) Good to be talking to you guys again, even if on a different forum.
Ugich, thank you! So good to read your comment. The swimmer and the dancer and busy with a capital 'B'! Now even I'm waiting for their term to end and for the holidays to begin.
Good to have you back Suj! Loved this piece.
Awesome article Sujatha. Could connect to this one in the way you like hot rice, pickle and miss family back home. I suggest if you live around the Vienna area, to get Amma's Mango pickle, it is simply superb!!
Poppy, thank you! It's good to be back. :)
Rashmi, we were at Amma's Kitchen on Saturday and I did get a jar of their mango pickle! I can never resist. We ran out of the one we got a few weeks ago. I agree, it is superb. :) Thanks for reading.
Sujatha,
What a lovely post! And it is so good to read your posts. My comfort food is dal-rice ghee - the typical marathi "goda" varan which takes me 15 minutes to cook and with it the mango pickle as you describe it!
Dinner back home - with papa and mumma, all the day's happenings, news, current affairs, me trying to watch my serial in between and dragging my dinner for as long as the serial was on - infuriating my mom always :-)
And I had my plate too - a circular steel one with raised edges as you describe to take care of all the varieties mom would make - curry, dry veggie, pickle, shrikhand at times, dal and roti/rice.
This post brought back so many memories - especially when you narrated about your father. I lost my father when I was 17 but his memories are still very fresh in my mind after all these years and there are days when I look for all the "tickets" that take me back to my childhood - my dal-rice is one of them :-)
GG, thanks. :) Great to see you back here. You were a baby when you lost your dad. I remember reading your posts. Mealtimes in India are quite something, aren't they? It's been so long since I ate on a steel plate on the floor.
Ah, sometimes that comfort food calms us to face what comes next. How fun to see you one here. I hope to get my blog back up and running this summer. Haven't had much to say the past year. In my personal journal either. Hope to get back on track. School ended for me last week, so trying to find out where I am.
Greetings to you Sujatha.
Oh my god, Suj, your writing! Loved this, shall be reading a few times.
Mine is paruppu, ghee and rice with brinjal curry, the way Mom makes it.
In the US student days, it was expired Maggi with eggs, the way my roommate made it. He is the gold standard on this junk food! :-D
Again, loved the writing. Waiting on the book!
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