Sunday, September 30, 2012


WEIRD FOOD.COM-(FOOD INFORMATION )

CHÍCALAS (ROASTED ANTS) FROM OAXACA;MEXICO. CHÍCALAS ARE LARGE BLACK ANTS THAT HAVE BEEN TOASTED ON A GRILL OR IN A FRYING PAN.


Chinicuiles:- Maguey worms
 Gusanos de maguey (chinicuiles) are edible caterpillars that live in the maguey and agave plants. They are considered a delicacy and are often eaten raw, toasted or crushed in a spicy red salsa.Escamoles:- Escamoles are ant lavae or eggs that are used to prepare different dishes. Seasonal and hard-to-find escamoles can go for as high as $30 to $50 a pound, and can be thought of as similar to caviar

Chapulines:-chapulines-for-sale.jpgA chapulín is a big grasshopper. You can eat a handful as a snack or enjoy then combined with other foods



COOKING LIZARDS IN MEXICO


 drinking snake blood in vietnam ,cambodia



making wine from snake:-(china)



snake and scorpion wine vietnam:-




Drinking Cobra Wine in Vietnam and china :-




Cobra heart eaten while still beating (VIETNAM) 

 

Grilled dog on the menu in Nanning China 



madhura manohara mononja china( a song sung by Indian communists praising china in 1960)

South Africa's national lottery is claiming an unlikely victim: vultures. Local people -- convinced these birds' superb eyesight gives them the gift to see the future -- are eating vulture meat to acquire the power of clairvoyance." — Robin McKie; Vulture Numbers Are Cut to the Bone; The Observer (London, UK); Jul 16, 2006. 

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

'Adukkala,' - the Kitchen

Monday, September 17, 2012

plant-based diet

Plants to the rescue

BCJ Hospital & Asha Parekh Research Centre recommends a whole plant-based diet to reverse diabetes and keep lifestyle diseases in check. Say no to animal products and oil and you're off medication too, they claim. Come September, they will start a tiffin service and cooking classes for diabetics

August 19, 2012

Mumbai
Moeena Halim

Since last year, Dr Suketu Shah, CEO, BCJ Hospital & Asha Parekh Research Centre, was desperate to rid himself of diabetes, hypertension and obesity. The three lifestyle diseases were preventing him from visiting Kailash Mansarovar, a high-altitude journey he wanted to make along with Morari Bapu, a popular spiritual leader. He had been on medication since 2007, to keep these diseases in check, but was keen on finding a permanent solution.


Nutritionists at BCJ Hospital & Asha Parekh Research Centre, Dr Rashmi Bhanushali and Dr Mahek Makhija, guide the cooks at the hospital kitchen as they make the special whole plant based diet food. Pics/Sunil Tiwari

“Last year my friend, Dr Nandita Shah, introduced me to Dr Neal Barnard’s book on reversing diabetes. I tried it. The results were amazing. In about four months, I had reversed my diabetes, hypertension and obesity. For the first time in five years my body index, sugar, Hb1Ac, cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure levels were in the normal range, without medication. I felt very energetic. I could successfully accomplish my dream of going to Kailash. Even a year later now, my reports are still normal. I have also lost 22 kg,” reveals Dr Shah.

So impressed was he with the results that he decided to introduce it to patients at the hospital’s Lifestyle Medical Centre, which was set up in June 2012. The programme is a combination of a whole plant-based diet and routine exercise (especially walking).

“It was cheap, easy and beneficial, and could either eliminate medication entirely or keep its requirement low, so I decided to introduce people to it at the centre through various ways such as cooking classes, seminars and a tiffin service.” he explains. The centre began recommending the diet to patients in June this year. While the patients admitted at the hospital are offered the diet food, they are not forced, he adds.


Red rice idlis are served for breakfast at BCJ Hospital & Asha Parekh Research Centre

More than vegan
Nutritionists Dr Mahek Makhija and Dr Rashmi Bhanushali, armed with books that Dr Shah passed on to them, had the tough task of Indianising the recipes for the centre and its patients. The diet, similar to the vegan diet, allows no animal products — so no milk, cheese or curd and obviously no meat. “This is because Insulin like Growth Factor (IGF) is found in dairy products which is similar in structure to insulin that takes the place of insulin on the receptors. According to Dr Neal Barnard, fat is the cause of all diseases, which is why all fat is eliminated from the meal. No oil is used while cooking, and no animal fat is consumed,” explains Dr Makhija.

“There are a lot of alternatives and once you get used to this way of eating, you don’t miss these ingredients. For instance, instead of milk we recommend soy milk or peanut milk,” says Dr Makhija, while Dr Bhanushali nods in agreement. Both doctors have introduced their families to this diet too. “Although our children are young and don’t suffer from lifestyle diseases yet, following this diet will prevent them from getting diabetes or hypertension when they’re older,” explains Dr Makhija.

Who said diet food was boring?
The doctors have been working closely with the cooks in the hospital kitchen. Together, they cook up some pretty creative dishes. From red rice idlis for breakfast to idli open sandwiches as a starter at lunch, the diet food seems far from boring. The doctors have also managed to find a replacement for chhaas — peanut milk chaas. “For the recipe, you’ll have to come visit our clinic,” laughs Dr Bhanushali. “We don’t just tell our patients what to eat, we also tell them how they can cook these foods. We give them recipes,” she adds.

The doctors also plan to start cooking classes for diabetics in September. “Ideally, we’d like couples to attend, so the spouse will know how to care for his/ her diabetic partner,” says Dr Makhija. While deciding on a menu, the doctors are careful to create a balanced meal. “The body requires a certain amount of oil and we ensure we provide that amount. For instance, we use whole peanuts or suggest the use of olives instead of olive oil,” informs Dr Makhija. They also suggest eating fruits and veggies whole — without peeling them. “An advantage of the diet is that diabetics don’t have to restrict their intake of fruits. We can eat as much whole carbohydrates as we wish and diabetes will still be reversed,” adds Dr Bhanushali.

Take-away tiffins
For the convenience of patients who are too busy to cook, the centre has also started a tiffin service. The food, which is prepared in the hospital canteen’s kitchen, is doled out in plastic bags for the moment and has to be picked up from the hospital. “We will start a delivery service once we have 100 customers,” says Dr Makhija.

The service isn’t limited to patients of the hospital — anyone can buy the tiffin. However, each patient’s diet has to be tailor-made, the doctors explain. “We need to know a person’s medical history before we start giving them a tiffin. For instance, we wouldn’t give a patient suffering from thyroid soy milk because it is harmful for him,” says Dr Makhija. The doctors offer the tiffin service (which is currently lunch-only) once the relevant tests are conducted, for Rs 150 per meal. Although they recommend it primarily to diabetics, the diet also helps patients with other lifestyle diseases such as high blood pressure and obesity.

Missing milk
For 53 year-old Sapna Sabani, a patient at BCJ Hospital & Asha Parekh Research Centre, sticking to the diet was quite a challenge for the first month. “I was a milk lover and enjoyed drinking chai. I used to miss it a lot, but now I’ve become a green tea drinker,” says Sabani, who has been suffering from diabetes for the past 15 years. “Another challenge has been to cook vegetables without using oil. Veggies like bhindi and cauliflower just don’t taste the same, so I avoid those,” she adds. But it is worth it, she insists, because for the first time in all these years her sugar levels have fallen. “I’m still on medication and take insulin injections, but it has only been three months and I am hoping to get better.”

Good, but challenging
Keen on getting another perspective, we met Dr Hira Mahajan, an independent nutritionist, to ask for her opinion. We took her a tiffin prepared at the centre, comprising palak-corn bhaji, missal, sprouts salad, chapatti, red rice pulao and soya tikkis, and she enjoyed the food. “Not only is it delicious, it is also a very well-balanced meal,” said Dr Mahajan. Although she was impressed by the diet, she understood that most people might find it difficult to turn vegan and not use oil. She sees no harm in milk products and suggests a katori of curd with every meal

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Bun lovers, take note

SUMANTO MONDAL
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  • Crazy choice: Chetty's Corner has 25 different items with a bun base, catering to every taste. Photo: Karan Ananth
    The Hindu Crazy choice: Chetty's Corner has 25 different items with a bun base, catering to every taste. Photo: Karan Ananth
  • The biggest crowd-pullers at Sri Ramakrishna Fast Food are the dosas. Photo: Karan Ananth
    The Hindu The biggest crowd-pullers at Sri Ramakrishna Fast Food are the dosas. Photo: Karan Ananth
  • Always abuzz: Gullu's Chaat is a family-run business that originated in the early 1950s as a simple cart. Photo: Karan Ananth
    The Hindu Always abuzz: Gullu's Chaat is a family-run business that originated in the early 1950s as a simple cart. Photo: Karan Ananth

At the end of a hard day’s work, there is nothing better than some food to satisfy the soul rather than the dietician — in keeping with this tradition, the residents of Kumara Park take their evening snack pretty seriously. The fast food culture in the area has progressed steadily over the years, with the rise of eateries such as Gullu’s Chaat and Chetty’s Corner competing to churn out their unique takes on fast food, and people from in and around have been the biggest beneficiaries, says Sumanto Mondal.

Gullu’s Chaat

A family-run business that originated in the early 1950s as a simple cart, Gullu’s Chaat is one of the few acclaimed chaat shops in the city, having been recognised by many sections of the media. Jeetu, the current proprietor, says, “we are here because of our customers.”

Having been at its present location on Serpentine Street for the past 23 years, this place pioneered the concept of U.P.-style chaats in the area while becoming a haunt for students, residents and celebrities alike.

With more than a couple of dozen types of chaats, the most popular is their trademark pani puri: not claiming to be made with mineral water, it strikes a perfect balance to impress all palates. Their unique boondi-based masala puri is a must-try. Working on all days of the week between 11 a.m. and 10 p.m., this joint is always abuzz, particularly in the evenings, and if you don’t know how to find it…just ask around!

Chetty’s Corner

A first-of-its-kind fast food joint, Chetty’s Corner has been revolutionising the idea of fast food in the area for the past 15 years. For a first-timer, the names of the items here might sound bizarre, but a combination of some the most unlikely items are presented in perfect harmony. Take, for instance, the “Bun Nippat Cheese”, which takes the humble Karnataka snack to new heights, or the “Bun Butter Nut” which uses simple spiced peanuts along with other toppings to create a snack that really packs a crunch.

All the items here are cleverly crafted by its proprietors, brothers Vinod and Anil Chetty, whose mother always gave them free hand to assemble snacks in their own unconventional style.

The place has 25 different items with a bun base, catering to every taste. Another unique dish is the “Sandwich Pizza”, available in about 15 varieties, the most popular being the special veggie. All the items available here are enhanced by the range of “Masala Cold Drinks” — one can choose any soft drink, which will then be spiced up with a secret mix. Another interesting beverage is the Nanari herbal drink, supposedly a blood purifier.

The most important policy of the proprietors here is not to pinch pockets; with every item in the range of Rs. 10 to Rs. 45, Chetty’s Corner is every foodie’s dream.

Sri Ramakrishna Fast Food

A more conventional restaurant, this place has been around for over two decades now. Serving mainly the office-going crowd from in and around, Sri Ramakrishna Fast Food has come to be a regular ‘adda’ for many who come down for a quick bite or a relaxing coffee.

The biggest crowd-pullers here are the dosas that are made on a cooking station placed right at the entrance of this single-shutter joint. One doesn’t have to wait long as the dosas are made in batches of eight, and are served up in no time at all. One can be sure of perfectly-done dosas that can be enjoyed at any time of the day. They come in three varieties — plain dosa, onion dosa and benne (butter) dosa, all of which are worth a try. The place is also frequented for its excellent tea and coffee, and sells ‘shunti coffee’, which claims to be of medicinal value.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Just desserts!

Vasundhara Chauhan
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Batter-fried prawn. Photo: R.M. Rajarathinam
Batter-fried prawn. Photo: R.M. Rajarathinam
GOURMET FILESIdeal sea food in Delhi? None still….
Back in the day, Dilliwalas had to travel as far as at least Bombay to eat seafood. There were fish and seafood shops, but seafood-specific restaurants were few: Sridharan’s in Gole Market, Babu Moshai etc. in Chitto Park — again freshwater.
Then came Fishermen’s Wharf, which unfortunately downed shutters before it got a chance; Swagath, which serves all manner of food, not necessarily from the sea; and Ploof! whose menu smartly included other food, but that too gave up the brave attempt in a few years and changed to a delicatessen.
In the meanwhile we’d all been to Mumbai’s Apurva, Mahesh Lunch Home, Trishna, Sindhu Durg, Ecellensea, Gajalee and many others, all memorable. And bemoaned our Capital Punishment: The lack of cheap fine dining, fresh seafood and coastal spices. Well, the sea was far away and the cold chain was suspect, so what could you do but hope for a trip to Mumbai soon. Then, recently, there was this buzz about Trishna opening here, in the shadow of the Qutub Minar, just as one enters Mehrauli and the enclave of Indian designer boutiques and fine restaurants like Azimuth and Olive.
Twice friends made plans to eat there and I resisted, successfully — without having been there, I was apprehensive. But last night I had to bow to democracy, confess to not having a real reason, and go, As Bunty said on the phone this morning when I reported on last night’s dinner, I coulda-toldya; sitting here in Nizamuddin, I coulda-toldya.
First, it was, after the trashy approach, very swish: Japanese pebble garden, frangipani tree, gazebos, “air-conditioning” and white table linen. Not like the original Mumbai branch, with its laminated table-tops and paper napkins, but even there they all have “family” sections with the same pretensions.
Starters
It was over 40°, so at first I thought the air-conditioner was having a difficult time, but I asked the maître de and he said that someone had switched off the unit inadvertently and he quickly fixed it. It was Saturday night, we were six, and only one other table was occupied. Later two more women came in. We ordered fried Koliwada prawns to start with, and Kim, the vegetarian among us, asked for a vegetable hot and sour soup. That immediately vindicated the vast menu. I had been telling myself to not be an inverted snob, to stop looking for simple, integrated menus, and here was proof of why Trishna had stretched itself to Chinese and Tandoori Paneer: After all, what is a vegetarian going to eat as a starter? Someone asked Kim how her soup was and she smiled inscrutably. I, not so well-bred, asked pointedly: “Hot water and vinegar?” She said, “Umm… with some sliced mushrooms.”
The prawns had been shrink-fried and were small, brown and crisp. The masala was standard, unremarkable. I had decided on my way there to eat fish we don’t get easily in Delhi. Crabs and lobsters are available for a price, pomfret is good but ho-hum, but rawas, bombil (Bombay duck) and ladyfish there is none. But even in Trishna, bombil and ladyfish there was none. I asked for my rawas to be shallow fried with a casing of rawa — to avoid confusion, I said “sooji”, “semolina”. No, they said, they didn’t do rawa-fried rawas or rawa-fried anything. But they recommended the Hyderabadi Rawas tikka enthusiastically. It came and was okay, like fish tikka made with any fresh fish, it could just as well have been sole. Coastal… I’m not so sure if they use tandoors in Malwadi or Koliwadi cooking.
I asked if they had any vegetables, so the waiter suggested matar-methi-malai. Yes, it was N.I (north Indian), and yes, they did have coastal vegetables, namely vegetable ghassi. Ghassi is a curry with specific flavours, but which were the vegetables they’d used in it? While the waiter pondered, I ventured cauliflower-potato-carrot and he nodded gratefully. There was no choice, so we had it. Thick brown gravy, which I suspect they cook by the cauldronful in the morning and feed to unsuspecting Northies all day. Not that our stomachs suffered, despite the fact that we also had the rawas ghassi. Same gravy, shredded fish. They had appams, but most of us had neer dosai, which were soft but a little bit too stretchy.
And we ordered dal “kolhapuri”, which could be identified as arhar, tuvar. To my mind, names like Kolhapuri mean nothing — it’s as illuminating as saying chicken “Punjabi” or roti “Uttar Pradeshi”. But the nomenclature would have been irrelevant had the food been good.
People who’ve been to the Mumbai Trishna rave about the Crab Butter Garlic, and religiously order it here. My own exposure to expensive seafood is limited, but I still have a view. Meat as sweet and delicate as crab should be left alone to speak for itself, without suffocating it in the thick, viscous purée of garlic and butter that has become so popular. Just boiled, with salt and pepper and a squeeze of lime is perfect; anything else is crass. But it sells — at many thousand rupees — so why shouldn’t they cook it ad nauseum? Yet the poor show-out made me wonder whether Trishna, in its attempt to cater to the Northie, has fallen between two stools. Because the food is neither good coastal nor would a card-carrying Dilliwala go there to eat butter chicken or chow mien. So who is it for?
YETTI GHASSI
Karnataka Prawn Curry
Serves 4
To be ground to a paste:
1 tbsp tamarind pulp
1/2 coconut grated
1 1/2 tsp turmeric powder
8 cloves garlic
8 red chillies, roasted
2 tbsp coriander seeds, roasted
1 tbsp peppercorn, roasted
1/2 tsp cumin seeds
1/4 tsp fenugreek seeds, roasted
1/2 onion, chopped.
2 tbsp coconut oil
1 onion, finely chopped
Salt
500 g shelled, headless, deveined prawns
Dilute spice paste to pouring consistency by adding 500 ml water. Pour coconut oil in a kadhai (wok) and sauté the chopped onion until brown. Add the spice paste and salt. When the mixture comes to a boil, lower heat and simmer for five minutes.
Add the prawns and cook on low heat till done, about five minutes.

Fry-up or not

Vasundhara Chauhan
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HUNKY OR MASHED?: Potatoes are the most versatile.
HUNKY OR MASHED?: Potatoes are the most versatile.
GOURMET FILES Enjoying oats or moong for breakfast ensures health, but hi-calorie indulgence is an option too.
It is actually the breaking of a fast — the gap between dinner and breakfast can go up to 12 hours. So usually I’m famished, and all I have to look forward to is fruit and some artery-cleansing health food like oats or sprouts. Even poha, unless of unpolished rice, or sabudana, are low residue and useless. Unfortunately my household doesn’t run to fresh idli or roti at the crack of dawn, so that leaves me with rabbit food and, on a lucky day, kala chana.
Poached eggs
But while I get ablutions out of the way, there’s no tax or raised triglyceride count on dreaming, so I think about puffy, golden three-egg cheese omelettes made in butter; poached eggs steamed in my parents’ special pan, which prevents the eggs from touching the water, but encourages you to add butter to the little steel egg-cups; and my “world best” favourite, two fried eggs, sunny side up, served serially and not together.
Sometimes the fantasy has variations. Bacon on the side, four rashers with melting fat and a chewy rind (where has that gone? No brand I’ve bought in the last 20 years has rind. Is it some kind of reconstituted?), fried so that it isn’t all crisp and crumbly. Or fat English breakfast pork sausages, bursting out of their casing and sizzling and sputtering even as they reach the table. Grilled half tomatoes, home-made baked beans, mushrooms and onions are optional add-ons and not integral to the vision, because those we’re allowed to eat anyway.
Inviting aroma
What happens while I’m dreaming on is that I smell another breakfast being cooked. Parathas. The cook likes them, so before I get to my virtuous, multi-coloured breakfast of kiwi fruit, watermelon, mango and papaya, or apples, pears and oranges, I’m forced to endure the aroma of atta being fried and to imagine it turning golden brown as it crisps. When he’s short of time he fries bread — but he’s healthy, so it’s multi-grain — in a wide puddle of oil and butter. The good part of that is that it smells wonderful — I’ve forgotten the pleasure of its taste — but the downside is the thick patina of annealed grease on the tawa, to remove which it takes a chisel and a harangue from this tetchy, deprived, fruit-eating old bat. Part of the sharpness comes from sheer deprivation because parathas are another favourite high on the disapproved-of list, but of those, another time.
So though the savoury component of breakfast is usually oats or a whole lentil, I’ve learnt to like the moong option. Dressed properly, it’s quite delicious. But once in a blue moon, there’s nothing like a fry-up.
FRITTATA
Serves 4
1 tbsp vegetable oil
1 potato, chopped small
8 eggs
Salt
Pepper
1 red bell pepper, chopped fine
2 tbsp butter
Heat oil and butter in a large heavy bottomed frying pan with heatproof handle. Lower heat and sauté potatoes. Meanwhile beat eggs till light and fluffy. Whisk in a teaspoon of water (to prevent a burnt or “eggy” smell), salt and pepper. Stir in the chopped bell pepper. Add butter to cooked potatoes and pour in the egg mixture. Cook over medium heat till bottom is set. Cover and continue till cooked through and bottom is slightly browned. If the centre is still soft, grill under medium heat, for about five minutes.
HASH BROWNED POTATOES
Serves 4
4-6 medium potatoes
Salt
Pepper
1/2 tsp red chilli flakes (optional)
Green stems of four spring onions
1 tbsp vegetable oil
Boil potatoes, making sure they are barely cooked, not soft. Grate coarsely and add salt and pepper. Chop spring onion greens into narrow one inch strips and mix with potatoes. Heat oil in cast iron skillet. Shape potato mixture into loose balls — do not compress tightly. Flatten and lower gently on to hot skillet. When the bottom browns slightly, turn over with metal spatula and cook other side. Serve hot when both sides are golden brown.
GREEN MOONG SABUT
Serves 2
1/2 cup sabut moong (mung bean, green gram)
Salt
1/4 tsp haldi (turmeric), optional
1/2 tsp oil
1/2 tsp sarson, mustard seeds
10-12 leaves curry patta
2 green chillies, seeded and cut into 1/2 inch diagonals
Juice of 1 lime
1 tsp sugar syrup (optional)
2 tsp grated coconut
Wash and soak moong sabut overnight in a large pan of water. In the morning, drain, rinse and boil. In a pan, add 1 cup water, salt and haldi. Boil till done, taking care to not let it get mushy. If water remains, drain out and discard. In a small frying pan, heat oil and sauté mustard till it splutters. Add curry leaves and turn off heat. Stir in green chillies. Add contents of pan to boiled moong and stir to combine. Cool dal mixture and mix in lime juice, sugar and grated coconut. Chill in refrigerator and serve.
GRILLED MUSHROOMS WRAPPED IN BACON
Serves 4
12 large mushrooms
12 rashers bacon
Wash and wipe mushrooms, retaining stems. Slice off any blackened bits. Wind one rasher of bacon around each mushroom, securing with a toothpick. Heat heavy bottomed pan. Do not add oil or salt. Place mushrooms-wrapped-in-bacon carefully in pan, in a single layer. Heat till bacon changes colour where it is touching the pan. Using tongs, turn each parcel so that uncooked sides come into contact with hot pan. Press down with tongs or metal spatula to ensure cooking and browning. When all sides are looking cooked and brown, remove to drain on absorbent kitchen paper towel. Serve hot.

Toast

Vasundhara Chauhan
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Dry or buttered, decorated with a topping or grilled, a slice of bread can inspire.
Beans on toast, eggs on toast, tea and toast… “Toast, as everyone in Britain knows, is made by placing a slice of bread in front of dry heat… until the surface browns and gives off an attractive smell.” (Alan Davidson, The Oxford Companion to Food.) We don’t need definitions because, like “everyone in Britain”, we know what toast is.
It is a standard part of a proper English breakfast — whichever continent it is eaten on — and “the true toast addict is fussy about its preparation, choosing day-old baker’s bread to make it, and insisting it is eaten as soon as ready, for good toast must be consumed whilst hot. It is the smell of toast, and the sensations of the hot crunchy outside of the bread combined with the soft inner crumb and melted butter, that makes it so appealing. Left to go cold, it becomes leathery and loses its aroma.” (Ibid) In effect, “it’s toast”. Because to be toast means to be (or be likely to become) finished, defunct, or dead. As in “one mistake and you’re toast” or “if my boss hears of this, I’m toast”.
Over the centuries, England has seen toast, then called “tost” being eaten as a sop (a piece of bread, preferably toasted, used to mop up soup or other liquids), until now, when toast-with-a-topping is routine. In the 16th century, meat toppings became popular; sometimes sweetened, as in kidneys, eggs, sugar and flavourings; and sometimes savoury. Towards the end of that century, toppings we now consider the norm became common: Poached eggs, buttered (or scrambled) eggs, ham or bacon, melted cheese. All of these are associated with toast, as are beans, sardines and marmalade. But in India, we have made it our own; we have more: Bombay toast, Bombay toast sandwich, and rusks, differentiated as “cake” rusk and “toss” rusk” where “toss” presumably means toast, and is harder and less sweet than the “cake” type.
Tossed!
Bombay — or should we now call it Mumbai — toast is a version of French toast, and a Bombay toast sandwich is what in some Delhi circles is called a “patty”: A toasted sandwich. Anita the cruel once affected innocence and asked a colleague, eyes opened wide in awe, how she had had the time to make flaky pastry before reporting to work at the crack of dawn. Because that poor ignoramus had said that she’s made “patties” for the family’s breakfast. Of course Anita knew what she’d meant: Some vegetable leftovers (or mashed and spiced potatoes) sandwiched in sliced white bread, buttered and toasted (or grilled) in that wonderful tongs-like appliance, a “tasty toast” maker.
French Toast, pain perdu, literally, “lost bread” is a dessert and consists of slices of stale bread soaked in milk, dipped in eggs beaten with sugar, then lightly fried in butter. It is served hot and crisp. According to the Larousse Gastronomique it was originally intended to use up crusty and leftover pieces of bread, and today is made with brioche or milk bread and served with custard cream, jam or compote. In France it was formerly called pain crotté, pain à la romaine, or croûtes dorées.
In India it is often served for breakfast, only sometimes sweet. Savoury, it is made with salt instead of sugar, finely chopped onions, green chillies and fresh coriander.
FRENCH TOAST
Serves 4
2 cups milk
Half vanilla pod or 1/2 tsp vanilla essence
1/2 cup sugar
250g stale brioche (or milk bread), cut into thick slices
2 eggs, beaten well
2-3 tsp caster sugar
1/2 cup butter
Boil milk with vanilla and sugar. Leave to cool. Soak cut bread in cooled milk, only long enough to wet thoroughly without falling apart. Stir a spoon of sugar into beaten egg. In a heavy-bottomed skillet, heat butter. Meanwhile dip bread in egg-sugar mixture, then fry in hot butter. When golden on one side, turn over gently and fry other side till cooked, crisp and golden. Arrange bread slices in a round dish, dust over with remaining caster sugar, and serve hot with cream, cream custard, jam or stewed fruit.
CROQUE-MONSIEUR
Serves 2
This toast dish combines all the usual toppings, and is very similar to Welsh rarebit (or rabbit) but with added ham.
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
1 cup whole milk
Pinch of ground nutmeg
1 bay leaf
4 slices firm white sandwich bread
4 thin slices Black Forest ham
150 g sliced Gruyère cheese
1 tbsp melted butter
1/4 cup grated Gruyère cheese
2 teaspoons chopped fresh chives
Melt two tbsp butter in small saucepan over medium heat. Add flour and stir one minute. Gradually whisk in milk. Add nutmeg and bay leaf. Increase heat to medium-high and boil until sauce thickens, whisking constantly, about two minutes.
Season with salt and pepper and keep aside. Preheat grill. Place two bread slices on work surface. Top each with half of ham and sliced Gruyère. Top with remaining bread. Heat heavy large skillet over low heat. Brush sandwiches with one tbsp melted butter. Add to skillet and cook until deep golden brown, about two minutes per side. Transfer to small metal baking sheet. Spoon sauce, then grated cheese over sandwiches. Grill until cheese begins to brown, about two minutes.
(Processed cheese is not a great substitute, but does when you’re strapped.
A variation is the croque-madame (or, in Normandy, a croque-cheval), with a fried egg on top.)