Thursday, April 18, 2013

Restaurant review:



After a long day at work with busy schedules I headed to Bandra Kurla’s famous hot spot; Yauatcha, which recently celebrated its 1st birthday; is a haven for food aficionados, offering Modern Cantonese cuisine and a wide array of international tea’s menu to Mumbai’s High end section....


There is more to this restaurant than just remarkably fresh good food…....


For all foodies out there, Renaissance Mumbai Convention Centre hotel is hosting special Arabian cuisine at Lake View Cafe this month. ....


Vile Parle's Irla lane offers some interesting versions of Indian snacks.....


When we came to know that Fat Cat Café is now under a new management and has been re-launched as At Fat Cat- Bar & Bistro, we decided to check this place out.....


Give your regular cocktails a makeover and create a new drink. ....


Tender coconut water has been declared as Kerala's official drink recently. So here are some awesome tender coconut water combos and get set to experiement.....


With Ramzaan going on, Executive Sous Chef Rahul Dhavale of The Westin Mumbai Garden City gives us two recipes to relish on. ....


Dolcemente Italia, which recently opened its first outlet in the city, is the new entrant in the world of healthy flavoured yogurt and creative deserts with an Italian twist.....


Chef Amit Chaudhary of Corniche, a high end restaurant in Bandra, tells us three easy-to-cook corn recipes to relish during monsoons.....


It offers Cantonese cuisine and has tried to introduce the international tea drinking culture with their special Afternoon Tea menu.....


The hotel offers a Sunday brunch with unlimited food and beverages and one spa treatment priced at Rs 1111.....


Mumbai Mirror Online decided to visit the newly opened restaurant Jyran which offers Nawabi cuisine.....


Pinky Vodka, with its mild hint of berries, is serious vodka like any other.
....


Here are the recipes of some simple ye easy to make wine cocktails.....


Global Desi Tadka, a chain restaurant from Ahmedabad, is the perfect new joint for family outings that has sprung up in the western suburbs.....


These combos replenish nutrients that the body loses during the day and nourishes it with antioxidants.....


Curl up on the sofa and start sipping...here's how to brew the most flavourful and aromatic teas this season.
....


A review on 2 month old city restaurant 'Kazan'.....


Bartenders add fun and zing to drinks by giving them an Indian twist!....

       20 years in the baking
Oven Fresh, that Shivaji Park oddity, turns 20 this year. The Mehta men tell us how they’ve stuck their ground

Oven Fresh was born out of simple Gujarati canniness. The Mehtas own the building where it stands, and in the early 90s, when the ground floor tenants moved away, Jagat Mehta wondered how he’d put the space to use. “I realised that when people craved a pastry, they had to go to a five-star (restaurant),” says the chartered accountant. That’s how the idea of opening a bakery-cum eatery that served puffs, cakes and breads was born. “And khaari,” pipes in Ronak, Jagat’s son, who enrolled in a bakery course at Dadar catering college, while his brother Deepak, was given charge of anchoring backend operations.

Born in 1993, Oven Fresh is an oddity in its location. Dadar is not a restaurant district. The few eateries that exist (Prakash Lunch Home, Gomantak) have a distinct Maharashtrian tilt. Fastfood MNCs like McDonald’s have stayed away. “People said I was going to drown my savings,” says Jagat. “When the oven arrived, they thought it was a safe and that I was opening a jewellery showroom, like a dutiful Gujarati. They wondered why the safe had a window!”

The oven became the star of the show. “Everything in the restaurant is made inhouse - the breads, the pizza base, the sandwich buns. I wanted patrons to see it emerge fresh from the oven, which is why the kitchen is at the centre, encased in glass walls,” he explains.

College kids started dropping in for a puff, and a curiously populated menu was pasted behind the cash counter in case you wanted to order while you waited for a table. Which you very often did. There was Chinese, Italian, Mexican and fast food, apart from the danishes and pastries.

But in the last three years, the restaurant has been inching towards sophistication. Gone are the syrupy soda floats. The menu has been chiselled to select flavour pairings within Continental and Mediterranean cuisine. The stir fries and house special nachos remain, but a tortellini with mascarpone in paprika orange butter sauce has moved next door. “We’ve moved away from artificial, sugary flavouring,” says Ronak, “and now source single origin chocolates, vegetables and other ingredients directly from their native countries. Everything is light on the palate.” They use an extra-dry French butter that doesn’t retain moisture, so the croissants are crisp.

The shift is subtle, and not advertised. The service (crockery and cutlery) is more flamboyant and the portions, a wee bit smaller. But Ronak doesn’t take it upon himself to educate his guests. “Our fondue always used gruyere cheese. People would take two bites and leave it. But when they ordered the same thing elsewhere, they realised that they were eating a plain cheddar cheese sauce, and recognised the difference,” he says proudly.

And yet, the price of a dish hardly touches Rs 400. “It’s because we don’t pay rent,” offers Jagat. “And we don’t offer frills - no valet parking, credit cards or home delivery. It sounds proud when we refuse, but we want to keep it simple.”

And they have no branches. “There are Parisian patisseries that have stayed put in the same place for 300 years,” Ronak says by way of comparison. “We’re only 20 years old. In the next few years, several international celebrity chefs are going to open restaurants in Mumbai. We have to be able to continue business in the face of this competition.”

The other adamant decision has been to turn and remain vegetarian. Old timers get nostalgic about the chicken burger, which they served till 2005. “We’re Jains, and when my late wife was very ill, she got sentimental. It was her wish that we stop serving non-vegetarian food, and we did over night,” says Jagat.

Deepak is the official taster, as are regular patrons. “We make small samples and ask guests whether they’d like to try them,” says Ronak. Deepak likes everything on the menu, “because everything passes through me, literally.” Jagat could be speaking for his locality when he says, “I grew up in Shivaji Park, so if you gave me a choice between a spicy misal and pasta, I’d choose the first.”




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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Pithas, larus sell like hotcakes in Guwahati

GUWAHATI: Traditional Assamese delicacies are selling like hotcakes on the eve of RongaliBihu in city markets. Though pithas (pancakes) and larustop the list, curd and rice procured from the villages are also in demand among Assamesefamilies settled in the city.

On Rongali Bihu, every Assamese family will dish out traditional pithas and larus to guests, a practice which continues for several days. "My family is here to buy pithas, larus and curd made from buffalo milk. All food items here are brought directly from the villages and are fresh. So, we are enjoying our time though we are away from our native village," saidSanjiv Borthakur, who is out to buy traditional delicacies from the vendors in the Ambari area of the city on Saturday. Flattened rice, which is served on Bihu days with curd, is also in great demand in the city.

The price of foodstuff served on Rongali Bihu is almost the same like last year. Larus made from coconut, sesame and jaggery were selling at Rs 4 per piece in the city. pithas made from grinded rice and sesame or coconut are being sold at Rs 4 per piece. The price of buffalo curd and milk cream was Rs 120 a litre and Rs 440 a litre on the eve of Rongali Bihu.

Most sellers who arrived in city markets with Assamese delicacies are from villages situated on the northern and southern banks of the Brahmaputra in lower Assam.

"There is a great demand for traditional foodstuff in Guwahati. We also feel happy by promoting Assamese delicacies during Bihu. It's good that the Assamese families settled in Guwahati are liking traditional pithas and larus," said Madan Kalita, a villager from lower Assam's Nalbari district.

Though many people don't bargain with the price of the traditional delicacies and are more than happy to get fresh pithas and laurs made in far-flung villages right here in the city, some feel the price is reasonably high.

"We have to buy one pitha at Rs 5, which is bit costlier. The cost of preparation must have been much lower," said Swarup Sarma, a teacher in Guwahati who is from Kamrup district. However, he said the price hardly matters in Bihu while buying traditional delicacies.

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Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Thoothukudi macaroon- a vestige of European colonisation

Perhaps it’s something to do with this land, there’s something in the air here,- Thoothukudi macaroon- a vestige of European colonisation

In search of 

Olympia Shilpa Gerald
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  • Macaroons are made by mixing egg white, cashew and sugar at bakeries in Thoothukudi. Photo: N. Rajesh
    The Hindu Macaroons are made by mixing egg white, cashew and sugar at bakeries in Thoothukudi. Photo: N. Rajesh
  • In Thoothukudi, it is stuffed with cashew and shaped into a cone with a round base and a pointed peak. Photo: N. Rajesh
    The Hindu In Thoothukudi, it is stuffed with cashew and shaped into a cone with a round base and a pointed peak. Photo: N. Rajesh
  • A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
    The Hindu A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
  • A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
    The Hindu A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
  • A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
    The Hindu A peek inside the bakeries. Photo: N. Rajesh
Bakers reveal to Olympia Shilpa Gerald how they reinvented a vestige of European colonisation into a much-coveted confection.
I gingerly lift the waist-high wooden plank that cordons off swarming devotees of bread and cakes from the baking gods, who turn out the confection that the seaport of Thoothukudi (or to give its anglicised name Tuticorin) is celebrated for — macaroons.
Squeezing into the tiny space between the wall and the display cabinets, I emerge behind the sales counter of a bakery that opens out into a narrow room lined with gilded cardboard boxes. The anterior chambers of the bakeries in this city, like those behind church altars where garments and vessels are stored, are privy only to a select few. It takes much cajoling, coaxing and running around in circles till the custodians of confectionery secrets condescend to allow us a peep into their mystery shrouded rituals. That too only after ascertaining I am not from the income tax department or a nosy apprentice of a rival baker.
What strikes me as strange is that I am yet to spot the macaroons, though all around me orders are flying and so are the cardboard boxes. The macaroons are missing among the tempting puffs and plum cakes that dress up counters. “This is not a roadside snack,” my local friend accompanying me informs quite snobbishly. “One kg costs Rs.600,” she nods to the price list, where the macaroon tops the list. The snack that sells by reputation alone has an elitist air to it and understandably its makers are viewed as royalty, so much so that the hole-in-the-wall bakeries double up as landmarks in a city synonymous with pearl fishing, feisty freedom fighters and salt pans. 
 “There was a time when we used to store the macaroons in glass jars. But the rise in demand meant frequently opening them to transfer the contents,” says Suresh of Gnanam Bakery, established 45 years ago by his grandfather Isravel who named the bakery after his wife. “Watch,” says Suresh, finally producing a macaroon. “It won’t taste the same five minutes later. The macaroon tends to absorb moisture and is best stored away in air-tight containers.”
Chellappa, who has been making macaroons for 30 years, places one on my palm. Unlike other Indian pedas with ethnic flavours, the Thoothukudi macaroon is a European export and a vestige of colonisation, albeit reinvented in a unique shape. For around the world, the macaroon is mostly flat and filled with almonds, chocolate or coconut; only in Thoothukudi, it is stuffed with cashew and shaped into a cone with a round base, bulging middle and a pointed peak.
Nutty affairs
I sink my teeth into the crunchy sugary tip that gives way to gluey and gooey cashew crumbs. For all the secrecy that shrouds the pastry, deconstructing it reveals just three ingredients — eggs, cashew nuts and sugar. No water, no oil and no secret ingredient! The secret rather lies in technique — in blending each ingredient into the hat-shaped pastry, says macaroon master Chellappa. “It involves using high grade cashew nuts (most shops source it from Kerala), knowing when to add each ingredient and baking in firewood ovens.” Suresh paces to and fro, wrapping loaves of bread and heading back to answer my questions. “I challenge you to get the shape or taste of the Thoothukudi macaroon at home in an electric oven or microwave. We have tried, it never works.”
When I get curious about the origins of the pastry, I’m directed to Dhanalakshmi Bakery, one of the oldest around town, where Thoothukudi’s association with the confection is believed to have been shaped, much before Independence. Though the bakery has lost its yesteryear prominence, I find it still makes the nuttiest of macaroons, with the base choc-a-bloc of cashew granules. In the kitchen, I peep into a closet size hollow kiln built of brick, inside which are rows and rows of pearly white macaroons, just baked. “The firewood furnace is just right for macaroons in the morning as it reaches the ideal temperature after all the baking the previous evening,” says owner Velammal. But how does she get the temperature right?  “O, I put my hand inside the wall of the kiln and I know when it’s right.” Pointing to a portrait of the late Arunachalam Pillai, his daughter Velammal claims it was her father who popularised the macaroons in Thoothukudi. “He worked in a confectionery at Tiruchi and later at Spencers in Chennai and learnt to bake cakes and other European confections from Anglo-Indians and foreigners there. He came here and began selling pastries, and the macaroons which he shaped like this. Many ‘masters’ or confectioners learnt from my father and set up their own bakeries.”
 Though many of the bakers in the city acknowledge Velammal’s story, Dharmalingam at Ganesh Bakery, arguably the most popular in the city (courtesy the milling crowds at any time of the day), believes that macaroons must have been around in Thoothukudi much earlier, but gained popularity in Arunachalam’s period. “The Dutch and Portuguese occupied Thoothukudi before the British and the fondness for continental pastries over Indian snacks is seen here even today. The ships that anchored off the shores of Thoothukudi must have required local labour. These men improvised on the flat almond macaroons.” Macaroons at Ganesh Bakery are handed out in gift-wrapping paper. “What matters as much as quality is the way you present the product,” Dharmalingam says.
Unlike many of their counterparts, folks at Ganesh believe mass production calls for modernisation, and macaroons are baked both in firewood and electric ovens. I watch as men in vests crack the egg gently, pouring in the gummy albumin inside a vessel, while the yolk hovers precariously in the shell. The rest of the ingredients go in one after the other as given in the recipe (see box).
Around half a dozen men stand over a table squeezing the cones as little peaks materialize on greased trays. The trays are assembled on a rack and wheeled into the massive glass fronted oven. As I nibble at the macaroons that scream of sugar than cashew at Ganesh Bakery, I wonder if Dharmalingam has tried his hand at export. Like many of his peers, he notes, “The delicate crumbly texture of the macaroon does not lend itself to transportation over long distances.”
But industrialist S.G. Ponseelan, who entered the confectionery business recently is determined to make the city’s coveted confection available to pastry worshippers in other cities. Packed in aluminium packs and Halal certified, Abi Macaroons guarantees a shelf life over two months. “We have come up with baby macaroons to minimise risk of breakage during transportation,” says Ponseelan who got started with the macaroon production after a company producing miniature versions adored by his daughter, closed down. The macaroons maybe a treat for children but miss out on the fulsome delight of crunching into a conventionally packed one.
Though improvisations like macaroons with pistas and chocolates have been tried by bakers, as Sridhar, proprietor at Shanti Macaroons established in 1964, will tell you, cashew macaroons are unparalleled in popularity. Sridhar has two stores slated to open in Chennai and Bangalore, but insists that the macaroons will be carted from Thoothukudi. “I have tried baking them in firewood ovens in other cities with masters from Thoothukudi, but the taste was not the same.” Though none of the ingredients is sourced from the city, almost all bakers I have met swear that attempts to produce the macaroons elsewhere have failed miserably. Some say it is the expertise of veteran macaroon masters, others believe it is the firewood ovens, but everyone admits to a certain je ne sais quoi. “Perhaps it’s something to do with this land, there’s something in the air here,” Sridhar smiles. 
Interestingly, however varied their techniques might be, I notice that they are unequivocally similar across major bakeries. The paper cones that give the confections their distinctive shape is shaped out of thick newspapers — all invariably The Hindu. A utility for the newspaper that I never dreamt of!
HOW IT’S MADE
Ingredients
Eggs 12 to 15
Cashewnuts (Some recommend 1/4 kg)
Sugar 1/2 kg.
Method
Powder cashew nuts, set aside. Crack eggs and separate the whites ensuring not a single drop of yolk falls in. With an egg beater, whisk the egg whites in a large bowl. When they turn frothy, start adding sugar little by little while continuing to vigorously whip up egg whites. Keep beating till the mixture rises into stiff peaks. Gently fold in the powdered cashews. Scoop batter into a stiff paper cone and squeeze cone to shape pointed macaroons. These macaroons are generally baked in firewood ovens, but baking them in electric ovens at 70 degrees may also achieve a similar result.

1 comment:

Now Thoothukudi macroons are available in air sealed packets in chennai at 45587772
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