[Text and Photos by D.B.]
I might sound repetitive when I say that whatever happened
in the last month brought me back to writing or that I am once again swayed by
the plot of the movie Eat Pray Love! (See, my earlier post Single in The City) But that is what exactly happened. Eat Pray Love - Is what that kept me busy. The
only difference is the time lapse. This time, it took a whole month to go
through the cycle.
Eat
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'The Financial Capital' |
Almost all of us are aware of the saying, “Naani ke ghar jaayenge, Motey ho kar
aayengey!” Every visit to the city of Mumbai proves the validity of this
statement, for me. Being my second home, place of my Grandparents, Mumbai has
always been a city as the ‘home away from home’. Thus it was the only place of
which I could think of to spend my ‘last’ academic summer vacations. The 10-day
trip started off in the last week of July- the best time to visit the city, at
least for me. That’s the time when you get to see the Mumbai Monsoon! Monsoon played a game with the
Delhi-ites this year, which eventually made the Mumbai trip much more
effective. I was welcomed by rain. My residence is in Thane, which being part
of suburbs, receives plenty of rainfall during this time. The urbanization of
the city has not affected this place yet. Now, as Indians, our love for the Chai and pakoda with Baarish is
very well known. Similarly, when in Mumbai during monsoon I try not to miss the Wada-Paav,
the Paav-Bhaji and Bhel-puri. The Mumbai Special Paani-puri is not mentioned as anyone who’s been
fond of the version sold in Delhi (the Gol-Gappa)
would never have the Mumbai one (smaller in size and far less teekha). Belonging to a family where the
ladies are the Goddess of food, I confess, that I run for street food just to
have the ‘feel’ of the city. If I miss the street food, it’s like my trip is
incomplete.
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The Staple Food |
The garma-garam paav half-cut
from middle, stuffed with wada coated
with the special onion-garlic-red-chilly powder, served in an old newspaper
with green chillies (optional) is the staple food and delicacy of that place.
You might not find an auto (just kidding, it is next-to-impossible) but you
will find someone selling wada-paav and
bhajiya-paav in every nook and corner
of the city. The best part, the delicacy is available for Rs. Seven Only. Those
who have modernized with time can go for the Rs. 10 and Rs. 25, also termed as
Jumbo-paav. The thrills of having one
with the green chilly (my choice) could be cooled down only by having a plate
of bhel-puri or sev-puri. Sold in other cities with tag of Bombay Bhel, written in red-paint bordered yellow, this is the
second best thing one can have anytime in Mumbai. The mixture of bhel with papdi, dahi, aloo and mithi-chatni
is as mouth-watering as it sounds and strikes the taste-buds as it gets in.
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Paav-Bhaji Stalls |
Next comes the paav-bhaji, everyone
remembers Sanjay Dutt selling paav-bhaji
in the movie Vaastav, right? Bring
that image to mind and think of a stall with big tawa with red-colored bhaji boiling
on the surface surrounded by many paav
aligned with the circumference of the tawa
and for audio effects, think of the cook hitting the karchhi repeatedly and the “chhisss..”
sound whenever the oil is poured. Done,
now think of the order served hell hot with layer of melted butter on the bhajii and paav, and thanks to monsoon, add minor drizzling to freeze the
frame. Heaven! Back in time, it used to be Juhu beach, where I cherished the
flavor. Now, I prefer stay away from the crowded ‘tourist’ spot and enjoy my
cuisine standing amidst a crowded market place. Time has changed but the taste
remains the same. I can very well recall the day when I refused to accept the
meal served by a restaurant in Katra
just because he was selling kulcha in
the name of paav. My peer group was
surprised of my rude attitude but how could one eat kulcha-bhaji? For god sake, kulcha
is kulcha and paav is paav!!!
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Leopold Cafe |
During the trip I happened to visit places which were famous
for other things also apart from just serving good food. First, the Leopold Café, established in 1871, the
café has a character of its own. Old, cozy, classic paintings, elite, and a
place to be, defines it all. The café doesn’t have much space for all the
customers but it feels as if it was meant to be like that only. Just had a cold
coffee there but was contented by the ‘feel’ it served. In short, if we had to
rate it like Rocky & Mayur of Highway on my Plate, I would give, “Ambience:
10/10”. Although, it was very unfortunate to see the bullet-marks in the walls,
a leftover of the terror attack on Taj. The place has seen much.
The next was Olympia. My
grandpa told me about this. Back in 1985, he used to go there with his friends
after office, but only had an image of it. He wasn’t sure of its existing till
date and even forgot its name and was searching for Columbia. Though, he could recall it when we reached there. Run by
the Iranian community, at that time, the café spoke about its age itself. Nanu said, “The furniture is same”, and
I could sense the nostalgia. We had daal
- roti and a cup of coffee. It could be compared to home-cooked food, it
was that tasty. I was interested in the activities going around, office-people;
especially those keeping roza were
there as it was dinner time. The service was polite and humble; it was in-budget
for anyone, not a well-maintained structure as compared to Leopold, but still being
a rival to it standing facing it from the other side of road.
My taste-buds worked full on till the end of the trip. A
visit to Marine Drive on a High-Tide day filled up the voids left. Looking at
the skyline of the city, gazing at the sea, feeling the breeze, dark sky
waiting to burst out, constant sound of the waves hitting the tetra-pods placed
on the coast line, and suddenly, a high-tide comes and floods you in and leaves
a smile on the face. That moment, gone in a second, you feel you had a
conversation with the heavens. This ambience and a guy came up to me selling chai. How could I refuse it? That mere
single cup of chai made it theee
perfect moment! Nothing could be better than that.
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Talking to the Sea |
The trip was meant to be a vacation and it actually turned
out to be one. A Vacation from things that keep you disturbed, a Vacation from
worries, and a Vacation from things of lesser value. As I always say, each city
has its own ‘feel’. Mumbai’s local cuisine and the places where all this is
available turned out to be the ‘feel’ of Mumbai for me, this vacation.
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The city that never sleeps |
The tale continues, as
I didn't want to kill the ‘feel’ to save the text space. And, because of my
absence from the “social-network”, some of my readers have started thinking
that I do not exist anymore! (lols..) For them, I am always available on panwadi.tales@gmail.com. I’ll be glad to hear from you.
i hav never been mumbai...but i jst feel all..specialy
ReplyDeletetaking "chai" at marine drive..n njoying d weather..... :)
thanks sheizi. glad to know that you could feel it too :) keep reading! - D.B.
ReplyDelete