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Epicurean
Delights
It was 137
years ago that the last of the kings of Avadh walked on
the sarzameen (land) of their beloved Lucknow. While these
monarchs sat on the throne of Avadh, there was nothing
that they left untouched, thankfully, for their touch was
like the proverbial magic wand. It could raise the most
mundane of activities into the realm of art and to
unattained heights of excellence. Little wonder that even
bawarchis became master-creators of culinary delights.
Powerful courts all over India vyed with each other to
wean away a cook who had either worked or was trained in
Lucknow. To belong to Lucknow was the highest
qualification a cook could hold.
The rulers of Avadh engaged in peaceful pursuits since the
battle of Buxar, and laid the foundation of a culture
which dazzled the world. Under their patronage developed a
cuisine which did not remain the prerogative of royalty
alone. Recipes travelled from the royal kitchen to the
kitchens of the nobility and from there, to the kitchens
of ordinary people. Soon the Lucknowi learnt not only to
eat well but to spend more than he should on his bawarchi
khana.
All the while, research and innovation proceeded unabated
in the bawarchi khanas of the royalty and aristocracy
where money was no constraint, neither was time. In the
mid-l8th century, in the personal bawarchi khana of Nawab
Shuja-ud-daula, Rs. 60,000 was spent per month or Rs. 7.2
lakhs per year on the preparation of dishes. The dishes
which adorned his dastarkhwan did not come from that
kitchen alone but from five other bawarchikhanas,
including that of his mother Nawab Begum and his wife Bahu
Begum. These ladies separately spent Rs. 9000 every month
on the preparation of food. The staggering salaries of the
hierarchy of cooks and other kitchen staff came from a
separate budget. However, high salaries were not the only
reason for the excellent performance of the cooks. They
were given total freedom to pursue their work their own
way. Examples of cooks laying down conditions of
employment before crowned heads, and the latter meekly
accepting them, would only be found in Lucknow. And in
Lucknow alone would you find cooks strutting off in a huff
if the king did not sit down for a meal when told to do so
by the cook because the food was hot. A tale is told of a
cook employed only to prepare mash ki dal (arhar ki dal)
on a monthly salary of Rs. 500. The dal was not cooked
daily but once in a while, and the king was
condition-bound to sit down at the dastarkhwan when the
cook announced that the dal was ready. The king once
delayed, so the cook left. Before leaving, he emptied the
contents of the dish at a place where stood a stalk of a
dead tree. In a few days, leaves started sprouting from
the stalk and before long; the tree turned a healthy green
colour (source: Abdul Sharar's `The Last Phase of an
Oriental Culture'). The story may appear like an
exaggeration but the fact remains that the ingredients
that went into the preparation of the royal dishes were
very nutritious.
It was an unwritten law that the master would sanction
whatever quantity of ingredients the cook demanded. No
questions were asked, nor doubts expressed. Another
popular story goes that king Ghazi-ud-din Haidar slapped
his vazir Agha Meer for reducing the quantity of ghee used
by the cook in preparing parathas. The king was no fool.
He said that even if the cook pilfered some ghee, so what?
The parathas he made were excellent, while "you rob
the whole monarchy and think nothing of it !"
It was not royalty alone who pampered their cooks. The
nobility, aristocracy and people of lesser means too
maintained well stocked and well staffed kitchens from
where were turned out the most exotic of dishes. Begums
and ordinary housewives too persevered in their kitchens
and acquired an excellence that could match the skills of
a professional bawarchi.
Broadly, there are three categories of cooks in Lucknow.
The bawarchis cook food in large quantities. The rakabdars
cook in small gourmet quantities. Rakabdars also
specialize in the garnishing and presentation of dishes.
The nanfus make a variety of rotis, chapatis naans
sheermals, kulchas and taftans. Normally, one cook does
not prepare the entire meal. There are specialists for
different dishes and also a variety of helpers like the
degshos who wash the utensils, the masalchis who grind the
masala and the mehris who carry the khwan (tray) to be
spread on the dastarkhwan. The wealthy always had their
kitchens supervised by an officer called daroga-e-bawarchi
khana or mohtamim. It was this officer's seal on the khwan
that guaranteed quality control.
The Lucknow dastarkhwan would not be complete unless it
had the following dishes: qorma (braised meat in thick
gravy), salan (a gravy dish of meat or vegetables), qeema
(minced meat), kababs (pounded meat fried or roasted over
a charcoal fire), bhujia (cooked vegetables), dal, pasinda
(fried slivers of very tender meat, usually kid, in
gravy). Rice is cooked with meat in the form of a pulao,
chulao (fried rice) or served plain. There would also be a
variety of rotis. Desserts comprise gullati (rice
pudding), kheer (milk sweetened and boiled with whole rice
to a thick consistency), sheer brunj, (a rich, sweet rice
dish boiled in milk), muzaffar (vermicelli fried in ghee
and garnished with almonds and saffron) and halwas
garnished with balai (cream). The varieties of dishes
would increase with one's status.
Lucknow is known for its large varieties of pulaos.
Seventy types of pulaos were cooked at a wedding banquet
thrown by Prince Azimushan (son of Muhammad Ali Shah) and
attended by king Wajid Ali Shah. There was a nobleman in
Lucknow who belonged to the family of Shuja-ud-daula's
Begum, Nawab Salar Jung, whose passion for pulaos earned
for him the title of Chawal Wale. Even the king looked
forward to his banquet of pulaos.
There are two broad methods of cooking pulaos that are
followed in Lucknow. For the yakhni pulao, a thick meat
broth (yakhni) is prepared in which the whole spices like
pepper, cloves, cardamoms, aniseed, cummin, ginger, garlic
and onions are not added directly into the broth but
wrapped and tied in a muslin cloth and then dropped into
the broth. After the dish is cooked, the spices are taken
out and thrown away. This way the aroma of the spices is
absorbed by the meat and the broth gradually. The rice is
then cooked in this broth over a slow fire. This process
of cooking is called dum. Burning coal is also put on the
lid of the vessel for even heat. During the process of dum,
a wet muslin cloth is sealed with flour paste along the
mouth of the vessel before covering it with the lid, to
contain the flavours. In keeping with the Lucknowi's
disdain for masala, chillies are never put in pulao. This
pulao is light and easy to digest.
The other variety is called qorma pulao. Here, the qorma
and the rice are cooked separately. The water in which the
rice is boiled is poured out so that there is no starch in
the rice. For the qorma, finely cut onions are fried over
a very slow fire with the spices and ghee till the ghee
separates - this very slow shallow frying is called
bhunoing. The meat is then added and allowed to cook in
water. Then alternate layers of rice and qorma are spread
in another vessel and the latter put on a slow fire.
In Lucknow,
the yakhni pulao is preferred. The yakhni should be made
of meat which has some fat (not lean meat). The quantity
of meat should be at least twice the weight of rice used.
There are instances of one seer of rice cooked in a yakhni
of 34 seers of meat. Abdul Sharar has recorded that a
couple of morsels of this pulao could satisfy one's
hunger. The rice would almost melt in one's mouth.
Lucknowis believe in quality and not quantity. It is
considered uncultured to eat large quantities. They
believe that the food eaten should be rich and nutritious.
An interesting incident is told about a well-known
wrestler who was invited to lunch by Hakeem Banday Mehndi,
a connoisseur of good food, and was offered just a small
plate of pulao. The wrestler whose daily diet included
about 12 kilos of meat, an equal quantity of milk and
three kilos of dried fruits, was taken aback and felt
insulted. He quietly ate the small quantity. A little
later, an elaborate dastarkhwan was spread before him and
other guests. But the wrestler could not eat another
morsel. The little plate of pulao had satisfied him
completely. The following day, he came to his host and
reported that he never felt so fit before!
The Lucknow aristocracy derived great pleasure in
extending invitations to friends to elaborate meals where
a couple of items on the menu would be camouflaged. The
discomfiture of the guests at not recognizing the dish
would give great satisfaction to the host. It was taken as
a proclamation of the host's culinary expertise.
At a dawat (banquet) given by Wajid Ali Shah for Mirza
Asman Qadar, a Mughal prince from Delhi, a dish was served
which looked like a morabha (a spicy conserve of
vegetables) but was a qorma. Even the prince who was a
discerning gourmet was fooled. The king was very pleased,
but not for long. Very soon Prince Asman Qadar invited His
Majesty for a meal. The king was extremely cautious, there
were bound to be camouflaged dishes. His expert eyes
surveyed the dastarkhwan, but only found a magnificent
spread of qormas, pulaos, kababs, sheermals, a variety of
salans and kheers. He suspected no danger! But lo and
behold! every item on the dastarkhwan, qormas, pulaos,
katoras (little bowls) and spoons included, were made of
caramelised sugar!
A similar dawat, where the food and containers were made
of sugar, was given by the Raja of Mahmudabad in the early
part of this century. These dawats were a common feature
in Lucknow. The scale of grandeur varied with the status
of the host.
The
Lucknowi's menu changes with the seasons and with the
festivals which mark the month. The severity of winters is
fought with rich food. Paye (trotters) are cooked
overnight over a slow fire and the shorba (thick gravy)
eaten with naans. Turnips are also cooked overnight with
meat koftas and kidneys and had for lunch. This dish is
called shab degh and is very popular in Lucknow. The
former Taluqdar of Jehangirabad would serve it to his
friends on several occasions during winter.
Birds like
partridge and quail are had from the advent of winter
since they are heat-giving meats. Fish is relished from
the advent of winter till spring. It is avoided in the
rainy season. Lucknowis prefer river fish particularly
rahu (carp), for fish bones are the last thing they would
like to struggle with! For this reason, fish kababs
(cooked in mustard oil) are preferred.
Peas are the most sought after vegetable in Lucknow.
People never tire of eating peas. One can spot peas in
salan, qeema, pulao or just fried plain.
Sawan
(spring) is celebrated with pakwan (crisp snacks ),
phulkis (besan pakoras in salan), puri-kababs and birahis
(parathas stuffed with mashed dal). Khandoi (steamed balls
of dal in a salan), laute paute (gram flour pancakes,
rolled and sliced and served in a salan) and colocasia-leaf
cutlets served with salan add variety. Raw mangoes cooked
in semolina and jaggery or sugar, makes a delicious
dessert called curamba, in summer. These dishes come from
the rural Hindu population of Lucknow.
Activity in
the kitchen increases with the approach of festivals.
During Ramzan, the month of fasting, the cooks and ladies
of the house are busy throughout the day preparing the
iftari (the meal eaten at the end of the day's fast), not
only for the family but for friends and the poor. Id is
celebrated with varieties of siwaiyan (vermicelli) -
muzaffar is a favourite in Lucknow. Shab-e-barat is looked
forward to for its halwas, particularly of semolina and
gram flour. Khichra or haleem, a delicious mixture of dals,
wheat and meat, cooked together, is had during Muharram,
since it signifies a sad state of mind.
There are
dishes which appear and disappear from the Lucknow
dastarkhwan with the seasons and there are those which are
a permanent feature, like the qorma, the chapati and the
rumali roti. The test of a good chapati is that you should
be able to see the sky through it. The dough should be
very loose and is left in a lagan (deep, broad vessel)
filled with water for half an hour before the chapatis are
made.
Sheermals
were invented by Mamdoo Bawarchi more than one and a half
centuries ago. They are saffron covered parathas made from
a dough of flour mixed with milk and ghee and baked in
iron tandoors. No other city produces sheermals like
Lucknow does and the festive dastarkhwan is not complete
without it. Saffron is used to flavour sweets too.
Utensils are made either of iron or copper. Meat kababs
are cooked in a mahi tava (large, round shallow pan),
using a kafgir which is a flat, long handled ladle for
turning kababs and parathas. Bone China plates and dishes
were used in Lucknow since the time of the Nawabs. Water
was normally sipped from copper or silver katoras and not
glasses. The seating arrangement, while eating, was always
on the floor where beautifully embroidered dastarkhwans
were spread on darees and chandnis (white sheets).
Sometimes this arrangement was made on a takht or low,
wide wooden table.
As recently as October 1991, a grandson of the Raja of
Mahmudabad organised a food festival with varieties of
Avadhi delicacies. Inspite of the best efforts to recreate
the original taste, it was not possible to put in the
ingredients which were originally used. For, how many of
us can today feed chickens and goats with saffron tablets
to create a pleasant aroma in their flesh as was done
during the time of the Nawabs?
(Credit: Praveen Talha; Photography: Mahesh Hiremath)
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