« October 2006 | Main | December 2006 »

November 2006 Archives

November 12, 2006

Great Reads: Climbing the Mango Trees, a Spicy Memoir of India

mangoe_tree_s.jpg


There is a moment in Climbing the Mango Trees that perfectly captures the tensions underlying Madhur Jaffrey’s near-idyllic childhood In India. Shibbudada, her charismatic and capricious uncle, arranges a treat for Jaffrey and her siblings: a visit from the khomcha wallah—the hot-and-savory-chaat- or snack-seller—at Saturday tea. The children are beside themselves with delight. “This was akin to telling a Western child that he could have a whole candy shop for an entire afternoon,” she explains.

The khomcha wallah did not prepare sweets, however. His specialty was dahi baras: irresistible fried split pea patties which he drizzled with yogurt and showered with salt and spices: black pepper-cumin-dried mango for mild tastes, yellow and red blends with various chilies for hot. The piece de resistance, it seems, was sweet-and-sour tamarind chutney: “A wooden spoon would disappear into the depths of a brown sauce as thick as melted chocolate. It would emerge only to drop a dark, satiny swirl over our dahi baras. As we ate them, the dahi baras would melt in our mouths with the minimum of resistance, the hot spices would bring tears to our eyes, the yogurt would cool us down, and the tamarind would perk up our taste buds as nothing else would. This to us was heaven.”

Just as we are vicariously enjoying these delicacies, Jaffrey reminds us that the khomcha wallah’s visit was a divisive weapon in an ugly, long-running family drama: As his father’s favorite son, Shibbudada kept the whole clan on its toes by mercurially shifting his favors from one member to another, always ignoring his own children, the products of a loveless arranged marriage to a homely woman. “We would watch our three cousins, jumping around in general glee with the rest of us, but every now and then they would throw a quick glance at their father, their large dark eyes begging for another kind of crumb. Perhaps a hug, a touch of the hand. They never got it…”

Climbing the Mango Trees is filled with wondrous, sometimes painful recollections of growing up in a large, prosperous Delhi family. The book covers the first 19 years of Jaffrey’s life, up to the point when she leaves India for drama school in London. Eventually she would become an actress, notably starring in Merchant Ivory films such as Shakespeare Wallah (1965) and Heat and Dust (1982), but she really hit her stride when she began to write about the foods of her beloved India. Jaffrey’s 13 cookbooks include An Invitation to Indian Cooking (1975), Taste of the Far East (1993), voted Best International Cookbook and Book of the Year by the James Beard Foundation, and most recently, From Curries to Kebabs: Recipes from the Indian Spice Trail (2003).

Not bad for a girl who didn’t know how to cook when she left home and who had failed a domestic sciences exam when unexpectedly asked to prepare a dish using Indian spices. Born in 1933, Jaffrey, whose first name means “sweet as honey,” spent her childhood shuttling between two family residences, one belonging to her parents in the Delhi suburb of Kanpur and the other in a riverside compound with sprawling gardens ruled over by her autocratic grandfather. Although the family was happiest in their Kanpur home—which featured a salmon-hued dining room decorated with gold plaster rosettes—it is quite clear that many of her most joyous moments were spent in the company of her extended family.

The title of the book is drawn from an early episode, undoubtedly a pivotal one for a food-writer-to-be: One hot day, while the grownups napped “in rooms cooled with wetted, sweet-smelling vetiver curtains,” Jaffrey and her cousins climbed up into the branches of mango trees, “armed with a ground mixture of salt, pepper, red chilies, and roasted cumin. The older children, on the higher branches, peeled and sliced the mangoes with penknives and passed the slices down to the smaller fry on the lower branches. We would dip the slices into our spice mixture and eat, our tingling mouths telling us we had ceased to be babies.”

Jaffrey’s taste-memory is prodigious. She can conjure up the flavor of the “snack of wealth,” describing it as “a heavenly froth, tasting a bit of ,,, bamboo, a bit of terracotta, a bit sweet and a bit nutty...” as easily as she can the spicy potatoes, “earthy, gingery, and hot,” served at her grandfather’s funeral feast. Thirty-two of her family recipes may be found at the end of the book, including a version of the khomcha-wallah’s split pea fritters, and a sublime duck curry with coriander and cardamom.

Her culinary memories make for delicious reading, but I found myself even more eagerly following the tumultuous saga of this family whose fortunes rose in the 17th century when they became scribes to Muslim rulers of India. Moments of sheer bliss—summer holidays in Simla, for instance, when the whole family picnicked in the cool foothills of the Himalayas, eating juicy mangos chilled in icy streams—are interspersed with her struggles at school and her dawning awareness of the deep pools of bitterness within the family.

Jaffrey is a good writer and she keeps her story going with a novelist’s flair. The portraits of her parents are vividly drawn. There is her rather sophisticated, well-educated father, an Anglophile condemned in life to run ghee and candy factories, who was happiest when designing elaborate illuminations for Diwali, the Festival of Lights. Her mother, from a poor Delhi family, had not gone to high school, but excelled in all domestic arts, teaching her daughters to maintain perfect skin by washing their faces in fresh raw cows’ milk and cooking exquisite curries. A section devoted to her Kashmiri shawls and her canny negotiations with the shawl-wallahs who purveyed them, will incite lust in the heart of anyone who loves textiles.

If there is a villain of the story, it is the spellbinding uncle Shibbudada, whose power games created so much misery and whose misguided attentions to her sister Kamal resulted in a tragic medical misdiagnosis. Yet during the riots that convulsed Delhi during Partition, this same uncle sallied forth day after day in his two-tone Chevy, in order to ferry Muslim friends to planes and trains headed for Pakistan. Far from being a memoir that settles scores, Climbing the Mango Trees is in the end a candid tale of a big, mostly loving family, troubles and all.

As the story deepens, Jaffrey herself emerges, slowly changing from a timid, undisciplined girl caught up the swirl of a large family into a young woman who blossoms when she discovers that she can write and act. Now, one imagines, she is a rather formidable person. Pity the young Hollywood actress who casually addressed her as M, a pet name permitted only to intimates. “I had to let her know, as gently as possible, that only those who had known me for at least forty years or were members of my family could address me that way,” Jaffrey says. Gently? I would not like to have been on the receiving end of that reprimand.

Climbing the Mango Trees by Madhur Jaffrey (Alfred A. Knopf, 2006) is available through www.amazon.com.

November 16, 2006

Recipe: Madhur Jaffrey's Spicy Duck Curry with Coriander and Cardamom

IMG_4210.JPG
A rich duck curry, served with basmati rice, gets an unexpected lift from a
sweet and hot cranberry chutney with ginger, tangerines and walnuts.

We’re deep into fall: The lawn is a crunchy tapestry of red, gold and brown leaves. Gusts of wind set them swirling like cyclones, only to resettle in drifts around the trunks of nearly bare maple and crab apple trees. The last of the Canadian geese, honking plaintively, straggle south over the pasture. The scent of wood smoke perfumes the chill morning air. In the kitchen, it’s time for duck…

In her new memoir, Climbing the Mango Trees, Madhur Jaffrey writes that the men in her family were avid hunters. Winter dinners in India usually included game from the day’s outing: “There might be duck or partridge or quail, some with pellets still inside them, cooked with rich cardamom-flavored sauces; or my father’s favorite, leg of wild boar, cooked for a whole day in beer.” These were served with cauliflower and peas, spinach, or carrots with fenugreek greens, along with phulkas, “little puffed whole wheat breads” similar to chapatis.

Upon reading this, I immediately flipped to the recipes at the end of the book and, yes, there was one for duck curry cooked in medley of warming spices. The dish is sublime: A large Pekin duck, cut into pieces, is slowly simmered in a sauce enriched with creamy yogurt and a fragrant blend of sweet and pungent spices—ginger, garlic, coriander, cumin, cardamom, cinnamon and Kashmiri red-chili powder—until it is falling-off-the-bone tender. The curry is quite good served over basmati rice, but even better with the delicate phulkas Jaffrey recommends. Phulkas are easy to make and can be puffed up on a hot griddle just before serving the curry.

A spoonful of sweet chutney is a delicious counterpoint to the spices in the curry. You can always open a jar of mango chutney, but, as Thanksgiving approaches—why not take a more adventurous route and serve Laxmi Hiremath’s sweet and hot cranberry chutney with ginger and tangerines from her book, The Dance of Spices?

Classic Duck Curry with Coriander and Cardamom
(adapted from Madhur Jaffey in Climbing the Mango Trees)

To serve 4

Ingredients:

4-inch piece of fresh ginger, peeled and chopped
6 large cloves garlic, peeled and chopped
4 tablespoons whole coriander seeds
2 teaspoons whole cumin seeds
1 teaspoon cardamom seeds (see note)
1/2 teaspoon whole cloves
2-inch stick cinnamon, crushed
1 teaspoon Kashmiri red-chili powder (or 3/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper)
1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
4 tablespoons olive or peanut oil
6-pound duck (see below)
2 medium onions, peeled and finely chopped
8 tablespoons plain yogurt
1-3/4 teaspoons salt, or to taste

Method:

1. Have your butcher cut the duck into 8 pieces: 2 drumsticks, 2 thighs, and 4 breast quarters. Reserve the wings (discard the tips), back, sternum and gizzard for the sauce, if desired. Remove all the fat and skin that hangs from the sides or ends of the duck, leaving only the skin that sits on top of the meat.
2. Put the ginger, garlic and 1/4 cup water into a blender. Blend thoroughly until you have a smooth paste. Set aside.
3. Combine the coriander, cumin and cardamom seeds, cloves and cinnamon in a clean coffee or spice grinder. Grind as finely as possible. Empty the spice mixture into a small bowl. Add the red-chili powder, turmeric, vinegar and about 3 tablespoons of water to make a thick, dryish paste. (The paste may be very liquid at first, but it will thicken after a few minutes.)
4. Pour the oil into a large sauté or frying pan and set over medium heat. When it is hot, put in as many duck pieces as will fit easily, skin side down. Brown the duck on one side. Turn and brown the other side. Remove to a bowl. Continue to brown all the duck pieces in the same way.
5. Add the onion to the same hot oil. Stir and fry until the onion pieces turn reddish. Add the ginger-garlic paste and turn the heat to medium low. Stir and cook about 2 minutes, then add the spice paste, stirring and cooking over medium-low heat for another minute.
6. Add 1 tablespoon of yogurt. Stir and cook until it seems to disappear. Add the remaining yogurt in the same way, a tablespoon at a time. Now put in all the browned duck and any juices that may have accumulated in the bowl, the salt and 2-3/4 cups water. Stir and bring to a boil. Cover and turn the heat to low, and simmer gently for 1 hour and 15 minutes, or until the duck is tender. Stir gently every 10 minutes or so during the cooking period, turning the duck pieces over now and then.
7. Lift out the duck pieces and place them in a bowl. Tilt the cooking pan and spoon off as much of the fat as possible from the sauce. Pour the defatted sauce into a blender and blend very fine. Pour this sauce through a coarse sieve or strainer right over the duck pieces, pressing down on the sieve to extract all the possible juices.
8. The duck may be reheated and served the same day, or it may be refrigerated and served a day or two later. Serve with basmati rice or phulkas (see recipe below) and a spoonful of sweet chutney.

Note: Cardamom seeds removed from their shells can be found in Indian markets or ordered from www.penzeys.com.

Continue reading "Recipe: Madhur Jaffrey's Spicy Duck Curry with Coriander and Cardamom" »

November 21, 2006

Recipe: Spicy Cranberry-Tangerine Chutney with Ginger and Cardamom; Not Your Grandmother's Cranberry Sauce

IMG_4231.JPG


If your family is like mine, you cannot have Thanksgiving without the cranberry sauce. But I’m always tempted to be subversive and tinker with tradition. This year, alongside the usual sauce, we’ll be serving Laxmi Hiremath’s hot and sweet cranberry-tangerine chutney from her cookbook, The Dance of Spices. Spiked with fiery cayenne and ginger, fragrant with cardamom and cinnamon, it will be an unexpected and sparky accompaniment to our brined turkey with rich oyster stuffing and buttery mashed potatoes.

One thing: Do not refrigerate the chutney. Make it a day ahead, as Hiremath recommends, and let it sit overnight, covered, on the kitchen counter so that flavors can meld. The next day, serve it at room temperature. If you chill it, the spicy flavors will vanish and you’ll be left with….your grandmother’s cranberry sauce. Well, almost.

Hot and Sweet Cranberry-Tangerine Chutney

(from Laxmi Hiremath, The Dance of Spices)

Makes 3 cups

Ingredients:

2 small tangerines
1 bag (12 ounces) fresh cranberries, stemmed and washed
1/4 cup chopped yellow onion
1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
3/4 cup sugar
4 green cardamom pods, seeds removed and ground
1/2 teaspoon cayenne
1/3 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 cup chopped walnuts, toasted (see note)

Method:

1. Halve the tangerines crosswise without peeling. Remove the seeds and cut into 1/2-inch wedges.
2. In a heavy non-aluminum medium saucepan, combine the tangerines with the cranberries, onion, ginger, sugar, cardamom, cayenne, salt and cinnamon. Bring to a gentle boil, reduce the heat to low, and cook, stirring regularly, until the sugar dissolves and tangerine rind is slightly softened, 12 to 14 minutes. The chutney should be nicely reduced, thick and glossy, and adequately perfumed. Stir in the nuts. For the best flavor, allow the chutney to sit, covered, at room temperature, for a day before serving.

Note: To toast the walnuts, place in a medium skillet over medium heat. Cook, stirring, until the nuts are toasty and start to brown, 2 to 4 minutes.

6a2fe834b0twitter-wb-fm.png

About November 2006

This page contains all entries posted to SpiceLines in November 2006. They are listed from oldest to newest.

October 2006 is the previous archive.

December 2006 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.36