Dr Shah
couldn’t believe that Goan food could be made without something that has a
tail, without onions or garlic. Like the Jain cuisine, Goans too have recipes
that are sattvic or fit to be served
to the Gods. For some reason, a number of Hindu Gods don’t like non-vegetarian
food and for some other inexplicable reason, bulbs that grow underground aren’t
considered ‘pure’ because they have ‘life’ in them. But so do sprouts which are
relished. In an already complicated social set up, we have sub-complications
when it comes to caste, dialects and food. In Goa, Christians add salt to the
rice when it’s cooking; Hindus don’t. The former use vinegar to add sourness
and tang to a gravy, Hindus prefer tamarind pulp or kokum.
Unless you’re going for a Saraswat food festival or someone’s
home, you are unlikely to find these recipes/dishes on any menu.
First, a raw
mango ud-da-methi. Peel a
medium sized raw mango, remove the seed, chop into little squares, sprinkle
salt over them and keep aside. Finely grind 2 cups grated coconut, 2 tsps
chilli powder, ½ tsp turmeric powder, a tbsp. of tamarind paste and 12
peppercorns. Heat a tbsp. of (preferably
coconut) oil till it smokes. Then add a tsp each of mustard seeds, urad dal
(split black gram without the skin) and fenugreek (methi) seeds. When the dal
turns brown, add a pinch of heeng (asafoetida) and immediately pour into it the
ground masala, salt and jaggery to taste, three cups of water and the mango
bits. Boil for 3-4 minutes and serve hot with rice.
Next, a stew
called khatkhatem. Chop into 1-2” pieces and keep ready a cupful
of each: red pumpkin, raw papaya, banana, drumstick, raw jackfruit and white
radish/turnip, yam (suran, colocasia root). If you have an ingredient or two
less, don’t panic, either do without it or replace with something similar. But
no cauliflowers, peas, broccoli or carrots. Or cabbages, spinach and the likes.
Cook and mash ¼ cup of toor dal. Add
to the dal 4 cups of water. First add and cook the hard vegetables: jackfruit,
yam and radish. Then add the other vegetables. Cook them with salt until they
are soft but retaining their shape.
Whilst they’re cooking, grind together finely 2 and ½ cups grated
coconut, a tsp of turmeric, 1 tbsp of chilli powder and some tamarind paste.
Lastly, add to this masala 4-5 lightly
crushed teffla (this strong smelling
spice is commonly used on the west coast and is easily available with hawkers
who squat outside markets and in villages). Add a dash of jaggery for
sweetness, give it a good boil and stir and serve immediately. This dish is not
dry. It goes well with rice/bread/chapatti.
The third
vegetarian dish with no onions, no garlic is a simple one, made with the lowly
but tasty and nutritious and easily available red pumpkin. Goa doesn’t
celebrate Halloween. The inexpensive pumpkin is unjustly looked down upon. Try
this recipe and you’ll see why: take a slice (approx. 300 gms) of bright orange
pumpkin, remove its seeds (you can dry them and use elsewhere) and its skin.
Cut the flesh into ½” bits, put it in a vessel with a fistful of freshly grated
coconut, a tbsp. of finely ground ginger, ½ tsp of crushed jeera (cumin seeds), salt and green chillies to taste and cook it
until tender with very little water. Garnish with finely chopped fresh
coriander leaves. If you want to convert this into a raita or yoghurt-based salad, beat up a cupful of curd, cool the
pumpkin and mix it all up.
Whoever said
Goans can’t, don’t, won’t eat anything that’s plucked hasn’t met my
grandmother. Ok, she’s been gone a long time, but my mother and now my cousins
and I enjoy our ‘pure’ vegetarian food as much as we relish the fried fish,
pork chops and beef steaks (blasphemy that I should even mention this, but
truth must prevail) that are often served in our platters.
So hark ye who
believe that the world and humankind will be saved by everyone turning to
healthy, vegetarian, vegan, organic food, turn to Goan cuisine, you won’t miss
flesh again.
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