Kolkata as I know it: Peth Pujo-The Kolkata Food Festival

03:39:00 Sudipti Singh 2 Comments

I have always had a love-hate relationship with Kolkata. Introduced to this huge, buzzing metropolis as a gangly 17 year old, fresh out of home from a comfortable, sheltered, small city, I was immediately intimidated and overwhelmed with the craziness of it all.


                   I was repulsed by the constant cacophony of the milling populance in the streets, the jarring prospects of destitution on the side walks and the sometimes-unbearable, sweltering heat that was too much to bear for someone hailing from the cool Himalayan foothills. Needless to say, I pined for home and drove my mother half insane with the continuous cribbing. It's a good thing my bad-ass mother is not the mollifying, over-indulging kind. She instead told me to grow up and deal with it.

And I did.



"Kolkata is an acquired taste", I have always recounted to anyone who'll listen to me chatter about my new-found love for the city. Well, it is. And it's a taste that grows on you by the minute. Of course, there are still lot of things to dislike about the city as all cities have. But, I found, there are more things to love about it than you'd initially imagine.

Chef Anirban, from Kolkata himself, tries to give us a tour of this confusing city through the epicurian route (Which is, perhaps the best) and take us through the journey through the myriad tastes of this huge small-town.
         He captures not only the traditional, bengali classics but also the fact that Kolkata has forever celebrated its religious and ethnological tolerance. The puchka and tele-bhaja (deep fried snacks) may be a fixture in the food geography of the city but it would still be incomplete without the stir-fried chicken chow-mein or spicy egg roll at the road-side stall. The typical Ramzan and Eid fare is enjoyed by Muslims and Hindus alike. Christmas and Easter means a surge of people of all religious backgrounds thronging to St. Paul's Cathedral and enjoying the bakes of the season.



So, The Cafe at Hyatt Regency celebrates this diversity with 'PETH PUJO- The Kolkata Food Festival'. The expat and anglo-Indian influence of Kolkata finds its representation in Chef Anirban's fest in the GRILLED CHICKEN and SHEPERD PIES. The China Town which is just as much a part of the city is given a spot in table with the BAOs and DIMSUMs which made the traces of Chinese in my heritage, pleased. Not to mention, the mouth-watering traditional bengali food is at the pride of place in the huge spread.

Prioritizing my plan of action, I made a bee-line for the PUCHKA and JHALMURI stall. In the past 3 years of living in Maharashtra, perhaps this is what I have missed the most. The JHALMURI brought back memories of my mother topping up a bowlful of puffed rice, onions. peanuts and savory chanachur with pungent mustard oil. Now mustard oil is something that makes all the difference which (I take the liberty of saying) makes sure Jhalmuri trumps over Bhel.



The PUCHKA is not your average pani-puri. You get no choices of sweet or spicy water as they do here in Maharashtra. You are thrust a bowl made up of dry Sal leaves. The huge pot of carefully spiced, tamarind water given a good stir by the puchka-seller with his hands elbow deep in it. And you leave all the flavor and hygiene choices to him as you surrender to the bursts of flavor while hurrying to keep up with his pace of disbursing the spheres.
Well, you surely get a taste of that experience at the festival but you have to be in Kolkata to know what I am talking about.



There were also thoughtfully placed noodles and rolls stands. I immediately asked for a chicken egg roll, my favorite snack from back home perhaps. I laughed a little at how disconcerted I was with the hygiene and cleanliness which is not a choice on the street of Kolkata. The all too familiar 'Dada' or 'Kaku' rolling out the dough and handling your food with his un-gloved hand is weirdly comforting. But I marveled at how close the roll came to what I remembered.



Kolkata high-tea means political and worldly discussion during the mandatory evening 'adda' with rounds of hot, steaming, sweet tea with occasional puffs on the cigarette and newspaper lined plates full of deep-fried goods. I found some as I wandered through the buffet table. KOROLA BHAJA, good ol' BEGUN BHAJA, AALU BHAJA, all greeted me as I quickly filled up my plate. There were the Mochar chop and Beetroot chop which were duly devoured and only reminded how much I had missed these Bengali snacks.



The mains were over-whelming yet delightful. I had already put a good dent in my appetite with all the snacking but I did make sure to taste a little bit of everything. LUCHI and ALU DOM was every bit the comfort food I crave. GHEE BHAAT with CHANAR DALNA was spot on with the authentic flavors of bengal.



I went on to CHICKEN CHAAP which was one of the best I've had in Pune. I wished I could have eaten more of it but I was fuller than I'd want to. MALAI CHINGRI and DOI MAACH were my choices in fish and they did not disappoint. I, myself, find the task of carefully maneuvering through the countless, tiny fish bones a bit daunting and hence I limit my intake of it as such. But the joy in the faces of my fellow diners reflected the quality of the dish itself. With that I rest my case.



The dessert section was the most awaited one. There were tiny 'bhar's (pots) of delicious MISHTI DOI and ROSHOGOLLAs. The MISHTI DOI was stellar but I found the other sweets a bit drab. I only say this for the sake of reporting and by no means, did that affect my view on the festival that night. There were the usual bakes and desserts to be had but I settled for a bowl of JAGGERY ICE-CREAM which had a really distinct 'Gur' taste that I loved.



Talk about sweet endings.

Well, It really was a rather nostalgic and very appetizing trip down the memory lane for me. I invite you as well to take this adventure yourself and experience Kolkata as I know it, not just as a slice of Bengal but as a mixing pot of all cultures and religions as single, beautiful yet intriguing entity.

A huge shout out to the ever so warm and welcoming, Ankoura of Hyatt Regency for having us over and a round of applause to Chef Anirban for pulling this off.



Peth Pujo- The Kolkata food festival at The Café at Hyatt Regency Pune is on till the 30th of April 2017. The buffet has new dishes introduced everyday and costs Rs. 1050 for lunch and Rs. 1299 for dinner.

The Cafè - Hyatt Regency Pune Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

2 comments :

5 Things To Do at Bombay Diaries

04:41:00 Sudipti Singh 1 Comments

We walked into Bombay Diaries one Sunday evening not knowing what was in store. Was it a Bombay themed restaurant? Was the cuisine like? Could I survive the journey all the way from Wakad to Bund Garden?

Okay the last one was because I live in the unofficial yet popularly thought, far-flung area of Pune with a characteristically hectic trafficked roads topped to the fact that I was low-key starving (Which is perhaps my perpetual state of existence).

When we arrived at the gates of this beautiful restaurant, it was dinner time but I couldn't help but notice how beautiful the property looked. The restaurant has an all-open air seating under the canopy of the leafy trees and beautiful twinkly lights. To save the patrons from the suddenly brutal sun's wrath, Bombay Diaries only operates after 5 pm. 
Plus they also have a stage with live music almost every day. That's a good addition for a nice, dreamy candle lit dinner, if you were asking.

Another fun thing was all the servers were dressed as the Mumbai Taxi drivers. Uniforms and all! And the ones taking orders were dressed as the Traffic Policemen. That kept me amused for longer time than I'd like to admit. 

Chef Deepu of Cafe Mestizo was in attendance and he was gracious enough to join us for the evening as he helped us pick the dishes and smile untiringly to our crappy jokes. So as he led us through the evening of gluttony, he specified that the food here is mostly North Indian. The place has tried to adopt a Mumbai themed vibe but in essence you get served mind-blowing North Indian food.

Lets make this idiot-proof and list out all the things that we loved and you should probably try at the Bombay Diaries:

1. The beautiful, evening-out, romantic dinner scenes:

You may choose to visit here with bae or bae-stfriends (haha, I'm so clever...not) for a fancy yet not heavy-on-the-pocket weekend dinner. The lights and decor are gorgeous. The live band adds to the mood with all the lovely music.  All you have to do is let the pleasant evening-Pune weather do the magic.

2. The super cute cocktails served in 'Pauwa' bottles:

If you come here and don't try this, I'm done with you. These cocktails were so cutely packaged I had them possessively cradling them for the rest to the evening at the risk of the Chef probably dismissing me as slightly mentally deranged. 

My favorite ones were the Chulbul which was a Kala Khatta flavored cocktail and the Chikni Chameli which was a strawberry and cucumber mix. The bottled drinks came in fun names such DRINK MASTER GOGO, BOMBAY THUMAKDA and BOL BACCHAN, you can hardly stop at one.

3. The amazing bartenders and their amazing mixes:

The Bombay Diaries tries to bring classic drinks with desi twist on it. Bollywood-ized cocktails and mocktails include gems like DESI WALA MOJITO, RANGEELA DRIVER and 12 KA PAANA. Everything has a splash of Indian twist in it. Be it a bit of jaggery here or a dribble of rooh afza there, everything comes down to refreshing amalgamation of delicious drinks.

4. The starters...oh god, the starters:

Being in a restaurant belonging to a chef of Chef Deepu's caliber with Chef Deepu, means he went all out with the choicest of the appetizers from his menu. Each one of them had its own unique style of preparation and taste, but stood in solidarity to the exquisite taste. My pick of the night would have to be MUTTON SEEKH LUCKHNOWI among others. The skewered kebabs were placed inside a vessel along with smoking coal embers. The end result was succulent meaty kebab with exquisite smoky flavors.

We were also partial to the TBD special murg tikka which was spiced so nice, it made us salivate just with the aroma. It helped that the kebab was filled with cheesiness.
To be honest though, we hardly think that you'd go wrong with anything on that menu.

5. Just one real reason you should be there... FOOD:

As a food blogger, at the end everything boils down to this thing in particular, the grub. Everything else are frills, nice and enjoyable but still frills at the best. But the food at TBD was one gastronomic journey through the North Indian cuisine.

KURKURI BHINDI MASALA was the dish that piqued our interest and it was delicious. It was spicy bhindi cooked in gravy and topped with crunchy bhindi crisps. Inspired!
The DAL BUKHARA was another of our favorite with pulses slow cooked till creamy. Went so deliciously with the tandoori roti.
Well, the vegetarian dishes were so amazing it really paved the way to just as brilliantly prepared non-vegetarian ones. You would want to try the NALLI NIHARI and the MURG ADRAKI to find out why we are raving about the food.


As we conclude this list, we invite you to go and make your own little food adventure and let us know what we missed. We loved our jaunts to this place and we are sure you will too!


The Bombay Diaries Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

1 comments :

4 things that could make Arthur's theme your weekend go-to dinner place

13:07:00 Sudipti Singh 0 Comments

Food blogging comes with its own set of challenges. I mean, there are a bunch of advantages (most of it being delicious food almost all the time) but a food blogger is also known to be under immense strain sometimes.
And trust me I'm not talking about the missed deadlines and acid refluxes (though I'm suffering chronically with the former at the moment); but about the ceaseless Food-Critic-Syndrome. So FCS, though made up at this point, is a legit affliction that we suffer from, rendering us helpless against the unwanted scrutiny we constantly bestow even if it's a masala-puri trip with the cousins to the pani puri stall across the road. No wonder, the folks at home always think a dozen times before we are invited to eat outs.

gif

Surprisingly I still remain a ravenous glutton, though a bitchy one and a less than perfectly seasoned pasta earns my scoff before I devour it. But yes, our desensitized (or is it overtly sensitized?) palates are hardly ever blown over when out with folks in their choice of restaurants. It takes quite a lot before we might admit that we liked everything about a particular place and when we do we make sure you know.

gif

Tip: In case suffering from FCS, try (and i repeat try. And this is not a drill) to keep it hold it back at home. I've learnt it the hard way, the mothers definitely don't like any feedback about the lack of seasoning in the gobi-aloo.

So the other day I visited the Arthur's Theme, Balewadi for a tasting with my blogger fam. Now, Arthur's Theme is one of the places that we have continued to frequent even after our foray into food blogging. Mr. TKD and I, both love the menu and the food here. Though we had always been to the KP outlet which is a snug place to have your meals at.


The Balewadi branch was much more open and breathable. The decor only helped highlight the European-ness of the menu. Tall ceiling with elegant chandeliers, glass facade and shrubs on the walls. There were a few tables outside too but we chose to sit in. The place is perfect for a classy date or leisurely meals on a sunday afternoon.

So lets do the title of this piece a justice and delve into the reasons that will probably compel you to give this place a visit:

1. This cracker of a summer-in-a-bowl salad: HAWAIIAN SALAD

     I know you must be shaking your head in disapproval as you read this at my choice of an opening dish, but trust me, this is a truly beautiful dish. With summers already here, you should probably ditch your caesars and other dressy salads for this light and breezy plate. My bowl was a confetti of colors with the strips of chicken, pineapples and bell peppers tossed together with a light mayo dressing that did not over-stage the lightness of this beauty at all.
Every bite was a crunchy, juicy and delicious morsel of flavor galore. Try you must.


2. The tale of Chicken Roulette: ARTOIS (CHICKEN ROULETTE WITH MUSHROOM SAUCE)

     Another one of my favorite.The perfectly cooked chicken, pounded and rolled with mushrooms and other fillings was served in a bed of thick and creamy mushroom sauce. The chicken was tender and the sauce really complimented the dish. Initially I thought the sauce was bland but then I realized that the chefs went easy on the salt. In fact the sauce was very flavorsome and with juicy pieces of mushrooms in it. I enjoyed finishing off the plate quite a lot (though I have to confess, I did have to add a sprinkling of salt).
It was served with potato croquettes on the side which added crunchiness to the dish. Fried food, this is what I live for.
   
3. The prawn star : LADY JENNIFER (CHAR GRILLED PRAWN IN LEMON BUTTER SAUCE)

    So this was the dish that had everyone fighting over the last morsel. The prawns were grilled just right and it was juicy and crunchy at the same time. But boy oh boy, the lemon butter sauce was another level all together. So light yet so buttery smooth, the sauce did magic for the crustacean.
The silky, creamy mashed potatoes which tasted like heaven made sure this dish was the best of the night.

4. The good news: FOUR COURSE MEAL PLAN!
     So when the food is this good, it sure doesn't come too cheap. And we will understand your plight if you are a penniless student or just a plain stingy. (Hey we don't judge) So here's the icing on the cake, Arthur's Theme has come up with a 4 course meal plan just for Rs 799! Now that's a steal.

So what's stopping you from taking bae out on a date or just going out and pampering yourself? I can't even begin to justify the value for money here because the food is out standing.

The food at Arthur's Theme has always been amazing and the new outlet isn't different from that. The 4 course meal consists of a Soups/Salads, Starters, Mains and Dessert. Each section has a good selection of some of the most popular dishes to choose out of. So rest assured that you will have a great time with the meal.

The desserts didn't really leave a mark on us that night but they were decent in their own right. Well you can't blame me, I suffer from FCS! Lets just say the dessert section does it's job of being the sweet ending to the meal, but the other courses more than make up for it anyway.


But the sweetest ending to the meal, in my opinion, would probably be the bill after you've had a sumptuous 4 course meal!

gif

Arthur's Theme Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato

0 comments :