The Indian Meal
First of all, I`m sorry my friends, that I have been such a bad, bad blogger, not updating, and perhaps doing too much work. But recently there has been too little time, and even in whatever time, I could save to sit and write, there came new demands to satisfy, and my constant battle with time, has been meeting with constant failure. But excuses apart, i`ve returned, with the definite will to keep posting once in a week. Let`s see how far it goes... Jac, hope I don`t upset you.. Thanks for prodding me.! Mathew, thanks for tagging me. Will do it soon.
I`ve not been able to think much, read much, but life still throws you challenges, you experience things, about which you want to pour your frustration.! , and so here I am.!
Recently at my workplace, in the cafeteria, the following conversation happened,
Mr X : Hi Srijith.!
Me : Hi.!
Mr X : So how`re things going..? blah blah...
Me : Blah Blah...
... and then suddenly...
Mr. X : Hey..! you`re eating with your hands..? You get spoons here..!
Me ( dumbstruck, angry and confused ) : WHAT..?!!
We`ve heard and talked about westernization, about corporate culture, but this was the limit.! Eating food with our hands has always been something so intimately Indian.! Why is it that we forget to acknowledge this.? In the book, the international bestseller, "The City of Joy", by Dominique Lapierre, the protagonist, a polish priest, visiting India, tries eating with his hands, and then observes, that he, for the first time, looked upon food as something full of life, as a gift of life, and not just something dead.!
We touch food, with respect and love, we eat with our hands accepting food as a gift, we get everyday. Would we wear gloves, before accepting a gift on our birthday.? There is a spiritual and emotional relationship which we need to build with food, and above all how can one simply ignore the heavenly pleasure in eating thus.!
It`s Onam season, which reminds me of how, as children, we used to sit on the floor and eat to our heart content, mixing all the curries, breaking the pappadams and at the end of it all, pouring the hot milk payasam on the plantain leaf and wiping it clean with our fingers..! I wonder whether that experience would have even been a fraction as memorable, if I had eaten with a spoon.!
Most Indian dishes are made to be eaten by the hand, to touch, pinch and tease those naughty white idlis, to tickle and deflate those bloated puris, to twist those rotis and dip in paneer butter masala, all require expert usage of the hands and fingers. How would a mere spoon suffice in ever providing that experience.!
I must, however tell you I am no glutton, I just try to make every meal an experience. Eating with our hands, washing our hands before and after a meal has all been something so integral to our culture, that i am truly finding it hard to digest, that eating with a spoon is becoming a "trend of sorts". Either due to this IT boom, or BPO wave, whatever we call it, we must still remain Indian.! Perhaps even show the world why this Indian gourmet experience is so heavenly because we use our fingers, and promptly lick them too at times.!
I`ve not been able to think much, read much, but life still throws you challenges, you experience things, about which you want to pour your frustration.! , and so here I am.!
Recently at my workplace, in the cafeteria, the following conversation happened,
Mr X : Hi Srijith.!
Me : Hi.!
Mr X : So how`re things going..? blah blah...
Me : Blah Blah...
... and then suddenly...
Mr. X : Hey..! you`re eating with your hands..? You get spoons here..!
Me ( dumbstruck, angry and confused ) : WHAT..?!!
We`ve heard and talked about westernization, about corporate culture, but this was the limit.! Eating food with our hands has always been something so intimately Indian.! Why is it that we forget to acknowledge this.? In the book, the international bestseller, "The City of Joy", by Dominique Lapierre, the protagonist, a polish priest, visiting India, tries eating with his hands, and then observes, that he, for the first time, looked upon food as something full of life, as a gift of life, and not just something dead.!
We touch food, with respect and love, we eat with our hands accepting food as a gift, we get everyday. Would we wear gloves, before accepting a gift on our birthday.? There is a spiritual and emotional relationship which we need to build with food, and above all how can one simply ignore the heavenly pleasure in eating thus.!
It`s Onam season, which reminds me of how, as children, we used to sit on the floor and eat to our heart content, mixing all the curries, breaking the pappadams and at the end of it all, pouring the hot milk payasam on the plantain leaf and wiping it clean with our fingers..! I wonder whether that experience would have even been a fraction as memorable, if I had eaten with a spoon.!
Most Indian dishes are made to be eaten by the hand, to touch, pinch and tease those naughty white idlis, to tickle and deflate those bloated puris, to twist those rotis and dip in paneer butter masala, all require expert usage of the hands and fingers. How would a mere spoon suffice in ever providing that experience.!
I must, however tell you I am no glutton, I just try to make every meal an experience. Eating with our hands, washing our hands before and after a meal has all been something so integral to our culture, that i am truly finding it hard to digest, that eating with a spoon is becoming a "trend of sorts". Either due to this IT boom, or BPO wave, whatever we call it, we must still remain Indian.! Perhaps even show the world why this Indian gourmet experience is so heavenly because we use our fingers, and promptly lick them too at times.!
Comments
May be when people dont want to keep their hands clean (can mean a lot of things :), spoons are a better choice.
But then what can food taste if you cant feel it with your hands
Take care and cheers
**Eating food with our hands has always been something so intimately Indian
I agree and I love to eat rice n curry with my hands...nothing like it!
but for some others, germs worry em. so they prefer to use a fork or a spoon. There can be many reasons.
But I hate it when Indians/Sri Lankans who's eaten using their hands b4, pretend like they dun like it anymore!
Keshi.
I prefer eating noodles and rice also with my hands as i enjoy eating food with my hand. I only use the spoon when i dont want to wash my hand. :)
I have had numerous arguments about the very same topic. Many talk about germs and dirt in your hand. But who gives you the guarantee that there is no dirt in the spoons? :)
But I admit I eat with a spoon or a fork sometimes, just to avoid being stared at.
:)
Velu.
@Keshi: For centuries together, Indians, Srilankans, all, were eating with hands, and haven`t they remained generally healthier than westerners..? I too hate it keshi, when they pretend.. Thanks for your support..!
@Alex: Me too alex, only for hot soup, or rice gruel, i use spoons..
@Deepak: Yes i too am getting very uncomfortable with the staring part. I wish things change..!
@Sreejith: I truly pray we don`t sree..! even if it takes a revolution of sorts.. count me in..!
@Velu: Truly velu.. nothing like it..!
Velu, you`ve started focussing more on movies, I guess.! What about kaleidoscope, my friend.. miss your writings badly.. any plans to come back..?
I did it on Onam at Hotel Samudra, Kovalam.
I will do it again.
How dare anybody prevent me !!!
@Naveen: That`s so sad, naveen. Anyway hope you get to travel home, more often.
@Jac: //I will do it again.
How dare anybody prevent me !!!// -- Exactly..!!! How Dare..!
But I eat with spoon to restrict myself to eat less, with hands I tend to eat a lot
I do not like the forgetting so India, So Pakistani etc.. part, Nothing should be preserved if it is not so useful or comfortable... keep changing, move forward. If something seems to be more comfortable than eating with hand I will change to it
Somethings like rasagula etc are best to be had in a cup than in a banana leaf
I beg to differ. I think these are basic things which define us..! and above all, you are again assuming here, that eating with hands is pre-historic.. Sadly many Indian traditions, which were scientifically and philosophically excellent practices were lost, due to this blind urge to move forward or keep changing. Change should happen, but not without a thought, about why or why not..? In the case of eating with hands, i simply felt that why part weighed more than the why not part of it.!