Journeys
I was in Chennai again last week, this time for an old friend’s wedding. Lots of friends, old and new, some of whom I hadn’t expected to see there – it was all most pleasing and punctuated with good food and drink and gossip and laughter. There was much angst over which sarees to wear, much debate over whether the saree padars and hair were to be pinned up or not (the fashion police dismissed my preferred pinned-up look as the totally uncool air-hostess look), much ruing of short hair in the face of lovely fresh jasmine flowers, and deep discussions of those occasions when a bindi nicely complements the saree and those when it disrupts it. All of us present were professional academics; what else did you expect us to discuss with such passion?
An old friend and I also decided to take a few days off and ride a motorcycle down a short stretch of the Tamil Nadu coast to see a few sights – the old Danish colony, Tranquebar, the old French territories of Pondicherry and Karaikal, the weaving town of Bhuvanagiri, and Chidambaram, the great temple town and home of the Dancing Shiva, Nataraja, among others. We rode all the way down to Nagapattinam. Using an SLR with a helmet on is not the easiest thing to do when you’re sweating and the road is bumpy, but hey, I even managed a self-portrait.
Innumerable shades of green glint in the winter sun on paddy fields and palm trees, and in between lots of blue-white backwaters and rivulets and old Chola-period water canals, you suddenly come up on the majestic blue ocean. Short and tall, brightly, luridly painted temple gopurams, mosque minarets and church towers dot the landscape and jostling with people in the raucous towns are giant, oversize posters of Tamil political leaders of every political party mouthing overblown rhetoric. Grinding inequality and desperate political struggle is embedded in this stunningly rich, agrarian Kaveri river delta, which witnessed tremendous destruction and loss of life during the ferocious 2005 tsunami. It is impossible for me to try and capture the richness of landscape or history of all the areas we visited in a short blog post or my camera. As I gazed around me, I kept thinking that I was in a Mani Rathnam film, and that Roja would show up any second, singing chinna chinna asai…
It was my first trip to this part of the country, and I think my overwhelming feeling was how little I had absorbed, and a wish to return again as soon as possible. My own current research, such as it is progressing, has to do with Maratha migrants from western India to the southern Kaveri delta region of Thanjavur, their social networks and cultural contacts, etc. Even when I teach the South Asia survey, I sketch with some familiarity broad events and processes such as the economic/agrarian functions of temple complexes, Europeans arriving on the peninsula, the fortunes of the Mughals in the deep south, or the particular braiding of caste and religion, especially Christianity, in this region, etc. etc. But it’s still quite something to confront the sheer diversity of the long history of this area visually, through the architecture, or the diverse cadences of Tamil, Urdu, Marathi, Persian, French, English. (Over beer I subjected a poor, unsuspecting friend to a long, impromptu lecture on the service gentry of the Nawab of Arcot and the Marathas in Thanjavur and the impact on linguistic and bureaucratic practice – all he had done was speak a bit of Urdu-Tamil mix!)
Pondicherry, in particular, is a glorious place, no matter what you go there for – the French-colonial atmosphere, the beach, the diverse creole Tamil-Chettiar-French architecture and cuisines, the experience the bohemian life at Auroville or to visit the Aurobindo ashram.
But one last thing – the food. My ready association with Tamil food all these years has been with Tamil Brahmin food: vegetarian, rice-and-lentil-based bliss, typified by curd-rice-mango-pickle, the best comfort food in the whole wide world. It is possibly my most favourite cuisine of all, and I can easily live on it for months on end.
But on this trip, I had occasion to try some excellent non-vegetarian cuisine, mostly seafood. I had expected it to be very heavily coconut-based, like in nearby Kerala, but it’s not – it is very simple and delicious, if incredibly fiery with black pepper. In the photo immediately below, from left to right, is yogurt, rasam, mutton curry, coriander-chilli paruppu, and garlic prawn, with garlic prawn and another prawn curry in the plate. All to be eaten, one at a time in courses (all this time I thought only the Bengalis, as good derivative discourse folk, ate in courses. Turns out they have company). In the photos below are the best crab curry and fried pomfret I have ever eaten.
Perhaps my favourite discovery, was of the Karaikal halwa, a popular dessert in these parts, and whose provenance I am yet to find out in detail. When my friend first offered it to me as a local delicacy, I demurred, because the shiny red and black stuff looked like large insects that had met with an unhappy, squelchy end. But I am glad I was persuaded to try them, because they were deliciously sweet and nutty, made in ghee. The red stuff is made with almonds, the orangey, crumbly one with grated beet and cream of wheat (like gajar halwa), and the black stuff, by far the best, was of crushed cotton seeds. Yum.























Oh. This is making me terribly nostalgic. Especially the food. And hey–you look lovely.
I think you all chose well when it comes to the saris. I love the one you’re wearing in the first picture. And that’s an amazing self-portrait!
You all look lovely – and that mendhi is amazing. Your photos are much appreciated – I really want to visit India someday – and checking your blog makes me feel like I am getting little visits without leaving home yet. Thank you!
just drool drool drool over the saris and mehendi and food and everything!
I love the photos you take.
BTW happy new year to you and yours…
Wow!! just wow!!
I was there with my kids absorbing these kutcheries (carnatic concerts) for 8 days in December during Margazhi music season. And, after 20 full kutcheries and some mini ones, I came back to join my kids for New year’s eve rather reluctantly as my oldest demurred “Appa are you kidding?” when I asked if I could stay a couple of days longer.
So, having dragged them from US missing Christmas for a mere 12 day trip, I couldn’t possibly say no.
Yes, Chennai always leaves me longing for more – though not the auto drivers (some of them are human though!)
great pix and echo the sentiments of the other commenters..
– s
Happy New Year!
I don’t know about courses, but us Andhra-ites also eat each item separately mixed with rice, starting with plain dal and ending with curd rice. Does that make it courses?
Thank you thank you all and Happy New Year! the camera I took along was so heavy it had better take some decent pics!
Swapna – Yeah, I guess that makes it courses, no? The Bengalis I know and have eaten with take great pride in this style, believing it to be a more culinarily appreciative form of eating. In Maharashtra and our part of Karnataka we eat the chapati/bhakri followed by rice but all the items are placed at once in the plate, and you eat all together. Each item has its own place in the plate too – cooked items to the right of the banana leaf stem, uncooked kosambaris, chutneys etc to the left… but now I don’t know if these are community specific or common to the entire regions.
Sthan – I wish I could have gone to a kutcherry! I really have to spend time in Chennai in Dec/Jan to listen to some music. I narrowly missed an Alarmel Valli concert on Christmas day. Next time…
A mouthwatering post! The well-hung (is that the term?) saris were gorgeous too. So I will not be my crabby self on this page. Only, was missing a picture of the biker, of whose hand there’s but a glimpse.
Ami – “well hung”??? Um, I don’t even want to think of the people certain google searches will bring to this page after this! I was going to suggest “well-worn” instead, but “well-draped” is the best, I think.
You look marvellous in saris!!
And the historical/linguistic/culinary travelogue aspect of this post, and your blog in general, makes me wish it were published so I could carry it to India with me.
If we ever venture to the south, I’ll have to look up these posts again. Better yet, I should just make a date to travel India with you (and Mary!), and get the full benefit! You can lecture me on linguistic migration any time
That last photo, coupled with its description, literally made my mouth water. Mmmmm, halva…..
You look adorable in the saris! Happy New Year
Hey Prachi,
That’s a great post. The Urdu-Tamil mix can be hilarious. My favorite phrase is “kassu laissu” for “did you bring the money?” (“cash laaya”?)
Not sure why you believe all that propaganda about Bongs being the only ones to eat in courses. Too many, too vocal presidency college types influencing you?
So that red stuff is called karaikal halva? Never paid any attention to it growing up. Now its too bloody late. Cotton seeds in dessert? That is some seriously creative cuisine. Next thing you know Padma Laxmi is going to read your blog and bung it on some unsuspecting, Ferran Adria wannabe molecular gastronomist on the next episode of Top Chef. Don’t even get me started on her accent.