Living in the Now 9.6.23
| Mrinal Chatterjee
Golgappa
Golgappa
has many names across the country. In northern states of India people call it panipuri. Bengalis and Odias like to
call it phuchka or puchuka. Odias call it puchuka or gupchup. It
is also called Pani ka Bataasha or Patasha. In parts of Bihar it is called
phulki or pakodi. But I like the word golgappa. Pronounce it slowly and you will feel its fragile rounded
shape, and will have the urge of putting a couple in your mouth post haste.
Origin
of golgappa is ancient and interesting. According to a legend, Draupadi (of Mahabharata
fame) invented the Pani Puri. When the Pandava brothers, Draupadi,
and their mother Kunti were in exile after losing their kingdom in a game of
dice, Kunti threw Draupadi a challenge. She gave her some leftover aloo sabzi and
a small amount of dough and asked her to cook something that would satisfy all
five brothers. The reason why she presented this challenge is unconfirmed. Some
say it was to gauge if Draupadi would be a good housewife. Others say it was to
see if Draupadi would favour one brother over the others. In response to
Kunti’s challenge, Draupadi invented Pani Puri. Impressed by her
daughter-in-law’s resourcefulness, Kunti blessed the dish with immortality.
Culinary
researchers say that it first came into existence
somewhere in the ancient Indian kingdom of Magadha. One of the sixteen
mahajanapadas, or ‘great kingdoms’, of ancient India, the Kingdom of Magadha
corresponded to what is now Southern Bihar. While the exact time frame of its
existence is unclear, it reportedly existed prior to 600 BCE.
History
apart, golgappa is no ordinary street food. You don’t order a plateful of
golgappa and eat alone in a fancy restaurant. That is not the way you should have
it. There is an elaborate ritual before you eat golgappa. You join a group,
standing in a circle around the golgappawala
and eat in a group in sessions.
Golgappa
is age-defying. I had a session last evening. In the circle were a three and
half year old girl, her mother and grandmother, me and Anita, my wife and a
tough looking bearded young man of 26. The little girl beat us all. I can
proudly say I discovered a golgappa-gulping prodigy.
Come to think of it, golgappa is the most
democratic of snacks. Prepared with humble ingredients and much less fuss- it
is inexpensive and it fills you up.
It is a great leveler too. Whoever you may be,
you'll have to stand in a circle around the golgappawala with katora/leaf plate at hand and wait for your turn. It is
one place, nobody jumps the queue.
It
also teaches life lessons. You talk about stress. You don’t know real stress until you have a panipuri in your
mouth, a panipuri in your hand, a panipuri in your bowl and the panipuri wala
is standing in front of you with another ready panipuri.
It also shows you a short trailer of Moksha- bliss that the
yogis and preachers talk about. Moksha is the feeling of bliss, when the soft
shell of the golgappa breaks in your mouth and the masalawala sour tamarind
water floods your mouth as your tongue finds the soft massed potato with
smattering of fried ground nuts, green grams and many other ingredients that
tickles your taste buds.
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