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Wednesday 4 September 2019

Udupi Cuisine – A Divine Experience




U
dupi is the paradise for gastronomic delight. The very mention of the name of this spiritual town conjures up memories of delectable delicacies besides the presiding deity Lord Krishna.  The eateries with a Udupi tag, spread across the country and the globe as well are known for their vegetarian fare.


     Udupi cuisine has evolved in the holy precincts of the temples in Udupi, particularly the famous Sri Krishna Math. Perhaps, the spirituality in the air enabled the place to experiment with the limited vegetables and spices, as many in the category are prohibited for a satvik food. Thus born a wide range of dishes.

Guided by tradition
     Onion and garlic are a strict no in these dishes. Even some vegetables like bottle gourd, a kind of brinjal, basale (a kind of leafy vegetable), drum stick and little gourd are not used in the traditional Udupi spread. The vegetables not grown locally such as cabbage, radish, cauliflower etc. are alien to traditional Udupi spread. Garam masala is not at all used in the food here, albeit some ingredients used separately in some dishes. During Chaturmasya period (usually the monsoon season), the list of ingredients has to be further cut down, as having certain vegetables and spices in the period is forbidden. Due to many such taboos, the cooks had no other go than innovating.  And the outcome, indeed, is mouthwatering. Thus in a way, it flourished under restrictions.

     Rice is the staple diet in this part, hence all accompaniments naturally are “rice-friendly”. Coconut is profusely used in many dishes owing to the abundance of coconut in the coastal region.  Even for payasa coconut milk is used instead of cow’s milk. It is the use of coconut oil which is one of the factors that lend a distinct flavour to Udupi food. Buttermilk or curd based dishes are aplenty, to counter the effect for the scorching heat of the coastal area. Though lemon is used, it is mostly tamarind that lends sourness to the dishes. 

     It is very interesting to note that each and every aspect of health is taken care of while whipping up the items and the way it is served. A Udupi spread on a plantain leaf with an array of colourful dishes is a feast to the eyes and the stomach for sure. However, except the strictly traditional meals at the temple and some orthodox families, Udupi cuisine too has seen some tweaks here and there to appease the ever changing palate of the people.  Coconut oil may find a replacement sometimes.  Today’s people whose acitivities do not demand much of physical work dread the oil, though there are views countering the claim.

Variety galores
     Usually the food is relished on a plantain leaf sitting on the ground. On the tip of the leaf on the left hand side are served salt and pickle. Pickle, most of the time, is of mangoes, despite being prepared in different ways. Occasionally pickle of hog plum (amtekai) too is served. Though salads are touted as a healthy option in recent days, they have been common in Udupi spread since its introduction. There are usually one or two kinds of salads. Mainly salads are made of split green gram or Bengal gram. Nowadays to make it exotic, salads are tossed with pomegranate seeds and sprouted green gram as well.  Sometimes they are entirely prepared with sweet corns or cashew nut pieces. 


     Chutney occupies the next slot. It is either of only coconut or coconut ground with other vegetables or roasted lentils. On the other end at the top sit comfortably one or two sautéed vegetables called ajotno or ajadina. These known as playas elsewhere are prepared with vegetables like beans, yam, ash gourd, brinjal, raw banana, tender jackfruit (seasonal) etc. Depending on the vegetable, plain coconut or coconut ground with spices like chilly and mustard or cumin is added.

     A rice bath called chitranna is served on the left below. Deep fried crunchy Happala and sandige are placed next. At the right hand side below a little of payasa is served.  The array of varied hues is complete with the steaming hot white rice at the centre.  A table spoon of semi-liquid lentil dish called tovve is served. Then comes a dash of ghee.

     Once set, you can start dining. As you taste the “starters”, comes the dish made with mashed cooked brinjal in curd. This is followed by a watery spicy pigeon pea-based item with tomato, sometimes without tomato too, called saaru (rasam).

     Then it’s the turn of sambars known as koddel one with only pigeon pea and vegetable and another with ground coconut and a bit of lentils with vegetables like cucumber, ash gourd etc. Menaskai that follows is a sweet sour and spicy sambar-kind of dish made usually out of mango, bitter gourd or pineapple.

     Once these spicy dishes are consumed one craves for some sweets to soothe the taste buds. Sweets include different kinds of holiges, laddus, jilebi etc. with some savoury items in between.


     Now the payasa that was served just a spoonful earlier is served a ladle-full or to the content of one’s heart. Payasa, also called paramanna, is made using different items. Usually it is split green gram or Bengal gram. But paramanna with wheat pieces, small dumplings of rice called peradye too is prepared. If it’s the season of mangoes, then rasayana - mangoes mashed in coconut milk sweetened with jaggery as base - is common in the Udupi menu.Now another curd-based sambar called kodakyana aka pulikajipu arrives. At the end curds and spicy butter milk are served.

      However, it’s not all about the Udupi spread. This is just the tip of the iceberg. The other  items include appa, vade, biskut rotti, and sweets like different kinds of burfies, hayagreeva maddi,  atthirasa,  sheera and the dishes like avil (many vegetables in ground coconut and butter milk as base) baratha (sour extract of raw mango with chillies and seasoning), tambulis (prepared with sour butter milk) and saasive and many more. Again, each and every item comes with several variations. Depending on the occasion, many addition and deletion are made in the menu. But whatever the case, it is full meal always.

(The article was published in Deccan Herald on 04.05.2019)