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Jewel in the Crown
Indian Cuisine
By Carole Kotkin
Indian cooking is heating up in kitchens around the
country as American chefs begin to uncover the secrets of this complex and
deeply flavorful cuisine. Regional Indian restaurants and those featuring
Indian-fusion themes are opening everywhere, and Indian-inspired dishes show
up on menus in all sorts of dining spots. It’s an expanding cuisine that is
being cooked with greater authority and flair than ever before in America.
For years, Indian restaurant food in the United States was the antithesis of
fine dining. It was cheap, filling food, eaten in hole-in-the-wall curry
restaurants in ethnic neighborhoods. Most of the food was based on northern
Indian cuisine, but the scene is changing. Chefs are serving not only the
now-familiar tandoori specialties and chicken tikka masala but also are
introducing the cuisine of the southern part of the country, with its
vibrant vegetarian dishes.
On every culinary front, the boundaries between
traditional cuisines are giving way to fusion and now it’s India’s turn to
be the newest player on the fusion front. Indian cuisine is having an impact
on American cooking few could have imagined 10 years ago, before Americans
had fully developed a taste for adventurous boldly flavored food. While some
chefs use the spices as backdrop to their own styles of cooking, others
borrow more liberally from traditional Indian cuisine applying Indian
techniques to ingredients that are rare or unknown in India. Prominent
American chefs, like Lydia Shire at Biba in Boston, Gary Danko at Gary
Danko’s in San Francisco, Nora Poullon at Restaurant Nora in
Washington D.C., and Rocco DiSpirito at Union Pacific in New York, have been
putting tastes of India on their menus for some
time. For Norman Van Aken of
Norman’s in Miami, experimenting with Indian spices has long been an
important element in his cooking. “We have done an entire Tasting Menu on
Indian Cuisine. I think it’s a natural with the climate we have here. One of
the dishes we do is a roasted squab with yogurt and Indian spices,” he says.
Another trailblazer in applying Indian spices to local ingredients is Chef
Allen Susser of Chef Allen’s in Miami prepares dishes like crab cakes with
mango chutney and cool orange riata served with red snapper and vindalloo
made with lobster. The trend is not without its critics, however. Neela
Paniz, chef and co-owner of Bombay Café in West Los Angeles and author of
Bombay Café cookbook, says, “Some of the American chefs do not have a true
understanding of Indian cuisine and use spices incorrectly, like sprinkling
unpalatable un-toasted mustard seeds over a dish.”
The creative blending and use of spices are the heart
of Indian cooking. Indians have been the acknowledged masters in the use of
spices for over 2,000 years. The variety of spices and condiments is
staggering and each region uses different spices in their food. Neela Paniz,
of Bombay Café says, “Almost every spice you can name goes into an Indian
dish-- cinnamon, cardamom, cloves, bay leaves, fennel, ginger, turmeric,
cumin seeds, nutmeg and mace.. either ground or used whole and more
delicate, complicated flavors also are emerging, including mustard seeds and
curry leaves.”
The food of India varies from region to region because
of religion, geographic location, and history. Before India’s independence
it was divided into 600 semi-independent kingdoms ruled by maharajahs and
wealthy landowners, as well as large tracts ruled directly by the British,
and each developed its own cuisine. There are now presently 37 different
Indian states, (the number of states changes with new political situations)
each with its own language, history, literature, dress, and culinary
traditions. The people of Kerala, in the southwest, enjoy shrimp and
coconut, unknown in the meat-loving northwest. In Bengal and Andhra Pradesh
and other southern states, the staple is rice; in Punjab and Uttar Pradesh
in the north, the staple is wheat. People from Gujerat, north of Bombay, eat
nothing grown underground, consequently no garlic and onions. Four centuries
of colonization by the Portuguese in Goa influenced the Goan cuisine with
ingredients like palm vinegar. Muslims abstain from pork, and Hindus avoid
beef. Madhur Jaffrey, the Indian actress and author of more than a dozen
Indian cook books, recalls in her book Madhur Jaffrey’s Indian Cooking,
trading lunches in the schoolyard; and she’s not talking abut peanut
butter and jelly. “The kids carried lunches filled with regional specialties
that also reflected their religious dietary restrictions,” she writes.
Jaffrey, a Hindu, would bring quail and partridge prepared with onions,
ginger, cinnamon, black pepper and yogurt. Her Punjabi friend of Sikh faith
would bring wheat parathas filled with pomegranate seeds and eaten with a
sweet and sour homemade turnip pickle. Her friend from Gujerat, a Jain who
followed strict vegetarianism, would bring pancakes made from legumes called
pooras. Her Muslim friend from Uttar Pradesh would bring beef cooked with
spinach and flavored with chiles, cardamon and cloves.
As a child growing up in Bombay, Neela Paniz, of Bombay
Café, was exposed to the marvelous dishes prepared by her family’s cook,
whom Paniz considers to be one of the best in all India. After moving to Los
Angeles almost 30 years ago, she grew homesick for real Indian food. Her
aunt taught her to cook, and later, on vacations in Bombay, she studied with
the cook her family employed. When she opened the 75-seat Bombay Café 12
years ago, she began to break the rules of Indian cooking and create her own
exciting style. She has taken full advantage of ingredients not readily
available in the India of her childhood such as fresh seafood and vegetables
like lettuce and broccoli to create an Indian-California innovation. “Indian
cuisine is probably one of the most ancient cuisines and likely one of the
most complicated but it’s finally making its emergence into the Western
world. When people recognize that there is a lot more to Indian food than
the bottle of curry on their spice shelf, then the acceptance is much more
favorable,” she says. Although Bombay Cafe does a range of tandoori and
vegetarian dishes, she has introduced her customers to Indian “street food”
as well. That would include such dishes as chat, which features
seupuri—dollar-sized crisp crackers, flat or puffed, made of semolina
flour—that are topped with potatoes, onions and contrasting chutneys. They
are served like mini tostados with a noodle, called sev, which is made of
chickpea flour. “Puffed ones are served with lentil dumplings and potatoes
and smothered with yogurt and chutney, “ Paniz says. “There are many tastes
and textures: The crunch comes from the puri itself, the flavor from the
lentil dumpling, the sweet and sour chutney made from tamarind and dates.”
In addition there is panipuri, puffed puri with a hole broken on the top
with sprouted mung beans and cumin-mint water. “ You can pop those into your
mouth, and it’s a shot of fabulous flavors, “Paniz says. “These are foods
that are easy to dispense from a cart and don’t require much refrigeration,
because there is no meat involved. The flavors come from a variety of
chutneys.”
“For me, Tabla is like a dream come true. I always
wanted to mix and match Indian with European food, but in India I was told
it couldn’t be done, that Indian spices were too strong for European food,”
says Executive chef Floyd Cardoz of the fusion-Indian restaurant conceived
and developed by restaurateur Danny Meyer and Michael Romano, Meyer’s
executive chef and partner at Union Square Café. Cardoz was born in
Bombay 40 years ago of Goan parentage--therefore his Portuguese colonial
name. He first trained in India, but he also honed his craft in Switzerland
before coming to New York about 10 years ago where he landed a job as
executive sous-chef under Gray Kunz at Lespinasse, a four-star restaurant
that has no inhibitions about breaking cultural barriers and infusing
classical French food with Asian flavors. Cardoz and Romano went to India
where they observed, ate and learned about the cuisines of various regions.
Ultimately, they decided the key to Tabla’s (named after tunable Indian
drums) menu would be to use the freshest of seasonal American foods and
prepare them with Indian flair and French technique. Three Tandoori ovens
are built into the Tabla scheme. Two are located in the main level Bread Bar
at Tabla where hot, fresh flat breads and casual home-style foods are
featured. When the lid of the oven is removed, it reveals charcoal lining
the bottom that reaches temperatures of up to 900 degrees. When preparing
the thin cakes of bread (naan) that accompany many Indian dishes, the cook
applies the batter directly to the side of the oven. The bread sticks to the
side and is done within a minute. Among the breads is a naan with rosemary
and olive oil served with lemon-chive raita, and tandoori “pizza” of Goan
spiced mushrooms. The third tandoor is in the kitchen of the balcony level
Tabla where more elaborate prix fixe, seasonal menus are cooked. Here, chef
Cardoz cooks Goan spiced Maine crab cakes and serves them with tamarind
chutney, and braised lamb shoulder with lamb loin and green baby artichokes,
fennel, black pepper and cardamom sauce. Cardoz’ subtle use of spices
shatters the notion that Indian food is always exceedingly spicy. Tabla’s
extensive wine list is evenly divided between young whites and reds to go
with the aromatic and spicy flavors of Cardoz’ food. “Older wines are too
subtle and would be wasted on my food,” he remarks. There are 10 sparkling
wines on the list that Cardoz suggests be served throughout the meal.
“Champagne is cold and crisp, making it good with many spice blends,” Cardoz
explains. In Ruth Reichl’s three-star review of Tabla in the New York Times,
she said, “This is American food, viewed through a kaleidoscope of Indian
spices.”
Ask New Delhi born Ashok Bajaj who opened the
legendary, The Bombay Club in Washington, D.C. in 1988, just a few blocks
from the White House, about Indian Fusion food and he will tell you, “It’s
America--some would like to see authentic Indian; others would like touches
of it. There’s room for both. It’s like Italian or French nouvelle cuisine.
You develop, you learn, you take ideas.” You may have to wait at the bar for
one of the tables at The Bombay Club, much favored by presidents, senators
and celebrities, but with a chilled glass of Riesling in hand you won’t
mind. “We were the first in the U.S. to do sophisticated classic regional
Indian cuisine, and that’s what we still do,” Bajaj continues. The food at
the Bombay Club is a culinary trip through India. He respects the
centuries-old Ayurvedic tradition concerning food combinations and blending
of spices, believed to promote good health and to heal. Indian dishes tend
to present a number of distinct, equally strong flavors—some sweet, some
hot, some sour, some salty—so that the combination will provide flavors that
will harmonize. “A healthy meal at Bombay Club would include a balance
between sweet and sour (chutney and pickles) and include fresh vegetables,
lentils, yogurt, rice chapati, perhaps meat, but always pickles”, Bajaj
explains. A serious wine connoisseur, Bajaj says, “Wine is an integral part
of Indian food since ancient history. They are even growing wine grapes in
the Western part of India. Of course, it’s in the preliminary stages, but at
least it’s a beginning.” Bombay Club has a list of French, Italian and
American wines. “We try to educate our customers to choose the wines that
will complement our food—Rieslings, Gewurztraminers, Rhones, Pinots and
Chardonnay—but guests still ask for Cabernets that don’t go well at all,” he
says.
As the flavors of India are becoming more commonplace
on U.S. menus, Indian foods and seasonings are filling supermarket shelves
almost as fast as they are being embraced by chefs. Immigrants from India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka propel the movement. Bags of colorful
lentils, blocks of tart-sweet tamarind paste and jars of cardamom pods line
Indian grocery shelves. Indian spices like black mustard seeds, fenugreek
and fragrant, extra long grain basmati rice, essential for fine Indian
cooking, is no longer a curiosity. Basmati rice is routinely imported now
and is also being grown in Texas. Linda Bladholm has written The Indian
Grocery Store Demystified, a comprehensive guide through the maze of
ingredients found in over 9,000 Indian grocery stores in America. “Shopping
in an Indian market is challenging, but with persistence and an open mind
you will unearth a rich treasure trove of Indian ingredients. Experiment,
explore, ask questions, taste, and try new things,” she advises. If there is
no Indian grocery where you live, go to www.indiaplaza.com for a wide
variety of Indian ingredients.
Across the Atlantic in London neighborhood “curry
houses” have been as ubiquitous as pubs, but authentic regional restaurants
have opened all over town to join the 2,000 existing Indian restaurants in
London. At the newly opened Cinnamon Club on the site of The Old Westminster
Library, chef Vivek Singh from the Rajvillas Hotel in Jaipur and consultant
Eric Chavot of London’s Capital Hotel are turning out dishes that stretch
and lighten the traditional repertory, without loosing the basic integrity
of traditional Indian cuisine and the superb wine list an exceptional food
of chef Vineet Bhatia at Zaika has London abuzz.
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