It’s
been quite a while since we’ve heard from my college roommate, “Ford McKenzie.” He’s the guy who introduced me to White Dog whiskey and the pleasures of the protein overdose at the annual Brooklyn Beefsteak. Ford’s been a radical
underground journalist, a world traveler, a high-flier on Wall Street, and has even
dabbled in the theater. Now in his first
guest post for Culinary Types, Ford adds successor-to-Anthony Bourdain to his list
of creds with this culinary dispatch from Mumbai, India:
Sunday
1AM: In the back of a car on my way
to the Grand Hyatt. Just landed in Mumbai from Hong Kong. The airport looks
like an old bus station. There are people everywhere. Everyone is in motion.
It is like a rugby scrum – I feel like the ball. Every 10 feet someone asks if
they can carry my bags for a tip. Warm out and kind of swampy. Thank God the
hotel sent me a driver. I am going to sleep dreaming of a week full of real
live Indian food.
Sunday
12PM: In the back of a car headed across
town. On the plane, read an article in the Wall St Journal about Viya in
the Oberoi Hotel. It's run by one of the only Michelin-starred Indian chefs in
the world. Feel compelled to go. There is something like 25 million people here
and no traffic lights. Driving right now is like being on the bumper cars ride
in Coney Island.
Sunday
1PM: Viya, first Indian meal. Modern take on chaat, Indian street food.
Array of appetizers-too hard to describe. One is a vegetable croquette topped
with cardamom ice cream/sorbet in a martini glass-savory, cold, sweet, tastes
like perfume, unexpected. Second course: pot braised chicken with
biriyani rice, crispy fried bread strips, potato naan, side of stewed lentils.
Two glasses of Barbaresco. How can I ever go back to that gloppy
stuff in New York?
Wednesday
5PM: Office brought in a crew of Indians to make real chaat on the balcony
after work. Table of bags and plates of raw ingredients, some kind of home-made
grill contraption. Made to order: Grilled smashed Indian potato, chick peas,
spicy chutney, chopped red onion, and crushed puri (crispy stuff on top).
Thursday
8PM: At dinner. Don't know where
we are, but took two hours to drive here. Streets were chaos. Indian
buffet with open bar. Am drinking a margarita with crushed strawberries.
I tipped one of the waiters 500 rupiahs (about US$10) to guide me through the
buffet to the best dishes. Turns out that more than 900 million people in India
make less than $10 a day-so now he's treating me like I'm the King of India. I
didn't catch his name. I've been calling him Sanjeev. He doesn't seem to mind.
Thursday
9PM: Sanjeev keeps putting fresh drinks in my hand. Knee deep
into my fourth margarita. He just brought me a bowl of Burmese coconut cream
curry soup with long, thin rice noodles, potatoes, vegetables and Burmese
spices. Oh my.
Thursday 10PM: I've got a sixth maragarita in front of me. Sanjeev is insisting I try dessert. He's already made me have two incredible chicken dishes, cubed cottage cheese in murgh (paneer) and some tasty vegetable rice. Another bite is going to kill me, but he is relentless.
Thursday 10PM: I've got a sixth maragarita in front of me. Sanjeev is insisting I try dessert. He's already made me have two incredible chicken dishes, cubed cottage cheese in murgh (paneer) and some tasty vegetable rice. Another bite is going to kill me, but he is relentless.
Thursday
10:15: Jelabis with Rabdi: Flour dough stretched, cut, and fried in rings
then dipped in sugar honey glaze topped with lightly sweet, thickened reduced
milk with a side of sweet almond ice cream (tastes a little like crispy
zepolli) OMG-this is like the best thing I have ever had. Sanjeev is getting me
seconds.
Friday 8:30AM: Indian breakfast on the office balcony: Coconut chutney, red chutney, pounded steamed rice cakes and vegetable/tomato sauce. Was a little scared. Didn't think I could eat again after last night, but had to dive in.
Masala dhosas: Indian crepes with spicy potato for the second part of breakfast
Friday 8:30AM: Indian breakfast on the office balcony: Coconut chutney, red chutney, pounded steamed rice cakes and vegetable/tomato sauce. Was a little scared. Didn't think I could eat again after last night, but had to dive in.
Masala dhosas: Indian crepes with spicy potato for the second part of breakfast
Friday
12PM: Last Indian lunch: Biriyani food: chicken tikka
with green chutney, chicken biriyani with spiced curds and spinach kabob. One
of the wallas brought me a coca-cola.
© 2013 T.W. Barritt All Rights Reserved