A culinary memoir is no longer a novelty. For almost a decade, Indian food-based memoirs have consistently found readers, with the likes of Aparna Jain, Saee Khoranne-Khandekar and Padma Lakshmi writing books that weave autobiographical vignettes into recipes and introduce their readers to different lives and cultures. The latest entrant to this genre is Tabinda Jalil Burney with her book Fabulous Feasts, Fables And Family: A Culinary Memoir.
The book stands out, however, in how the food is hardly the main focus of its narration. This is despite 10 of 11 of its food-focused chapters being named after a dish made by a specific person from the author's extended family, like Naseem Khala's Extraordinary Firni, Shahida Chachi's Spectacular Rasawal or Abba's Favourite Kali Gajar Ka Halwa.
Each is an invitation to experience more than the dishes.
They recall a way of living, spontaneously bursting into song, poetry and funny sayings and idioms, and preparing for and participating in social and religious gatherings. The rest of its eight chapters retell fables that Jalil Burney heard from her grandmother-like Bandariya Bahuriya, The Ghost Who Lisped, or Raja Bakarkana, The Goat-Eared King-some of which may also be familiar to the reader.
In an interview with Lounge, Jalil Burney, a doctor with the National Health Service in London, talks about the heart of the book and why these otherwise ordinary-sounding dishes are special to her. Edited excerpts.
Esta historia es de la edición February 17, 2024 de Mint Mumbai.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición February 17, 2024 de Mint Mumbai.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
World Bank calls for reforming skills training in India
India must make a coordinated effort to reform and rebrand vocational skill training, besides aligning education with the job market, to leverage its demographic advantage to meet the $5-trillion target for its economy, the World Bank said.
FCPA cases take long to conclude after indictment
For investors keen to know the fate of billionaire Gautam Adani's indictment by US authorities, the watchword is patience.
Short-covering, relief rally add ₹7.27 trillion wealth
Markets up 2.39% to hit the highest in six months, a day after Adani's indictment
Wetter monsoon slows pace of adding new transmission lines
India's addition of new power transmission lines fell by half over a year earlier in the April-October period as a wetter-than-usual monsoon slowed work.
COP29's $1.3 tn fund plan disappoints Global South
The 29th edition of the UN climate change conference in Azerbaijan emerged from a deadlock with an annual climate finance goal of $1.3 trillion for developing countries, much to the disappointment of the Global South.
Jaguar rebrand is pink, diverse and doesn't feature any cars
Luxury automaker Jaguar is betting that a colorful and youthful rebrand will help it successfully launch fully into the electric-cars market.
Services up as manufacturing slows in Nov
The HSBC Flash India Services PMI was at 59.2 in Nov from 58.5 in Oct; manufacturing PMI fell slightly from 60.4 to 60.2
MSMED may protect medium firms too
The Centre may consider including medium enterprises for the protection granted under MSME Development (MSMED) Act, 2006, to resolve payment disputes.
Europe boosts Indian textile exports in FY25
Demand for Indian handloom, apparel partly fuelled by Bangladesh crisis
RBI nudges banks to cut speculative bet in rupee
The Indian central bank, in a rare move, instructed some banks to cut their long positions on the dollar-rupee pair on Friday, seeking to curb speculative positions with the currency at a record low, four bankers familiar with the development told Reuters.