Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam-the ancient Vedic phrase meaning "the world is one family"-fits very well for Christmas in Goa. The widely scattered diaspora of India's smallest state gathers back home in substantial numbers, Antipodean, British, North American, Lusophone and very desi accents chorusing together around family dinner tables. The village bylanes turn magical, with hand-made stars and fairy lights, and streams of excited children waiting expectantly for Santa Claus to arrive. You will hear guitars, and laughter, and carolling in Konkani, Portuguese and English. From each kitchen, there's an unstoppable stream of traditional delicacies that once again carry the traces and influences of trade routes reaching all across the world.
"Goa's Christmas sweets had a global touch much before the age of globalisation," says the fine Panjim-based historian Fatima da Silva Gracias, in her landmark Cozinha de Goa: History and Tradition of Goan Food. She describes how the seasonal array "draws from diverse culturesPortuguese, Hindu, Arabic, Malaysian and Brazilian". Other specialities have their roots in the Konkan itself, which "has its own influence in the form of neureos (sweety flaky pastry), kulkuls (a sweet rava and coconut milk sweet) and shankarpali (crisp flour and sugar bites)". Similarly wide-angled diversity also characterises the traditional family festival meal, which can include the famous sorpotel-born from the 16th and 17th-century African slave trade that connected Goa to Bahia in Brazil via Angola and Mozambique-that is made "tail to snout" from every part of the pig, famously including blood, and South East Asian-inflected bebinca (the version in Indonesia and the Philippines has the same name but spelled bibingka), along with lots fruit cake of Raj-era Anglo-Indian soaked in rum.
Bu hikaye Condé Nast Traveller India dergisinin November 2022 - January 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Condé Nast Traveller India dergisinin November 2022 - January 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Made In Nagaland
From home textiles to jewellery, clothing, and more, here are the 10 Naga craft brands you need to know. By Sohini Dey
TOKYO RIGHT NOW
As impossible to pigeonhole as ever, the Japanese capital is buzzing with fresh influences and new ideas
RAISING RAI: WHERE THE MAGIC HAPPENS
Raghu and Avani Rai on connecting via worlds seen through their lenses.
GILDED WATERS
Paula Hardy boards one of the last remaining dahabiyas on the Nile for a different perspective of Egypt's storied river
THE GIRL WITH GRAND DESIGNS
Gauravi Kumari is part of Jaipur's new creative set that is bringing fresh perspectives to the city's design legacy.
A FACE FOR ADVENTURE
Retooling the iconic Rolex GMT-Master II for fresh explorations.
THE GRAND seduction
Palermo's chaos, swagger, and temperamental charm cast a hypnotic spell.
Rhythm Divine
Wherever you go in Gwalior, the myth and magic of Tansen are inescapable, as Sam Dalrymple finds out.
IDEAL WORLD
Palestinian chef Fadi Kattan explains why he went ahead with the publication of Bethlehem, his celebratory cookbook.
NUJUMA, A RITZ-CARLTON RESERVE SAUDI ARABIA
On alittle-visited Red Sea archipelago, the Middle East’s first Ritz-Carlton Reserve reflects both untapped nature and hyperreal modernity, finds Noo Saro-Wiwa.