Delicious desi comfort food that you can whip up this winter season
Let’s begin by establishing that I’m not a fan of the winter season but, like many, I am a fan of eating desi during this time of the year.
Hence my planned trip to the East Coast of the US last weekend meant braving some uncomfortable weather, but nothing that a heavy parka and goosedown jacket couldn’t handle, I assumed. Grudgingly, I surrendered to a family get-together in the midst of the cold. Mind you, I was most excited about meeting the family and celebrating the birth of my niece, but the ‘brrrr’ part of it was keeping me up in the night.
And the polar vortex arrived just the very day I was to make a landing! Yes, the reality and application of Murphy’s Law has not escaped me to my utmost chagrin and panic. But my siblings kept reminding me, “We’ll do gup shup around hot desi food, and it’ll remind you of our childhood winter visits to Punjab with extended family, food, laughter, cold and a whole lot of catching up.”
I arrived in NYC ready to visit the Pakistani snow leopard at the Brooklyn zoo, brave the arctic blast, dress up in extreme winter attire (not compromising style), and eat some desi food, all in the company of my siblings.
When the weather is that cold, the best kind of comfort food is a piping hot paratha roll, not to say the delicious sarson ka saag and makai ki roti. Yes!
Stuffed with grilled spicy kebab, imli ki chutney, julienne sliced red onions, sliced tomatoes and green chillies, with a side of mint coriander chutney, it seemed life was perfect; and if it wasn’t in that moment, it was made so with the arrival of hot crispy aaloo samosas and Earl Grey chai (I prefer it to doodh patti), and I made the connection that winter eating is all about comfort food.
It’s important to note that a lot of winter-time eating is associated with cultural eating; we crave the cuisine and ingredients our genes evolved with, and nourished on — hence the parathas, samosas, sarson, nihari, paaye and halwas. Cool weather ushers in food cravings, and with it come opportunities to overindulge, especially as, because of the cold, outdoor activities are limited and we tend to prefer to stay in and eat.
Hence my craving for walnut halwa, chanay ki daal ka halwa and gajar ka halwa, not to mention the entire menu and cuisine that was a part of my childhood eating indulgences. Here, I revisit a few comfort food recipes from the winter of yesterday that are very relevant today.