The
Foodie File
Madhur Jaffrey

This Delhi-born most visible face of Indian cuisine has been
telling the Brits how to cook their quail for years now. She’s perhaps the
woman most responsible for introducing Indian spices to the West, (or just
Britain) and paving the way for fusion food.
Camellia Punjabi
The innovative
marketing director of Taj Group of Hotels revolutionised the way hotels saw
their food. She introduced food festivals, changing menus and experimented
greatly with exotic culinary
trends.
Namita Punjabi
The woman
who made Chutney Mary as talked about as the QE II also owns Veeraswamy —
the world’s oldest surviving Indian cuisine joint outside of India.
She’s catered to royalty and put Indian food on the list of
‘to-be-seen-eating’ foods for the upper crust.
Karen Anand
Cordon Bleu and a love
of fusion had a lot to do with Karen’s gourmet labels. She brought gourmet
pickles and preserves onto the shelves of supermarkets and painstakingly
explained to the Indian eating public what fine food really was.
Rashmi Uday Singh
If the mass of
food lovers in India were a football team, Rashmi Uday Singh would be their
Beckham — foodlines, food guides and just food, whether catered, budget
bites, made to order or fine ‘n’ swanky, Rashmi went for it all, and
along with her so did hundreds of Mumbai’s residents.
Farzana Contractor
Editor of
India’s first wine ‘n’ dine magazine along with enthusiastic
foodie husband, the late Berham Contractor, her magazine
Uppercrust
made Indians and some of the
foodie world realise we actually do take our food pretty seriously. The magazine
regularly brings together gourmets and chefs in a serious bid to look at
different foods.
Sanjeev Kapoor
The man who brought exotic cuisines to the fingertips of the most staid
and sit-at-home housewife, Sanjeev Kapoor’s amiable style of presentation
beat all the ‘Yan Can Cook’ episodes hollow when it came to
penetration of Indian homes. Whether filming in Mauritius or tackling some
unpronounceable dessert, Sanjeev makes it appear all so easy.
The Old Vs The New
The
traditional recipe for Rabadi
Ingredients:
Milk 1 litre Sugar
6-7 tbsps
Method
1 Heat the milk. 2
After the first boil, let it simmer till the milk thickens to a little less than
half its original quantity and turns light brown. 3 Add sugar and once it
dissolves, wait for five minutes before switching off the stove. The
Rabri
is ready.
The
new age recipe for Rabadi
Ingredients
1/2 tin sweetened condensed
milk 1/2 litre milk
Method
1 Stir half
the contents of the tin into the half litre of milk until well mixed. 2 Heat
until the milk thickens. 3 Garnish with slivers of almonds and serve.
Photograph
courtesy La Brallentine Glass