March 4, 2008

GUNDRUK FOR THE HOMESICK SOUL


One of the most vivid memories of the winters in Kalimpong is of rows and rows of wilting leaves of Rayo saag, radish and cauliflower drying on plastic sheets spread on the hedge. The backyard would be cluttered with an old chlorophyll stained okhli and tins with their tops weighed down with stones, the sharp acid smell of fermenting gundruk assailing the senses. Though not as famous as the other fermented leaf-tea, almost every house in the hills dutifully makes gundruk during the dry winter months to be used all round the year. Gundruk essentially consists leaves of Brassica family (mustard, Rayoo saag, cauliflower, radish) subject to lactic acid fermentation and sun dried to form a brownish acidic dried product. Not beautiful to look at but heavenly if you have a taste for it. Its is primarily drunk as a spicy soup but even the thought of fresh fermented gundruk spiced up with chillies and mustard oil will produce a deluge of saliva enough to qualify as the great flood itself.
Here's the recipe to a gundruk ko jhol (gundruk soup) any homesick nepali would happily do anything for.
INGREDIENTS
50grams Gundruk
2 green chillies (slit longitudinally)
1 onion finely sliced
3 cloves garlic (coarsely crushed)
1' ginger (crushed)
1 ripe tomato (finely chopped)
1 tps turmeric powder
salt to taste
2 tbs mustard oil
water ( the jhol comes out thick and nice if you used water in which rice has been washed, the second wash and rice should preferably be the indigenous Darjeeling rice locally called Dhikiko chamal or maseeno chamal or busty ko chamal)
1 tsp ghee (Khareyko ghiu/Clarified butter)
LETS DO IT
Steep the gundruk in a little water (just enough to wet it)
Heat oil. Add garlic and onions and fry till translucent and add the ginger and gundruk (after draining the water) and fry till onions turn brown.
Add chilies, turmeric powder, salt and tomatoes and fry til the tomatoes get cooked.
Add the water and bring to a boil.
Add the ghee in the end.
Hot or cold Gundruk tastes heavenly with rice.
[As I write this I suddenly remembered that Gundruk was partly responsible for my grandfather going bankrupt. A highly impractical man never meant for earning money he would carry on various types of business to keep his family fed and fund his studies as well. He floated a Gundruk company for exporting Gundruk to the Gorkha armies in various parts of the world. Well to cut a long story short it led to his bankruptcy and a childhood full of difficulties for my father and a childhood full of the difficulties he faced and "how lucky you all are" type stories for us. Anyway why hold it against Gundruk]


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