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For nearly three months,
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I travelled all over India, tasting curries,
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watching cooks in restaurants and trying to find out their secrets.
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And talking to so many people about what makes the perfect curry.
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It was a great gastronomic adventure, probably the best one I've ever had.
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This is my quest to understand Indian food in all its complexities -
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how the food of the Persians, with their love of robust meat dishes,
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is overlaid with the traditional vegetarian food of the Indians.
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It was also about the Indian respect for, and a sense of comfort from, home cooking.
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I wanted to travel everywhere for dishes deeply flavoured with chilli and spice -
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a delight to the eye in their rich colours -
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and to understand this fascinating country.
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CAR HORN HONKS Because when Indians talk of food, they talk of their life.
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- MAN:
- First-class curry, Ricky!
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- MAN:
- That's a mind-blasting curry, Ricky!
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Madurai, one of the oldest cities in South Asia.
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It's been an important trading place for Europe for over 2,000 years.
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This Tamil poem, written in the 2nd century AD, could also apply today.
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"Madurai is a city gay with flags waving over homes and shops
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"selling food and drinks.
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"The streets are broad rivers of people.
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"Folk of every race buying and selling in the bazaars.
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"Around the temple, amid the perfume of ghee and incense,
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"are stores selling sweet cakes, garlands of flowers,
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"scented powder and betel paan."
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CAR HORN HONKS Those are the folded-up leaves that you chew
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that can make you high as a kite.
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As you can see, Madurai is a delightfully colourful and busy city -
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lots of markets. Look at these beautiful flowers.
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These are all for religious ceremonial use,
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but I always think this
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adds so much to just an ordinary fruit and veg market,
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when people are buying flowers for religious purposes as well.
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It's a very busy city, and amazingly, 2,000 years ago, it was equally busy,
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and the Greeks and the Romans used to come here for the spices.
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Particularly the pepper.
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Indeed, there's an account at the time
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that the Romans were increasingly worried about the drain of silver
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from Rome to here, to Madurai, paying for those spices.
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But I just picked up a little piece of information
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from an anonymous Greek, writing at the time,
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about what the Romans might have traded for those spices in addition to silver.
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And it says, "Madurai was rewarded for its spices
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"with Mediterranean eye shadow, perfume,
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"gold and silverware, fine Italian wines
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"and beautiful slave-girl musicians who doubled up as concubines."
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Looking across the Madurai skyline,
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I can see why the state of Tamil Nadu is known as the Land of Temples.
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These towers belong to the Meenakshi Temple -
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solid granite structures
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decorated with colourful characters from the Hindu divine texts.
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RELIGIOUS SINGING
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Around 15,000 visitors come here every day to pray and be blessed and also to eat.
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And it's the eating part that interests me.
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It's embedded in the Hindu religion.
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And Sala, who grew up here, is my guide
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to explain what these chefs are cooking for lunch.
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Smells lovely, doesn't it?
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Smells lovely. They're still using wood fires, I can smell that.
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- I know, and these huge pots.
- What's this, then?
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So this is tamarind rice. It's really easy to make.
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It's cooked rice and they toss it with a sauce that's made of tamarind and cumin
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and it's tempered with... You can see the little pieces of lentils.
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- Oh, yeah.
- It gives a bit of crunch.
- Yeah.
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And you just eat it on its own or sometimes with a mint chutney.
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And this is called appam.
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- Oh, appams!
- Appam, yeah.
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It's sort of like a pancake, deep-fried. It's a sweet one -
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it's flour, sugar and it has a little bit of cardamom in it.
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And it's a very typical temple offering.
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- These are vadas.
- Vadas. Oh.
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Yeah, so you see the batter for the vadas here.
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- These are black lentils...
- Yeah.
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..that are soaked and ground
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and they skin half of them and they leave the skin on the other half.
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Hence the black speckles in them.
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So you can see he's using a piece of plastic or, like, clingfilm
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and some people will use a banana leaf to do the exact same thing.
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Modern technology. SHE LAUGHS
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The food is blessed by the god
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and then it's sold to the people that come to the temple
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and they buy it to take home, and it's blessed food.
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That is so good.
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- I mean, I was just thinking about cathedrals back in Britain.
- Mm-hm.
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The idea of going into a cathedral and buying some food made there,
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to help the funds, to preserve the cathedral.
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Exactly. And it's also... It's something special and something delicious
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that you take back from your trip to the temple.
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What a souvenir!
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Getting the right balance is crucial to all things spiritual,
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and food, I'm beginning to understand, plays a large part in that.
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Preparations in the kitchens here start shortly after daybreak.
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Sala, it's really amazing to me
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how important food, cooking, eating food is to temple life.
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Absolutely. Even all the rituals that they do for the gods at the temple
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is everyday life, you know?
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Bathing, eating, going to sleep -
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each one of these is a ritual for the god of the temple.
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That is very profound to me, because...
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I think, before you do anything else in life, you have to feed yourself.
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Then you can start thinking about spiritual matters.
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- The body is the temple.
- Your body is a temple.
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Just, I mean, it seems very important to them, eating in the temple.
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Is that the case?
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Right, I mean, they've queued up ahead of time to eat at the temple.
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SHE SPEAKS LOCAL DIALECT
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THEY REPLY IN LOCAL DIALECT
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- This is their first time... eating here.
- Oh, really?
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SHE SPEAKS LOCAL DIALECT
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THEY REPLY IN LOCAL DIALECT
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They feel very fortunate that they're here
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and have the opportunity to eat at the temple.
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So it's more than just because they're hungry,
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it's the ritual, the celebration of food in the temple?
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Yeah, it's more the sentiment behind eating at the temple
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and not just the food itself.
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The temple's public dining room only holds about 200 people,
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so it's important to get there early.
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Lunch is usually served just after midday
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and hungry worshippers flood the dining hall
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to enjoy the dishes that have been prepared by the chefs
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and served by the many volunteers who help out on a daily basis.
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These are the unlucky few that got there a bit too late.
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Everything about to be served is carefully thought out
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and always considered sacred.
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Around four to five varied dishes -
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always vegetarian and heavily dependent on rice -
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are traditionally served on banana leaves.
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Plain white rice and rice sweetened with jaggery -
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that's unrefined sugar - are common to all temples.
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But here they also like serving poriyal -
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potatoes and cabbage fried with a handful of coconut.
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We couldn't end the day without tasting one of Sala's most favourite snacks,
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the famous South India dosas -
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giant, crispy pancakes, cooked paper-thin on hotplates,
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drizzled with ghee to give it a golden glow
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and served with a variety of chutneys.
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Such is the love of this snack that it's become a street food favourite
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all over Northern India, too.
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Wow!
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- SALA:
- Oh, these are nice and crispy.
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RICK: This must be the sort of food you dream of
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when you're in the States, in Portland?
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Oh, yeah, absolutely. This is what reminds me of home,
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and when I arrive back home, this is the first thing that I eat.
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You know, I grew up with this.
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We had dosas with sambar or a good chutney
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almost every morning for breakfast or in the evening for dinner.
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- So it's very special.
- It's so good.
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The South of India is famous for its dosas,
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because this is the rice growing region, so we have a lot of rice-based dishes
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and, you know, this is one of them.
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Well, it's not exactly fish and chips,
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but I certainly know where you're coming from!
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THEY LAUGH
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CAR HORNS HONK
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Not far from the temple is The Modern Restaurant.
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I feel there could be a little touch of Indian irony there.
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Anyway, they purely serve vegetable dishes with lots of rice
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on these banana leaves, which they call sadya.
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There'll always be three to four different curries
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made from lentils, chick peas, spinach and potatoes.
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But the most popular is sambar, a spicy, rich vegetable stew.
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The main word in this particular recipe is "lots" -
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that's lots of tomatoes,
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ditto with the turmeric...
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..shedloads of salt...
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..huge fistfuls of jaggery...
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..and then tamarind water for freshness and acidity.
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Finally, asafoetida - very popular in India,
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especially in places where garlic is frowned upon.
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He's put two lots of asafoetida powder in here,
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first in the original masala and now this powder now.
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Now, they're Brahmins and they do not eat garlic ever,
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and I think asafoetida powder is the sort of closest thing to it.
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They say, when it's cooked, it tastes and smells really earthy,
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but when you smell it in the packet, it does...
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It is slightly reminiscent of garlic.
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And, of course, it stops... There's lots of lentils in here
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and we all know what lentils do to us,
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and asafoetida stops... What do you call it?
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Well, wind, I suppose.
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Bit hot, isn't it? Can I try a bit?
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- Hot.
- All right.
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OK, only salt and the tomato juice.
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- Oh, it's good!
- Good.
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Yeah, really good.
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And it's already got chilli and the masala...
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- Just got the masala.
- After, is the masala.
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Really nice. Great.
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Now, what they call a tarka -
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it's always added at the end to enhance the flavour,
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and in this case, it's made with fenugreek and coriander seeds, lentils,
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then curry leaves and dried Kashmiri chillies.
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Now that's poured into the vegetables, as I said, right at the end,
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and it really lifts the flavour.
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In keeping with tradition,
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the food is always served in a certain order.
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It's auspicious to place the sweet elements on first,
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followed by carbohydrates, which, in the South, has to be rice.
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Then proteins in the form of dhals
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and, finally, nutritious vegetables, and then curd.
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This is the only thing they serve here but everybody loves it.
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Everybody has the same thing.
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I imagine probably half of India eats like this, all vegetarian.
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And, certainly in Southern India, everybody eats off a banana leaf.
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It's the most perfect vehicle for eating off,
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because when you've finished, you just fold the banana leaf up
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with anything that's left and throw it away.
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But you don't throw it away into the garbage -
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you throw it away for the cows.
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I'm getting very much more used to eating with my hands.
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I still find it very difficult,
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because one's unfamiliar with eating with one hand
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and it's very difficult to stop from getting extremely covered,
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not only all over my hands but all over my shirt and trousers.
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The technique, apparently, is not to get the rice too wet
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and definitely you sort of roll it round a bit like this.
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Then you use your thumb to sort of fire it into your mouth.
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And I'm beginning to get it.
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And, I think, as you begin to get it...
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you begin to enjoy it.
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A thought comes into my head -
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it's a bit like eating jellied eels.
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Most people don't like jellied eels cos they don't like the bones.
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Once you get used to it, you think... "Piece of cake."
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So, to cook.
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And, I wonder, has there ever been a better location
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for a television chef to cook his heart out,
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surrounded by lovely birds and animals on the edge of this beautiful lagoon?
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Well, this is just the most famous dish, I would suggest,
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in the whole of Southern India.
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It's called sambar and it's a celebration of vegetable markets everywhere.
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It reminds me of walking down a long street quite near the temple,
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just with one side, loads and loads of vegetable shops -
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some large, some small
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and some just with a woman with a couple of vegetables in from the country -
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and just marvelling at the variety.
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And, of course, you've got to have a dish that uses all those vegetables,
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and sambar it is.
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And here's the vegetables.
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Just a selection that we got from the market this morning.
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We've some okra there, carrots. We've got some pumpkin.
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We've got some tomato, chillies.
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You name it, it's there and I'm just going to add this to the boiling water here.
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BEANS CLATTER IN PAN
247
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Oh, I've just heard that tip-tap-tip.
248
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I've forgotten one really important ingredient
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that goes into every sambar - that's mung dhal,
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00:15:37,680 --> 00:15:41,360
those tiny, little dhal, which actually cook so quickly
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that they will soften just as quick as the other vegetables cook.
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I've used green mung, but over here they prefer to use yellow.
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Now a teaspoon of turmeric and a teaspoon of sugar.
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00:15:55,120 --> 00:15:58,320
Well, I'm just going to leave that to boil and simmer away
255
00:15:58,320 --> 00:16:01,280
and now I'm going to make a masala to pour into this.
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00:16:01,280 --> 00:16:05,560
So, into some oil, I add a teaspoon of chana dhal,
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00:16:05,560 --> 00:16:08,240
some fenugreek and coriander seeds
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and three to four vibrant Kashmiri chillies,
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a good handful of curry leaves and the obligatory asafoetida.
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Now comes the fun bit and the thing I look forward to the most -
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turning the fried masala into a smooth paste
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00:16:24,720 --> 00:16:27,720
using my trusty first-class wet spice grinder.
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00:16:27,720 --> 00:16:31,040
GRINDER WHIRRS AND RATTLES
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Just make sure that the lid of your liquidiser is securely on,
265
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otherwise hot oil could go over your shirt and your face,
266
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or in my case, WILL go over your shirt and your face!
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"Mental note," I was thinking,
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"in the final recipe,
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"let the masala ingredients cool before blending!"
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There we go.
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So now what I'm going to do is make a tarka.
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Now, a tarka is what you stir into quite a few dhals right at the end.
273
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And it's normally things like really quite hard-fried onions,
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mustard seeds, fenugreek seeds,
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but if you stir that into something like this sambar or a dhal at the last minute,
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it just gives it a real sort of flavour lift. It's called a tarka, hence tarka dhal.
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Before serving, add a final handful of curry leaves
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and enjoy with a plateful of idlis and some coconut and tomato chutneys.
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It's really nice.
280
00:17:36,960 --> 00:17:39,800
INSECTS CHIRP AND BIRD CAWS
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Now for a relatively short road trip to the coconut heaven which is Kerala.
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This is a lovely opportunity to drive through the beautiful, spice-laden hills
283
00:17:59,040 --> 00:18:05,280
that form the border between Tamil Nadu and the holiday destination of Kerala.
284
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These famous hills are known as the Western Ghats -
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00:18:08,240 --> 00:18:14,280
mile after mile of fertile plantations producing a fantastic array of spices
286
00:18:14,280 --> 00:18:16,680
like vanilla and cinnamon.
287
00:18:16,680 --> 00:18:20,560
We're travelling west, heading for the town of Thekkady.
288
00:18:21,600 --> 00:18:24,960
Look at all these shops selling spices - cheek-by-jowl.
289
00:18:24,960 --> 00:18:28,960
I'm reminded of when I first came to the Costa Brava in the '60s,
290
00:18:28,960 --> 00:18:34,360
when practically every shop sold the same thing - straw donkeys and sombreros!
291
00:18:34,360 --> 00:18:37,760
Well, here it's hot and tasty spices all the way.
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00:18:37,760 --> 00:18:41,360
CAR HORN BLARES
293
00:18:41,360 --> 00:18:43,880
We've just driven through Thekkady a few miles back.
294
00:18:43,880 --> 00:18:46,880
I was just astonished by the number of spice shops.
295
00:18:46,880 --> 00:18:50,680
There must have been 20, 30, 40, all next to each other
296
00:18:50,680 --> 00:18:52,520
and all in the high street.
297
00:18:52,520 --> 00:18:55,400
Well, that's not for the locals, that's for sure, it's for tourists
298
00:18:55,400 --> 00:19:00,200
and I think it's testimony to how important food has become in tourism.
299
00:19:00,200 --> 00:19:03,360
I mean, you come to Kerala, as somebody from Europe now,
300
00:19:03,360 --> 00:19:05,200
and you don't just go for the beaches,
301
00:19:05,200 --> 00:19:08,480
you go for the trip into the hills and the spices.
302
00:19:08,480 --> 00:19:13,400
Well, Kerala's known to have the best cardamoms and pepper in the world,
303
00:19:13,400 --> 00:19:15,400
but I wouldn't be surprised if that wasn't true
304
00:19:15,400 --> 00:19:18,200
for such things as cloves and cinnamon, too.
305
00:19:29,920 --> 00:19:34,920
The Keralan Highlands are so fertile that practically anything grows,
306
00:19:34,920 --> 00:19:37,320
a fact that the British cottoned on to
307
00:19:37,320 --> 00:19:40,280
when they planted millions of tea bushes here.
308
00:19:40,280 --> 00:19:42,760
They remind me of a sea of jade -
309
00:19:42,760 --> 00:19:46,000
a series of great rolling waves of deep green -
310
00:19:46,000 --> 00:19:50,480
or even a giant, well-manicured Hampton Court maze,
311
00:19:50,480 --> 00:19:52,880
stretching for ever over the hills.
312
00:20:01,320 --> 00:20:06,080
Just outside Thekkady is a plantation growing cardamoms and pepper.
313
00:20:06,080 --> 00:20:09,400
Do you know, I've been a chef for over 30 years
314
00:20:09,400 --> 00:20:13,800
and I didn't have a clue - until now, that is - how cardamoms grew.
315
00:20:15,440 --> 00:20:19,160
There's something so tantalising and special about them,
316
00:20:19,160 --> 00:20:22,400
a sweet scent that transforms all curries.
317
00:20:24,840 --> 00:20:29,840
Well, I was sort of wondering, when I came here this afternoon in the minibus,
318
00:20:29,840 --> 00:20:32,520
I was sort of thinking, "I wonder what a cardamom is?
319
00:20:32,520 --> 00:20:34,440
"It must be like a sort of tea bush,
320
00:20:34,440 --> 00:20:36,960
"probably hanging from under the leaves."
321
00:20:36,960 --> 00:20:38,520
Not a bit of it.
322
00:20:38,520 --> 00:20:41,320
These are cardamom... Well, you can't call them bushes.
323
00:20:41,320 --> 00:20:45,720
They're rhizomes, they're like a ginger or galangal or turmeric
324
00:20:45,720 --> 00:20:50,600
and the cardamom pods actually grow right down near the ground,
325
00:20:50,600 --> 00:20:53,520
and the flowers pollinate, they have bees to pollinate them,
326
00:20:53,520 --> 00:20:55,800
and then they have these little green pods.
327
00:20:55,800 --> 00:20:59,200
Now, tasting them, I suddenly see, yes, of course, they're rhizomes.
328
00:20:59,200 --> 00:21:02,800
They taste to me a bit like galangal more than ginger,
329
00:21:02,800 --> 00:21:04,960
but they've got that distinctive taste.
330
00:21:04,960 --> 00:21:07,760
But, of course, when they're dried, it becomes much more subtle.
331
00:21:07,760 --> 00:21:10,720
No wonder they call them the queen of spices.
332
00:21:10,720 --> 00:21:13,520
I mean, it's wildly sort of...
333
00:21:13,520 --> 00:21:15,800
It almost sort of teases you out of thought.
334
00:21:15,800 --> 00:21:20,080
Sometimes, you sort of think, "Gosh, they're too much, it's too perfumed."
335
00:21:20,080 --> 00:21:22,840
And other times, you think, "That's just what I need."
336
00:21:22,840 --> 00:21:27,200
I mean, like in a cup of chai, I mean, you've got to have cardamom
337
00:21:27,200 --> 00:21:31,840
or in some of those sweets, those lovely sweets with vermicelli in them
338
00:21:31,840 --> 00:21:36,000
and lots of cooked milk and, like... Payasam, I think it's called.
339
00:21:36,000 --> 00:21:38,000
Just a tiny bit of cardamom.
340
00:21:38,000 --> 00:21:42,240
It's subtle and it's absolutely the centre of where it's all at.
341
00:21:43,480 --> 00:21:45,640
WOMEN CHATTER IN LOCAL DIALECT
342
00:21:45,640 --> 00:21:48,080
Well, if cardamom is the queen of spices,
343
00:21:48,080 --> 00:21:50,400
then pepper is certainly the king.
344
00:21:50,400 --> 00:21:53,640
It's what started the Portuguese quest to the East,
345
00:21:53,640 --> 00:21:56,320
beginning the spice route as we know it.
346
00:21:56,320 --> 00:22:02,240
Today, these little corns are said to outsell all other spices put together.
347
00:22:02,240 --> 00:22:05,640
And these hills provide a perfect growing environment -
348
00:22:05,640 --> 00:22:09,720
lengthy monsoon rains, high temperatures and good shade.
349
00:22:12,440 --> 00:22:13,760
I mean, look at that.
350
00:22:13,760 --> 00:22:16,280
It's not a pepper tree, there's no such thing as a pepper tree.
351
00:22:16,280 --> 00:22:17,920
It's a vine.
352
00:22:19,080 --> 00:22:23,080
Most of the heat in Indian cooking comes from chillies now, of course,
353
00:22:23,080 --> 00:22:25,480
but there is nothing to beat pepper.
354
00:22:25,480 --> 00:22:28,040
Particularly in the cooking of Southern India,
355
00:22:28,040 --> 00:22:32,200
pepper really matters - it really is the king of spices.
356
00:22:32,200 --> 00:22:34,360
And thinking about it, that trade -
357
00:22:34,360 --> 00:22:38,040
you know, boats coming from Europe to India and back again -
358
00:22:38,040 --> 00:22:41,240
it would have been worth, in today's values, billions.
359
00:22:43,240 --> 00:22:45,880
I had the chance to taste a local dish
360
00:22:45,880 --> 00:22:49,520
using the freshly-harvested spices from the plantation.
361
00:22:49,520 --> 00:22:53,400
Matthew, the owner, is cooking me a pork curry
362
00:22:53,400 --> 00:22:58,120
flavoured with spices virtually growing outside the kitchen door.
363
00:22:58,120 --> 00:23:02,360
Matthew, like so many people in these highlands, is a Syrian Christian.
364
00:23:02,360 --> 00:23:05,320
They came across the Arabian Sea in the 3rd century
365
00:23:05,320 --> 00:23:10,400
and realised that the land here was perfect for growing spices.
366
00:23:10,400 --> 00:23:12,880
So here we are then, the spices -
367
00:23:12,880 --> 00:23:17,480
mustard, cumin, cloves, crushed cinnamon
368
00:23:17,480 --> 00:23:20,240
and, of course, a couple of cardamom pods.
369
00:23:21,240 --> 00:23:24,000
Matthew's already fried the pork with some shallots,
370
00:23:24,000 --> 00:23:26,960
garlic cloves, green chillies and sliced ginger.
371
00:23:28,200 --> 00:23:31,000
Tell me about cardamoms, why they're so important in Indian...
372
00:23:31,000 --> 00:23:34,160
You know, it's one of those spices which, when used sparingly,
373
00:23:34,160 --> 00:23:37,000
is just fantastic. It's just very subtle and nice.
374
00:23:37,000 --> 00:23:42,600
But, the moment you add a little extra, it can get very overpowering.
375
00:23:42,600 --> 00:23:45,080
So...traditionally in Indian home cooking,
376
00:23:45,080 --> 00:23:49,400
you add just maybe one or two pods, that's about it.
377
00:23:49,400 --> 00:23:54,480
Before serving he brings the curry to a simmer with water
378
00:23:54,480 --> 00:23:58,200
and finishes off by adding some tamarind and crushed coriander seeds.
379
00:23:58,200 --> 00:24:00,280
This recipe is from his grandmother,
380
00:24:00,280 --> 00:24:05,440
who Matthew says is the best cook he's ever known. They all say that, don't they?
381
00:24:05,440 --> 00:24:10,360
Simply because she created delicious dishes out of very few ingredients.
382
00:24:10,360 --> 00:24:12,240
Well, looking forward to this.
383
00:24:13,640 --> 00:24:16,400
It's totally delicious.
384
00:24:16,400 --> 00:24:20,160
What I really like about it is it's very...
385
00:24:20,160 --> 00:24:22,320
It's sort of simple, it's very sort of...
386
00:24:22,320 --> 00:24:25,360
It's got...it's sort of vigorous, it's fresh-tasting.
387
00:24:25,360 --> 00:24:28,800
Pretty much what I liked about this dish is just the freshness of it, you know?
388
00:24:28,800 --> 00:24:33,240
It's just, it's not what we would call masala-fied,
389
00:24:33,240 --> 00:24:35,840
as most Indian restaurant food is -
390
00:24:35,840 --> 00:24:38,960
it's typically what Indian home cooking is all about.
391
00:24:38,960 --> 00:24:41,920
Dancing food, you know? It just dances on the plate.
392
00:24:41,920 --> 00:24:44,280
I'm getting a bit carried away, but that's the way I feel.
393
00:24:44,280 --> 00:24:45,920
THEY LAUGH
394
00:24:45,920 --> 00:24:49,560
BIRDSONG
395
00:24:49,560 --> 00:24:54,960
Seeing all these cardamoms gave me an idea for what is probably South India's
396
00:24:54,960 --> 00:24:57,440
most popular dessert - payasam.
397
00:25:01,080 --> 00:25:04,120
It's a very simple dessert. And actually, after many,
398
00:25:04,120 --> 00:25:09,120
many sticky Indian desserts, I found this a total delight.
399
00:25:09,120 --> 00:25:14,840
First of all you've got to reduce a lot of milk down to a very little.
400
00:25:14,840 --> 00:25:20,480
And while that's happening, in another pan, add a teaspoon or so of ghee.
401
00:25:20,480 --> 00:25:23,200
You need this to fry off some rice vermicelli,
402
00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:25,120
which forms the starch base of this dessert.
403
00:25:30,640 --> 00:25:35,200
Cashew and pistachio nuts and a handful of raisins are also fried in ghee
404
00:25:35,200 --> 00:25:36,920
to garnish the finished dish.
405
00:25:40,560 --> 00:25:41,600
Once the milk is boiled,
406
00:25:41,600 --> 00:25:47,240
simply add the fried vermicelli and a good amount of sugar.
407
00:25:47,240 --> 00:25:51,160
But the main point of this dish is the cardamom.
408
00:25:51,160 --> 00:25:53,880
Use green cardamoms, never black.
409
00:25:53,880 --> 00:25:56,640
Black cardamoms will give it a smoky flavour.
410
00:26:02,520 --> 00:26:06,440
Well, one of the things that I really like to do, filming here in India,
411
00:26:06,440 --> 00:26:11,600
and collecting recipes, is to find things that I actually want to cook at home.
412
00:26:11,600 --> 00:26:15,320
And this is one of them. It is a lovely, lovely sweet.
413
00:26:15,320 --> 00:26:18,840
Just a little bit of ice cold cream,
414
00:26:18,840 --> 00:26:21,280
beautifully flavoured with cardamom.
415
00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:22,320
Yum!
416
00:26:30,440 --> 00:26:36,800
Popular holiday destinations mark out, I think, great chunks of social history.
417
00:26:36,800 --> 00:26:42,200
Package deals to Spain, villas in Tuscany, gites in the Perigord, and now,
418
00:26:42,200 --> 00:26:48,440
I think, this is probably the latest, rice barges with all mod cons in Kerala.
419
00:26:48,440 --> 00:26:52,920
Cruising through palm-fringed backwaters with full air conditioning,
420
00:26:52,920 --> 00:26:56,200
your very own cook, sun deck and balcony.
421
00:26:56,200 --> 00:26:59,200
They once brought rice from the paddies inland.
422
00:26:59,200 --> 00:27:02,600
Who'd have thought, what a leap in imagination, they'd be taking
423
00:27:02,600 --> 00:27:05,600
honeymoon couples on the holiday of a lifetime?
424
00:27:08,280 --> 00:27:12,280
I suppose this is what Kerala's all about. Going in a boat
425
00:27:12,280 --> 00:27:13,760
up and down the backwaters.
426
00:27:13,760 --> 00:27:18,440
It's a bit like the exotic version of the Norfolk Broads, I was thinking.
427
00:27:18,440 --> 00:27:21,440
You know, you've got these sort of wide rivers going into big lakes.
428
00:27:21,440 --> 00:27:25,120
But looking around, it just sums up Kerala to me,
429
00:27:25,120 --> 00:27:29,480
because, I know I use this word a bit too often, fecundity,
430
00:27:29,480 --> 00:27:31,320
but, it is so fertile.
431
00:27:34,200 --> 00:27:37,920
And the water is teeming with fish, with shrimps, with prawns, with crabs,
432
00:27:37,920 --> 00:27:41,240
with clams. You name it.
433
00:27:44,920 --> 00:27:48,080
And fringing the water, you've got coconuts.
434
00:27:48,080 --> 00:27:50,920
Beyond that, the rice paddies.
435
00:27:50,920 --> 00:27:53,160
And what I've eaten so far in Kerala,
436
00:27:53,160 --> 00:27:57,920
it's just simple food that takes advantage of all these local ingredients.
437
00:27:57,920 --> 00:28:02,040
Not just the fresh vegetables and seafood and fish,
438
00:28:02,040 --> 00:28:07,520
but also the spices from the Ghat Mountains further east.
439
00:28:07,520 --> 00:28:11,520
Those lovely cardamom, cinnamon, coriander,
440
00:28:11,520 --> 00:28:16,920
all those wonderful spices which are supposed to be the best in all of India.
441
00:28:22,120 --> 00:28:24,840
I can watch fishermen all day long.
442
00:28:24,840 --> 00:28:28,440
It's timeless, basic and magical.
443
00:28:28,440 --> 00:28:32,760
This guy's catching the most popular fish here, it's called karimeen.
444
00:28:32,760 --> 00:28:37,120
And lots of little cafes along the backwaters serve it with masala.
445
00:28:39,800 --> 00:28:43,800
Well, we just stopped off for a coffee from filming them catching karimeen,
446
00:28:43,800 --> 00:28:46,600
the famous fish of the Keralan backwaters,
447
00:28:46,600 --> 00:28:49,240
and they just said, "Would you like something to eat?"
448
00:28:49,240 --> 00:28:50,600
So, I just had a look at this.
449
00:28:50,600 --> 00:28:54,320
I mean, it's such a lovely advertisement menu.
450
00:28:54,320 --> 00:28:57,120
So, I said, "Can we have some karimeen fry, please?"
451
00:28:57,120 --> 00:28:59,200
So, I'm really looking forward to that.
452
00:28:59,200 --> 00:29:03,800
They said, "Would you like some prawns too?" So, these are the prawns.
453
00:29:03,800 --> 00:29:06,040
I mean... Call that...
454
00:29:06,040 --> 00:29:08,800
I mean, this is a Bobby Dazzler of a prawn!
455
00:29:08,800 --> 00:29:12,200
So, I said to them, "Is there any chance we can film them?" Because, you know,
456
00:29:12,200 --> 00:29:14,640
it would be so good to be out there watching them come.
457
00:29:14,640 --> 00:29:16,680
And they said, "Well, they only do them at night."
458
00:29:16,680 --> 00:29:19,280
Well, we can't film that, because you wouldn't be able to see 'em.
459
00:29:19,280 --> 00:29:22,120
So, we said, "Well, do you fancy cooking some for us as well?"
460
00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:24,680
So, we're going to have them fried!
461
00:29:24,680 --> 00:29:28,680
I was a bit peckish, so they ended up making two dishes for me,
462
00:29:28,680 --> 00:29:31,160
starting with these giant prawns
463
00:29:31,160 --> 00:29:35,400
that were fried with onions, tomatoes and curry leaves.
464
00:29:35,400 --> 00:29:40,920
When the prawns have taken on colour, he puts in freshly ground garam masala,
465
00:29:40,920 --> 00:29:44,760
ground cumin, turmeric and more curry leaves.
466
00:29:44,760 --> 00:29:50,520
I think this is a prawn curry by which other prawn curries may be measured.
467
00:29:50,520 --> 00:29:53,200
What they're doing now is cooking the karimeen fry.
468
00:29:53,200 --> 00:29:57,040
That's the one that's just coated in the masala with cornflour,
469
00:29:57,040 --> 00:29:59,760
and in the masala we've got garlic, ginger, chilli,
470
00:29:59,760 --> 00:30:01,560
ground pepper, cumin, turmeric,
471
00:30:01,560 --> 00:30:04,760
cornflour and lemon juice.
472
00:30:04,760 --> 00:30:07,880
You won't be able to get the karimeen at home,
473
00:30:07,880 --> 00:30:11,440
but it would work really well with bass or bream and, of course,
474
00:30:11,440 --> 00:30:16,480
what's really important, it's got to be fried in coconut oil.
475
00:30:16,480 --> 00:30:21,960
The guy helping us out here on the backwaters is Floyd. No, not that one!
476
00:30:21,960 --> 00:30:25,360
But he was brought up here and he's also a chef.
477
00:30:25,360 --> 00:30:28,320
He worked in the Middle East in Bahrain.
478
00:30:28,320 --> 00:30:31,000
Any food in Kerala, if you go to any house,
479
00:30:31,000 --> 00:30:35,920
they don't serve you with a fork or knife or spoon, you have to eat it with your hand.
480
00:30:35,920 --> 00:30:39,000
- Let's go then. You start.
- You start from here.
481
00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:40,360
Let's just see what it's like.
482
00:30:42,600 --> 00:30:48,080
Mmm, what a good fish! Now, that tastes almost like a...like a sea fish.
483
00:30:48,080 --> 00:30:51,240
- Sea fish, yeah.
- The way it's cooked is wonderful.
484
00:30:51,240 --> 00:30:53,840
- This is the karimeen fry, isn't it?
- Karimeen fry, yes.
485
00:30:53,840 --> 00:30:57,920
This is the one which you have, you know, when you are having a small function,
486
00:30:57,920 --> 00:30:59,840
like, sitting with your friends,
487
00:30:59,840 --> 00:31:02,720
you're having a beer or wine, they serve you this.
488
00:31:02,720 --> 00:31:07,800
And this...this fish, the karimeen, is the most famous fish in Kerala.
489
00:31:07,800 --> 00:31:10,400
Yeah, sure, it's the famous fish in Kerala.
490
00:31:10,400 --> 00:31:15,040
You can go anywhere in Kerala and...but most in Alleppey, you come to Alleppey...
491
00:31:15,040 --> 00:31:16,840
- Yeah.
- ..they ask for karimeen.
492
00:31:16,840 --> 00:31:19,240
Tell me this, what dish would you be most homesick for
493
00:31:19,240 --> 00:31:21,880
when you were cooking over in Arabia?
494
00:31:21,880 --> 00:31:28,000
The dish which makes me homesick, which I feel like eating...
495
00:31:28,000 --> 00:31:31,840
- Yeah.
- ..is fish molee and prawn curry,
496
00:31:31,840 --> 00:31:34,840
because whenever I leave Bahrain, before I could leave there,
497
00:31:34,840 --> 00:31:36,960
I call my mother and I tell her,
498
00:31:36,960 --> 00:31:39,120
- "Mummy, I want this dish."
- HE LAUGHS
499
00:31:39,120 --> 00:31:40,720
So, she keeps it ready for me.
500
00:31:40,720 --> 00:31:43,840
I can see what Floyd means.
501
00:31:43,840 --> 00:31:47,480
This prawn curry certainly didn't disappoint.
502
00:31:47,480 --> 00:31:51,000
It was bursting with the flavours of pepper, chilli, cumin
503
00:31:51,000 --> 00:31:55,040
and the restaurant's home-made garam masala.
504
00:31:57,200 --> 00:31:58,880
Words fail me. I mean,
505
00:31:58,880 --> 00:32:01,520
just looking at those prawns when they were raw,
506
00:32:01,520 --> 00:32:04,880
I was just thinking, "This is going to be fabulous."
507
00:32:04,880 --> 00:32:10,160
I mean, I just love seafood, and...that is...spectacular.
508
00:32:10,160 --> 00:32:15,160
And what I really like is, of course, the most, to me,
509
00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:20,120
the most important ingredient in Kerala is coconut.
510
00:32:20,120 --> 00:32:22,200
Kerala means Land of Coconut.
511
00:32:22,200 --> 00:32:26,480
And the coconut oil flavour in this is superb.
512
00:32:33,240 --> 00:32:37,000
THEY SPEAK IN LOCAL DIALECT
513
00:32:37,000 --> 00:32:39,520
Toddy is very important in Kerala.
514
00:32:39,520 --> 00:32:41,680
It's not just for the tourists.
515
00:32:41,680 --> 00:32:46,080
The toddy shops are to the locals what our local is to us.
516
00:32:48,840 --> 00:32:52,840
The toddy comes from the nectar of the coconut palm bud.
517
00:32:52,840 --> 00:32:55,040
And this is a bit complicated,
518
00:32:55,040 --> 00:32:59,720
so bear with me, as I had a couple of glasses of this magic nectar
519
00:32:59,720 --> 00:33:02,120
before witnessing this!
520
00:33:02,120 --> 00:33:07,920
First of all, this chap climbs the palm and then beats one of these huge buds
521
00:33:07,920 --> 00:33:10,280
in order to get the sap to rise.
522
00:33:13,120 --> 00:33:18,040
And then it looks like he's already cut off the top of one bud, which he
523
00:33:18,040 --> 00:33:20,240
rubs with a bit of mud.
524
00:33:20,240 --> 00:33:24,520
This, I was told, promotes the rise of the nectar which starts to drip
525
00:33:24,520 --> 00:33:30,360
almost straightaway and that's captured in the clay pot.
526
00:33:30,360 --> 00:33:34,080
It's then left overnight and collected first thing in the morning.
527
00:33:34,080 --> 00:33:37,880
It'll start to ferment straightaway and by lunch time will be quite alcoholic
528
00:33:37,880 --> 00:33:41,160
and yet quite pleasant to drink.
529
00:33:42,480 --> 00:33:47,880
But towards the end of a hot afternoon, it'll be absolutely lethal!
530
00:33:47,880 --> 00:33:54,080
Floyd the chef and my guide here insisted that I visit a local toddy shop.
531
00:33:54,080 --> 00:33:58,640
He said, "You can't say you've been to Kerala without having a glass of toddy."
532
00:33:58,640 --> 00:34:00,880
To which I replied, "Well, all right then!"
533
00:34:02,920 --> 00:34:05,280
- Before you can drink the toddy...
- Yeah.
534
00:34:05,280 --> 00:34:07,240
..you have to pour a little bit first.
535
00:34:07,240 --> 00:34:09,920
Oh, I thought we were supposed to be drinking out of this, Floyd.
536
00:34:09,920 --> 00:34:12,040
- Yes, just a little bit.
- Yeah, OK.
537
00:34:12,040 --> 00:34:15,680
You wash it, you wash it and just...
538
00:34:15,680 --> 00:34:18,640
That's the style before you can drink the toddy.
539
00:34:18,640 --> 00:34:20,600
- Right, that... So.
- So, now...
540
00:34:20,600 --> 00:34:23,400
- How much do you put in there, then?
- Yeah, you put full.
541
00:34:26,080 --> 00:34:27,920
- And the first glass...
- Yeah.
542
00:34:27,920 --> 00:34:29,320
..you have to take it full.
543
00:34:29,320 --> 00:34:33,160
Oh, I've never tasted it before, what if I don't like it?
544
00:34:33,160 --> 00:34:34,600
You have to!
545
00:34:34,600 --> 00:34:36,440
- If you're in a toddy shop...
- I have to!
546
00:34:36,440 --> 00:34:39,280
..empty the glass, you have to. It goes like this.
547
00:34:39,280 --> 00:34:40,400
- Cheers!
- Cheers!
548
00:34:50,200 --> 00:34:53,720
- Crikey, that's not bad actually!
- That is...
549
00:34:53,720 --> 00:34:57,960
Once you start with the toddy, it's starting...trouble.
550
00:34:57,960 --> 00:35:00,640
THEY LAUGH
551
00:35:00,640 --> 00:35:02,200
It's like the engine.
552
00:35:02,200 --> 00:35:04,160
- Right, you've got to...
- You got to make...
553
00:35:04,160 --> 00:35:05,920
- ..fill the carburettor up...
- Yeah, and then,
554
00:35:05,920 --> 00:35:07,640
- by the time you start it...
- Yeah.
555
00:35:07,640 --> 00:35:08,960
..you keep on going.
556
00:35:08,960 --> 00:35:11,440
Phwoar!
557
00:35:11,440 --> 00:35:13,840
So, this is fresh this morning, this then?
558
00:35:13,840 --> 00:35:16,200
Yeah, they're fresh in the morning.
559
00:35:16,200 --> 00:35:18,800
I mean, it's very, very... It tastes quite healthy, really.
560
00:35:18,800 --> 00:35:20,520
Yeah, it's good for health,
561
00:35:20,520 --> 00:35:23,680
because it doesn't give you a kick very fast, like the other alcohol.
562
00:35:23,680 --> 00:35:25,960
Yeah, it's not like whisky or a...
563
00:35:25,960 --> 00:35:27,960
Yeah, whiskey, brandy, they give you a kick very fast.
564
00:35:27,960 --> 00:35:32,920
Just tell me though, I've heard that, you know, a lot people don't like toddy shops,
565
00:35:32,920 --> 00:35:36,000
or they've got a bad reputation, why is that then?
566
00:35:36,000 --> 00:35:39,560
Actually, the bad reputation came from out of state.
567
00:35:39,560 --> 00:35:44,280
They used to add chemicals, extra chemicals, for us to get the kick.
568
00:35:44,280 --> 00:35:45,920
Like what chemicals?
569
00:35:45,920 --> 00:35:48,640
- Oh, it's like, what they say...?
- HE USES LOCAL PHRASE
570
00:35:48,640 --> 00:35:52,840
That means for the elephant. You know, to sleep, they put like a...
571
00:35:52,840 --> 00:35:56,280
- Tranquilisers for elephants?
- Tranquilisers, yeah.
- Wow!
572
00:35:56,280 --> 00:35:59,040
Elephants are mighty ones, we are just small ones.
573
00:35:59,040 --> 00:36:02,440
- So, they put a little bit more quantity.
- Yeah.
574
00:36:02,440 --> 00:36:05,160
- That affects us.
- Anything else?
575
00:36:05,160 --> 00:36:07,360
No, they put this one only, they say that.
576
00:36:07,360 --> 00:36:10,680
- Oh, right. Wow!
- But this is pure, this is pure.
577
00:36:10,680 --> 00:36:12,960
Thank goodness for that!
578
00:36:12,960 --> 00:36:16,200
Otherwise I'd have been in serious trouble!
579
00:36:16,200 --> 00:36:17,720
HE IMITATES SNORING
580
00:36:34,280 --> 00:36:35,720
Such a pleasant place to cook.
581
00:36:35,720 --> 00:36:39,720
I've just been watching a cormorant catching eels in the water out there.
582
00:36:39,720 --> 00:36:43,240
It's very peaceful, but back to business.
583
00:36:43,240 --> 00:36:49,560
I'm going to do a Keralan pork curry, which, in a way, it's a bit like a Goan vindhaloo,
584
00:36:49,560 --> 00:36:52,880
cos it's pork with lots of spices and vinegar.
585
00:36:52,880 --> 00:36:57,960
But first of all, I'm going to mash up some ginger and garlic.
586
00:36:57,960 --> 00:37:04,360
I don't have a stone to do this on, I've got a very nifty Indian mixer to do it.
587
00:37:04,360 --> 00:37:09,680
And it takes seconds. Well, it takes seconds if the electricity is on,
588
00:37:09,680 --> 00:37:13,400
but we have electricity for only part of the day.
589
00:37:13,400 --> 00:37:17,320
Fortunately, it's on at the moment, cos we're right out in the middle of nowhere.
590
00:37:19,520 --> 00:37:22,080
Now for marinating my pork.
591
00:37:23,760 --> 00:37:26,880
First of all, a teaspoon or so of chilli.
592
00:37:26,880 --> 00:37:29,240
Then an equal amount of turmeric.
593
00:37:31,080 --> 00:37:33,160
And lastly, and most importantly,
594
00:37:33,160 --> 00:37:35,200
cos of the Portuguese influence,
595
00:37:35,200 --> 00:37:39,400
about a tablespoon of toddy vinegar, which is made from coconut nectar.
596
00:37:39,400 --> 00:37:43,840
Now, just leave that for a few minutes while I move over to my pressure cooker
597
00:37:43,840 --> 00:37:47,400
and mess around with it. Everybody uses pressure cookers here.
598
00:37:47,400 --> 00:37:50,880
Actually, I'm really frightened of them, I always think they're going to explode,
599
00:37:50,880 --> 00:37:55,080
and I just remember when we used to have one in Trevone when Chalky was alive,
600
00:37:55,080 --> 00:37:59,920
and he'd be out the door like a long dog, only he was only a short dog,
601
00:37:59,920 --> 00:38:02,280
whenever the pressure cooker came out.
602
00:38:02,280 --> 00:38:06,680
Because he just really worried about the whistles.
603
00:38:06,680 --> 00:38:10,000
But, actually, the way they describe cooking this curry here
604
00:38:10,000 --> 00:38:13,640
is the number of whistles. And this is a four whistle curry.
605
00:38:13,640 --> 00:38:15,920
So, just take the lid off here
606
00:38:15,920 --> 00:38:20,440
and now I think my marinated pork is about ready to go in.
607
00:38:20,440 --> 00:38:23,760
There we go. Just apply a bit of heat.
608
00:38:25,120 --> 00:38:29,080
I love these. I love gadgets. This is really the best
609
00:38:29,080 --> 00:38:31,760
gas lighter I've ever come across.
610
00:38:31,760 --> 00:38:33,640
Just got it in the market.
611
00:38:33,640 --> 00:38:35,920
So, just add a little bit of water to that,
612
00:38:35,920 --> 00:38:37,800
about 200, 300 millilitres.
613
00:38:39,240 --> 00:38:41,760
There we are. And then on with the lid.
614
00:38:46,840 --> 00:38:49,480
And we wait now till the first whistle.
615
00:38:51,520 --> 00:38:54,640
So, while I'm waiting, I will make the masala,
616
00:38:54,640 --> 00:38:57,520
which I'm going to finish the pork dish off with.
617
00:38:58,560 --> 00:39:03,200
Just add some coconut oil and some onions, sliced onions,
618
00:39:03,200 --> 00:39:06,480
and I'm just going to cook those for about ten minutes on a moderate heat
619
00:39:06,480 --> 00:39:09,160
so they get really soft and golden brown.
620
00:39:10,280 --> 00:39:13,000
Now, they're looking pretty lovely,
621
00:39:13,000 --> 00:39:19,120
so now I'm going to just add my paste from whizzing up.
622
00:39:21,320 --> 00:39:24,040
Such a good machine this, it just does a wonderful job.
623
00:39:25,360 --> 00:39:27,000
Wish we had something like that back home.
624
00:39:27,000 --> 00:39:28,920
OK, just stir that in.
625
00:39:28,920 --> 00:39:30,800
POT HISSES
626
00:39:30,800 --> 00:39:33,640
Ah, first whistle!
627
00:39:33,640 --> 00:39:36,680
That's all you get, it's not a whistle it's more like a snake's hiss,
628
00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:39,160
but we are in India!
629
00:39:39,160 --> 00:39:44,880
So...first whistle, I've got three more to go before my pork is done.
630
00:39:44,880 --> 00:39:47,720
POT HISSES My gosh, that was a bit quick!
631
00:39:47,720 --> 00:39:51,720
Was that the second whistle, or was that the continuation of the first whistle?
632
00:39:51,720 --> 00:39:54,040
Oh, hang on, I forgot to turn the heat down.
633
00:39:54,040 --> 00:39:56,200
Must remember the instructions.
634
00:39:56,200 --> 00:39:58,760
If all else fails read the instructions!
635
00:39:58,760 --> 00:40:00,080
OK, that's good.
636
00:40:00,080 --> 00:40:04,560
The tomato is cooking down very nicely, and next, I'm going to add some salt.
637
00:40:04,560 --> 00:40:06,320
POT HISSES Ah!
638
00:40:09,360 --> 00:40:12,800
It's got a mind of its own. Right! Salt!
639
00:40:15,480 --> 00:40:18,600
Next, coriander powder.
640
00:40:18,600 --> 00:40:21,880
Then my home-made garam masala - I just love it.
641
00:40:23,200 --> 00:40:27,360
Cumin seeds, and finally, black pepper.
642
00:40:28,560 --> 00:40:31,720
Now I just feel a bit embarrassed to say that I am a bit hot.
643
00:40:31,720 --> 00:40:34,160
It might show on my shirts. Um...
644
00:40:34,160 --> 00:40:35,440
it's so hot.
645
00:40:35,440 --> 00:40:39,800
It's got to be like 90-plus humidity and about 32 to 35...
646
00:40:39,800 --> 00:40:42,120
HISSING Oh!
647
00:40:43,240 --> 00:40:46,200
That's the fourth one, so I've just got to leave that now.
648
00:40:46,200 --> 00:40:48,400
Just finish about my shirts.
649
00:40:48,400 --> 00:40:51,480
We were just talking earlier, because I've only got one shirt today,
650
00:40:51,480 --> 00:40:54,000
I should have bought three shirts all the same,
651
00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:56,520
then I could have one drying while...
652
00:40:56,520 --> 00:41:00,480
I'm wearing the other one. We've been now filming for about 17 years,
653
00:41:00,480 --> 00:41:03,720
and it's only just occurred to us that would be a good idea.
654
00:41:03,720 --> 00:41:05,040
Particularly in India,
655
00:41:05,040 --> 00:41:08,800
where you can get shirts made overnight for about, you know, two quid.
656
00:41:08,800 --> 00:41:10,440
Not hard.
657
00:41:10,440 --> 00:41:11,880
We are foolish.
658
00:41:11,880 --> 00:41:13,520
Now, about this.
659
00:41:13,520 --> 00:41:16,240
I'm just a bit nervous. I mean, I've been reading instructions.
660
00:41:16,240 --> 00:41:18,440
You've got to wait for this bit to sink down to there,
661
00:41:18,440 --> 00:41:21,960
because there's no way I'm going to attempt to open it
662
00:41:21,960 --> 00:41:25,040
until everything seems safe.
663
00:41:30,600 --> 00:41:32,640
That should be all right.
664
00:41:32,640 --> 00:41:35,360
But you still think this is the moment where everything
665
00:41:35,360 --> 00:41:36,800
explodes all over the roof.
666
00:41:36,800 --> 00:41:40,240
But of course, it doesn't, does it, really?
667
00:41:40,240 --> 00:41:41,920
Oh!
668
00:41:41,920 --> 00:41:44,040
No problem.
669
00:41:44,040 --> 00:41:45,480
Perfect.
670
00:41:45,480 --> 00:41:51,000
Good. Right, we'll just add that to my masala now.
671
00:41:51,000 --> 00:41:53,240
Bring that to the boil.
672
00:41:53,240 --> 00:41:59,240
And then I'll just stir in some curry leaves and chopped coriander,
673
00:41:59,240 --> 00:42:02,200
and it will be done. Give it a taste.
674
00:42:07,560 --> 00:42:10,840
Oh, I tell you what. I tell you what.
675
00:42:10,840 --> 00:42:13,120
I do like my vinegar.
676
00:42:13,120 --> 00:42:16,720
I have missed it in all these weeks we've been in India.
677
00:42:16,720 --> 00:42:20,160
A little bit of vinegar in this just transforms it.
678
00:42:24,080 --> 00:42:26,480
- MAN:
- That's a proper Indian curry.
679
00:42:41,800 --> 00:42:44,280
It was by sheer fluke that Cochin
680
00:42:44,280 --> 00:42:47,160
became one of the most famous spice ports in India,
681
00:42:47,160 --> 00:42:50,680
because a massive tsunami in the 14th century
682
00:42:50,680 --> 00:42:54,400
swept away the landmass that blocked its way to the sea.
683
00:42:56,920 --> 00:43:01,160
The Chinese for centuries traded here, and as a legacy,
684
00:43:01,160 --> 00:43:04,400
left behind their famous lantern fishing nets,
685
00:43:04,400 --> 00:43:06,840
that still work amazingly well.
686
00:43:06,840 --> 00:43:10,080
Even the name Cochin sounds Chinese.
687
00:43:33,640 --> 00:43:38,520
But it was the Portuguese that turned it into such a thriving trading port.
688
00:43:38,520 --> 00:43:43,160
And wherever the Portuguese went, they were soon followed by the Dutch,
689
00:43:43,160 --> 00:43:45,520
and then a few years later by the British.
690
00:43:45,520 --> 00:43:50,840
It's a historical pattern that repeats itself all over India.
691
00:43:50,840 --> 00:43:54,080
Just cruising past the waterfront here in Cochin,
692
00:43:54,080 --> 00:43:59,040
it's really easy to imagine what it would have been like 500 years ago.
693
00:43:59,040 --> 00:44:04,440
Teeming with boats, everybody scrambling to get hold of the black gold - pepper.
694
00:44:04,440 --> 00:44:09,360
And just getting one cargo back to Europe was worth a fortune.
695
00:44:09,360 --> 00:44:14,240
You could virtually retire and live the life of Riley after that.
696
00:44:14,240 --> 00:44:18,280
It wasn't just about its pepperiness, about the flavour of pepper -
697
00:44:18,280 --> 00:44:24,040
it was also a great preservative, and valued for its medicinal qualities.
698
00:44:24,040 --> 00:44:27,160
It was that valuable that there's records at the time
699
00:44:27,160 --> 00:44:29,080
of people cutting ground black pepper
700
00:44:29,080 --> 00:44:34,960
with things like mustard husks, juniper berries, and even floor sweepings.
701
00:44:46,720 --> 00:44:49,240
Well, this is the oldest Christian church in India.
702
00:44:49,240 --> 00:44:54,800
In fact, Vasco da Gama, who brought European culture to India,
703
00:44:54,800 --> 00:44:56,560
was buried here for some time.
704
00:44:56,560 --> 00:45:01,200
Vasco deserves serious mention in the history of curry
705
00:45:01,200 --> 00:45:05,880
because the Portuguese brought all those fabulous things from South America -
706
00:45:05,880 --> 00:45:11,200
chillies, of course, but also potatoes, tomatoes, cashew nuts.
707
00:45:11,200 --> 00:45:16,520
And the Portuguese established the first European trading post in India,
708
00:45:16,520 --> 00:45:18,200
here in Kerala.
709
00:45:18,200 --> 00:45:20,880
And that became the envy of everyone else -
710
00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:23,080
the Dutch, of course, and then the British.
711
00:45:23,080 --> 00:45:26,000
And fortunes were made on the back of it.
712
00:45:26,000 --> 00:45:28,440
Yeah, yeah. Very hot.
713
00:45:28,440 --> 00:45:32,520
Some Malaysian students were intrigued by our interest in this.
714
00:45:32,520 --> 00:45:35,000
- Why are you filming here?
- We're filming here
715
00:45:35,000 --> 00:45:38,200
because Vasco da Gama was buried here for a while.
716
00:45:38,200 --> 00:45:44,120
And he arrived in Kerala and brought lots of produce from South America -
717
00:45:44,120 --> 00:45:48,520
he brought chilli, tomato, potato, cashew nuts?
718
00:45:48,520 --> 00:45:50,720
And transformed...changed all the cooking.
719
00:45:50,720 --> 00:45:53,160
- Where are you from?
- I'm from Malaysia.
720
00:45:53,160 --> 00:45:56,360
Malaysia! Whereabouts in Malaysia?
721
00:45:56,360 --> 00:45:59,240
- I'm from Malacca.
- Malacca!
722
00:45:59,240 --> 00:46:00,720
- Yes.
- Same thing.
723
00:46:00,720 --> 00:46:03,920
The Portuguese were in Malacca - trade, you know, all the spice trade,
724
00:46:03,920 --> 00:46:06,680
the pepper and the cardamoms
725
00:46:06,680 --> 00:46:09,640
and coriander, between the East and the West.
726
00:46:09,640 --> 00:46:11,680
The Portuguese went there too.
727
00:46:11,680 --> 00:46:15,840
This is very important to us because it all started here.
728
00:46:15,840 --> 00:46:18,640
- ALL:
- Wow!
729
00:46:31,200 --> 00:46:33,200
What I always do when I get to a new place
730
00:46:33,200 --> 00:46:35,600
is ask the locals where's the best place to eat.
731
00:46:35,600 --> 00:46:38,640
Here in Cochin they've told me here.
732
00:46:38,640 --> 00:46:43,800
What really heartens me is there's no European writing there.
733
00:46:43,800 --> 00:46:46,640
Heaven knows what it says.
734
00:46:46,640 --> 00:46:49,320
Except that I do know the place is called Shappu Curry,
735
00:46:49,320 --> 00:46:51,840
and apparently you get really good fish curries here,
736
00:46:51,840 --> 00:46:53,600
which I'm very interested in trying.
737
00:46:56,320 --> 00:47:01,200
I really see it as part of my job on telly to take you to places like this.
738
00:47:01,200 --> 00:47:04,560
It remains me a bit of one of those Russell Flint watercolours,
739
00:47:04,560 --> 00:47:07,360
the ones he painted in cavernous cellars.
740
00:47:09,320 --> 00:47:13,600
The men out the back are peeling prawns fresh from the backwaters.
741
00:47:13,600 --> 00:47:19,040
And this cook is making the most popular dish here - snakehead murrel curry.
742
00:47:19,040 --> 00:47:20,880
It's simply simmered in masala,
743
00:47:20,880 --> 00:47:24,440
and the sides have been slashed to take in all the flavour
744
00:47:24,440 --> 00:47:27,480
of this classic South Indian dish.
745
00:47:27,480 --> 00:47:30,440
Looking at this, it might be your idea of hell -
746
00:47:30,440 --> 00:47:36,120
all these fires, the smoke, the gloom.
747
00:47:36,120 --> 00:47:38,200
But to me, it's my idea of heaven.
748
00:47:38,200 --> 00:47:41,440
And I would say to you, think of pizzas.
749
00:47:41,440 --> 00:47:44,360
Where do the best pizzas come from?
750
00:47:44,360 --> 00:47:46,760
They come from a wood-fired oven.
751
00:47:46,760 --> 00:47:50,360
The point about this whole kitchen is, everything is fired by wood.
752
00:47:50,360 --> 00:47:53,400
When I first came in here, I thought, "Well, this is Cochin,
753
00:47:53,400 --> 00:47:56,520
"Ernakulam, very modern cities.
754
00:47:56,520 --> 00:47:58,400
"Why...why are they using wood?"
755
00:47:58,400 --> 00:48:01,400
The reason is because they say it tastes different.
756
00:48:01,400 --> 00:48:05,040
And I have to say, if you don't think that the smell
757
00:48:05,040 --> 00:48:09,400
and the taste of smoke gets into the food, you're totally wrong.
758
00:48:09,400 --> 00:48:14,120
And I'm sure that I would never, ever, even though I'm writing down the recipes,
759
00:48:14,120 --> 00:48:19,760
be able to recreate the taste of these curries precisely at all.
760
00:48:23,520 --> 00:48:27,920
Here is my old friend the karimeen, and they plaster it with this masala.
761
00:48:27,920 --> 00:48:30,040
It's not for the faint-hearted.
762
00:48:30,040 --> 00:48:34,000
You don't have to be a curry expert to know that this is loaded with chilli,
763
00:48:34,000 --> 00:48:39,440
and, I'm told, pepper, ginger, garlic, and a small amount of turmeric,
764
00:48:39,440 --> 00:48:42,880
and cocum, that gives it a lovely smoky taste.
765
00:48:42,880 --> 00:48:45,920
And fried shallots and coconut milk.
766
00:48:45,920 --> 00:48:50,120
The fish is then coated with this and wrapped in a banana leaf.
767
00:48:54,840 --> 00:49:02,200
Well, this, excuse my pronunciation, is Karimeen Pollichathu.
768
00:49:02,200 --> 00:49:06,240
I've had it before, because I've been in Kerala for a while now,
769
00:49:06,240 --> 00:49:08,160
but it's never been as good as this.
770
00:49:08,160 --> 00:49:10,200
I was absolutely right.
771
00:49:10,200 --> 00:49:14,720
The concentration of flavour, the smokiness, the deep intense redness
772
00:49:14,720 --> 00:49:22,720
of this local dish, and the beautiful flavour of the fish, is superb.
773
00:49:22,720 --> 00:49:27,200
It reminds me of the first time in Goa about 20 years ago,
774
00:49:27,200 --> 00:49:32,800
when I tasted stuffed pomfret, pomfret stuffed with a masala like this,
775
00:49:32,800 --> 00:49:34,800
and my whole world changed.
776
00:49:34,800 --> 00:49:36,520
I had never tasted anything...
777
00:49:36,520 --> 00:49:37,680
It's changed again.
778
00:49:52,920 --> 00:49:56,560
What would be interesting is that this would ideally be the location
779
00:49:56,560 --> 00:50:00,880
where even historically they would have been storing spices and selling them from.
780
00:50:00,880 --> 00:50:02,560
- Really?
- Yeah.
781
00:50:02,560 --> 00:50:05,920
Oh, that looks good. Wow. What a lovely smell.
782
00:50:05,920 --> 00:50:08,320
I met up with Ajeeth.
783
00:50:08,320 --> 00:50:10,520
He's quite an important chef around here,
784
00:50:10,520 --> 00:50:14,040
running the kitchens in one of Cochin's finest hotels.
785
00:50:14,040 --> 00:50:16,760
Gosh. Is this it?
786
00:50:16,760 --> 00:50:20,440
He really knows his stuff, especially about spices.
787
00:50:20,440 --> 00:50:23,720
Ah, look at that!
788
00:50:23,720 --> 00:50:26,320
This is the sort of place you dream of.
789
00:50:26,320 --> 00:50:29,280
Just run through, what are we looking at here, then?
790
00:50:29,280 --> 00:50:31,440
Very, very quickly. Actually,
791
00:50:31,440 --> 00:50:35,200
one of the most famous spices from Kerala - cardamom.
792
00:50:35,200 --> 00:50:36,920
There are about three grades of cardamom
793
00:50:36,920 --> 00:50:39,600
- that you can see here.
- I can see that. Those are smaller.
794
00:50:39,600 --> 00:50:43,360
Those are the smaller ones, those are slightly bigger, medium-size,
795
00:50:43,360 --> 00:50:47,960
and these are the most costly variety, the biggest versions possible.
796
00:50:47,960 --> 00:50:50,640
And over here we've got some mace, isn't it?
797
00:50:50,640 --> 00:50:53,160
- Yes, absolutely.
- It looks very good.
798
00:50:53,160 --> 00:50:56,080
This will be actually the covering of...
799
00:50:56,080 --> 00:50:58,400
- Of the nutmeg.
- ..of the nutmeg.
800
00:50:58,400 --> 00:51:02,480
What they do is they break it open and then dry it like this,
801
00:51:02,480 --> 00:51:05,520
and then once it's dried, it separates.
802
00:51:05,520 --> 00:51:08,360
This is possibly one of the best varieties
803
00:51:08,360 --> 00:51:10,480
- that you would get.
- Really?
804
00:51:10,480 --> 00:51:13,000
- And that's dried turmeric there.
- That's dried turmeric.
805
00:51:13,000 --> 00:51:16,960
You'd much favour buying the dried turmeric whole like this, then?
806
00:51:16,960 --> 00:51:20,160
Well, then I would need a mill of my own to pound it into powder.
807
00:51:20,160 --> 00:51:22,800
Yes, ideally that's what I'd like to do, but then I would have...
808
00:51:22,800 --> 00:51:24,120
I have so many spices to pound.
809
00:51:24,120 --> 00:51:26,240
- It's too much.
- It's too much.
810
00:51:26,240 --> 00:51:30,520
So as a part of the local community, what we do is I get my spices ground
811
00:51:30,520 --> 00:51:34,400
by one particular gentleman who is there in the community, who grinds it for me.
812
00:51:34,400 --> 00:51:36,880
- He grinds all my spices.
- So you know what you're getting?
813
00:51:36,880 --> 00:51:37,880
- Absolutely.
- OK.
814
00:51:37,880 --> 00:51:40,560
You must get very excited by all the quality here.
815
00:51:40,560 --> 00:51:44,960
What's it feel like to be in the centre of the spice trade, almost?
816
00:51:44,960 --> 00:51:49,600
It puts a big responsibility on the shoulders to ensure that every customer
817
00:51:49,600 --> 00:51:53,600
or every guest who comes is able to get a feel of that.
818
00:51:53,600 --> 00:51:56,920
Is able to actually feel that we are utilising the spices
819
00:51:56,920 --> 00:51:58,880
and giving the best of the spices to them.
820
00:51:58,880 --> 00:52:00,280
Yeah. I bet.
821
00:52:00,280 --> 00:52:04,200
I feel that responsibility more to give that story to the customer,
822
00:52:04,200 --> 00:52:08,800
and let them realise that this is the biggest thing that is happening here.
823
00:52:08,800 --> 00:52:10,560
And they need to feel it from the food.
824
00:52:14,600 --> 00:52:16,560
I love stories about food.
825
00:52:16,560 --> 00:52:19,840
Especially if it's combined with a railway journey
826
00:52:19,840 --> 00:52:22,280
set in the old British Raj.
827
00:52:22,280 --> 00:52:24,520
And Ajeeth told me this one,
828
00:52:24,520 --> 00:52:29,200
about his famous first-class railway mutton curry.
829
00:52:30,600 --> 00:52:32,480
Are you sitting comfortably?
830
00:52:33,720 --> 00:52:38,520
One day, a British officer was travelling down the Malabar Coast on a train,
831
00:52:38,520 --> 00:52:40,320
and he was peckish.
832
00:52:40,320 --> 00:52:44,120
And as the miles built up, he became ravenous.
833
00:52:44,120 --> 00:52:49,120
He followed his nose to the kitchen car, and took a bowl of what was served up -
834
00:52:49,120 --> 00:52:55,760
a mutton curry. It was far too spicy, and the cook, wanting to please,
835
00:52:55,760 --> 00:53:00,400
added coconut milk to bring down the heat.
836
00:53:00,400 --> 00:53:02,440
The officer enjoyed it so much,
837
00:53:02,440 --> 00:53:07,680
he declared it fit enough for all railway first-class compartments,
838
00:53:07,680 --> 00:53:11,360
hence "first-class railway mutton curry".
839
00:53:14,680 --> 00:53:17,720
I associate, when you say to a lot of Indian people,
840
00:53:17,720 --> 00:53:19,320
"What's this going to be like?"
841
00:53:19,320 --> 00:53:21,280
"First class!"
842
00:53:23,440 --> 00:53:27,400
So in a hot pan, vegetable oil, and the whole spices.
843
00:53:27,400 --> 00:53:32,000
Bay leaves, mace, cinnamon,
844
00:53:32,000 --> 00:53:36,120
black cardamom, star anise, and cloves.
845
00:53:37,920 --> 00:53:42,280
Then a paste whizzed up with fresh garlic and ginger.
846
00:53:42,280 --> 00:53:46,800
Next, a generous amount of chopped onions.
847
00:53:49,400 --> 00:53:53,480
You can start getting the flavour of the ginger and the garlic and spices.
848
00:53:53,480 --> 00:53:55,560
Getting the smell, yes, it's lovely.
849
00:53:55,560 --> 00:53:59,000
So, Ajeeth, I know the word "curry" doesn't mean a lot to you.
850
00:53:59,000 --> 00:54:03,200
We use it in the UK to mean lots of Indian food.
851
00:54:03,200 --> 00:54:08,720
But what would you say was the most important thing about a good curry?
852
00:54:08,720 --> 00:54:11,680
I would say it has to be something that has been braised slowly
853
00:54:11,680 --> 00:54:14,840
- and cooked on a slow fire...
- Yeah.
854
00:54:14,840 --> 00:54:18,000
..and cooked with a lot of love and passion.
855
00:54:18,000 --> 00:54:19,480
OK!
856
00:54:19,480 --> 00:54:21,600
It's...it's very important.
857
00:54:21,600 --> 00:54:23,440
You can't make a curry in a jiffy,
858
00:54:23,440 --> 00:54:26,720
you can't, bam-bam-bam-bam, put in all the ingredients,
859
00:54:26,720 --> 00:54:29,400
put it on a high fire, stir it, and put it in a curry bowl and do it.
860
00:54:29,400 --> 00:54:30,720
That just doesn't make a curry.
861
00:54:32,360 --> 00:54:34,400
So we're going to put the spices in next.
862
00:54:34,400 --> 00:54:36,680
- OK.
- The most important part.
863
00:54:36,680 --> 00:54:39,120
Now we've got some chilli powder.
864
00:54:39,120 --> 00:54:41,080
We're using Kashmiri chilli powder.
865
00:54:41,080 --> 00:54:44,280
Lovely red colour. I've learned that already.
866
00:54:44,280 --> 00:54:46,520
- And that is?
- That's coriander powder.
867
00:54:50,200 --> 00:54:55,080
A little bit of turmeric powder, and a pinch of garam masala.
868
00:54:55,080 --> 00:54:56,280
OK.
869
00:54:58,920 --> 00:55:01,960
What we're going to do is we're going to just...
870
00:55:01,960 --> 00:55:05,840
I'm going to make a small paste of it, in hot water.
871
00:55:08,880 --> 00:55:11,840
So that will drop the temperature of the pan a bit.
872
00:55:13,760 --> 00:55:17,320
Why I put water in was because at this stage
873
00:55:17,320 --> 00:55:19,520
if I just stick in the spices
874
00:55:19,520 --> 00:55:22,080
and put them in individually, the spices would have burnt.
875
00:55:22,080 --> 00:55:24,040
That's a really good bit of information.
876
00:55:24,040 --> 00:55:27,440
And actually, I've been filming lots of curries,
877
00:55:27,440 --> 00:55:29,240
that's the first time it's come up.
878
00:55:29,240 --> 00:55:31,640
- But it makes a lot of sense to me.
- It does. It does.
879
00:55:35,840 --> 00:55:37,120
Now the mutton.
880
00:55:37,120 --> 00:55:41,640
These are shanks marinated in yoghurt and tied with string to keep their shape.
881
00:55:43,360 --> 00:55:48,000
Ajeeth explained to me that Westerners are used to lamb shanks on the bone
882
00:55:48,000 --> 00:55:51,560
served like this, rather than cut into smaller pieces.
883
00:55:57,720 --> 00:56:00,040
Then Ajeeth put in cashew nut paste
884
00:56:00,040 --> 00:56:03,840
and a puree of fresh tomatoes to give it acidity.
885
00:56:05,280 --> 00:56:07,840
So what happens next?
886
00:56:07,840 --> 00:56:10,040
Now we're going to simmer it for the next four hours.
887
00:56:10,040 --> 00:56:12,160
- Four hours?!
- Yes!
888
00:56:12,160 --> 00:56:14,120
The director will be pleased!
889
00:56:14,120 --> 00:56:16,400
THEY LAUGH
890
00:56:22,080 --> 00:56:25,840
- MAN:
- Hey, Ricky! First class!
891
00:56:51,040 --> 00:56:55,280
I've been to quite a few Indian cities now and this one is really smart.
892
00:56:55,280 --> 00:57:01,640
Very, very tidy, nice restaurants, nice houses.
893
00:57:01,640 --> 00:57:05,040
And just a really open feel about it.
894
00:57:05,040 --> 00:57:08,760
I thought it was going to be a sort of tight place with little small streets
895
00:57:08,760 --> 00:57:12,200
like so many other parts of India, but no.
896
00:57:12,200 --> 00:57:17,840
It's got wonderful vegetation everywhere, and also, it's just paradise.
897
00:57:17,840 --> 00:57:20,680
I suppose the first Europeans coming here,
898
00:57:20,680 --> 00:57:24,560
apart from the scurvy on the way over and the disease they picked up,
899
00:57:24,560 --> 00:57:27,520
must have thought it was like paradise.
900
00:57:27,520 --> 00:57:29,720
The beaches here are stupendous.
901
00:57:29,720 --> 00:57:33,040
Fringed with coconut palms, and very unspoiled.
902
00:57:33,040 --> 00:57:35,800
The backwaters too, really unspoiled.
903
00:57:35,800 --> 00:57:39,440
I mean, it's a delight, I mean, it really is.
904
00:57:39,440 --> 00:57:46,160
After many, many weeks of really, really thugging it through India,
905
00:57:46,160 --> 00:57:47,320
this is paradise.
906
00:57:49,080 --> 00:57:51,880
My journey for the perfect curry continues.
907
00:57:51,880 --> 00:57:55,120
And I can't wait to try things further north.
908
00:57:55,120 --> 00:57:58,080
The city of Lucknow, really famous for its architecture
909
00:57:58,080 --> 00:58:01,280
and the sophisticated food of its Muslim rulers.
910
00:58:01,280 --> 00:58:04,280
There are some lovely treats in store.
911
00:58:04,280 --> 00:58:07,120
It's also where I heard some strong opinions
912
00:58:07,120 --> 00:58:11,360
concerning Britain's legacy in the story of curry.
913
00:58:11,360 --> 00:58:13,160
- MAN:
- The worst thing that was ever produced,
914
00:58:13,160 --> 00:58:15,200
and did a big disservice to Indian food,
915
00:58:15,200 --> 00:58:17,480
is the madras curry powder.
916
00:58:17,480 --> 00:58:19,080
Absolutely horrendous stuff.
917
00:58:19,080 --> 00:58:21,400
THEY SING IN INDIAN DIALECT
918
00:58:46,800 --> 00:58:50,360
- MAN:
- That's a mind-blasting curry, Ricky.
81646
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