Greeks are similarly obsessed with clean, nourishing food being predictably
only "Greek food". The Greek idea of diversity is bifteki or hamburger. Try
Crete on a Half Shelf for a hilarious account of a Montreal Greek chef
trying to convince Greeks of the virtues of Indian cuisine!

On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 9:24 PM, ss <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tuesday 02 Jun 2009 6:37:52 am Charles Haynes wrote:
> > I was shocked - but it's because there's no demand for it. People just
> > don't seem to be interested in trying new cuisines, in experimenting.
>
> Absolutely correct.
>
> But the Indian (read "Hindu" here - although the same practices are true of
> non Hindus) view of life and heatlh gives food a very important place and
> the
> reputation of food as something that causes disease or maintains health
> runs
> deep among Indians.
>
> Indian food is "known" to be "healthy and nourshing" and tried and tested
> (never mind the actual medical theory here) and foreign foods are always
> suspect. To add to this pre-existing bias - India food tends to be varied
> and
> delicious.
>
> It takes a lot for an Indian to shift out of Indian food to foreign food.
> The
> fisrt step is to overcome childhood inhibitions imposed by home rules set
> by
> granny as to what is "heatlhy" food. Food are classified in various ways
> like "Ushna" ("hot" is a mistranslation), or "sheetha ("cold" is a
> mistranslation) Ushna (chillies, chicken)  causes piles among other things.
> Sheetha (banana, yogurt, coconut water) causes sore throats and cough.
>
> Indian foods are broadly classified as Sattvic, Rajasic or Tamasic - each
> of
> which cause certain boldily and personality changes. Brahmins tend to go
> for
> the Sattvic foods by tradition. Spicy hot food and some meats come under
> rajasic food and are said to casue anger and distress. Tamasic food can be
> some meats, onions and stale food.
>
> Sattvic vegetarian food prepared today in the brahmin household must not be
> eaten tomorrow as it is then tamasic. it can be given to the servant, who
> will eat tamasic foods. All foreign foods tend to get their
> ingredients "wrong" and are rarely classifiable as good sattvic food.
>
> If a "foreign food" is accepted in India it will be Indianized and then
> become "American chopchew" (chop suey) or Chicken Manjuri ("Manchurian")
>
> shiv
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

Reply via email to