INTRODUCTION AND CULINARY
HISTORY
Punjab, the land of
the five rivers-Beas, Satluj, Chenab, Ravi and Jhelum, is also called the land of milk and honey. Perhaps it would
be appropriate to call it the land of plenty!! Punjabi cooking and eating is
just like the Punjabis themselves. It is simple and forthright. Punjabis are a
hardworking and fun loving community by nature with food and merriment, very
much a part of their lives.
Punjabi cuisine is
never complicated. Bhunao is one of
the main techniques of Punjabi cuisine specially for non-vegetarian cooking. It
brings to mind images of appetizing food. Being an agricultural state the staple food of Punjab is wheat and to
accompany hot rotis and parathas are a variety of the most exotic vegetarian
and non-vegetarian delights.
The earliest
references to region’s food are found in the Vedas, which document the lives of
the Aryans in the Punjab. Amazingly the elements mentioned over 6,000 years ago
are still extant in this cuisine. This includes dairy-dughd (milk),ghrit (ghee) and dadhi (curd),shak (leafy green
vegetables) and a variety of grain. Even today, the staple in the Punjab is
grains and vegetables in their basic form.
Ayurvedic texts
refer to Vatika-a dumpling of
sundried, spice specked delicacy made with lentil paste called vadi.The art of making vadi reached its acme in Amritsar with
the arrival of the merchants of Marwar,
who were invited by Ram Das, the fourth Guru if the Sikhs, to stream line the
trade in the sacred city. There is also reference to vataka or vadha made of soaked coarsely ground and fermented mash
(husked urad) daal.
The unhusked mash is
the mother of all lentils. Rajmah derives from the word raj mash or the regal
mash. Other pulses mentioned are chanak
(channa dal) and alisandaga
(identified as kabuli or large channa)that is stated to have reached India with
Alexander the Great’s troops who came to India via Afghanistan.
Punjab-this side of
the border or that-is situated at the crossroads of the Silk Route. This
allowed the Punjabis-Sikh, Hindu and Muslim-to imbibe diverse culinary
influences. The proximity with Persia, Afghanistan and Central Asia gave them a
taste for fresh and dried fruits and exotic nuts.
Punjabi cuisine has
always been strongly influenced by Mughal invaders who brought with them the
tradition of the great Tandoor and now Punjabi tandoori cooking is celebrated
as one of the most popular cuisine throughout the world.
REGIONAL COOKERY IN PUNJAB
·
Peshawar-The most North
Western of districts in British India is a Pathan country and the fare is akin
to the food eaten in Afghanistan. The market in Peshawar handled, besides large
volumes of cambric, silks and indigo, spices that came from Hyderabad(Deccan),saffron
from Kashmir, sugar, salt, tea and asafetida from Delhi. The exports were
raisins and dry fruits.
·
Rawalpindi-South of Hazara and
east of Jhelum, separated from Kashmir with Attock to its west, the district of
Rawalpindi is covered with groves of oak, olive and chestnut. The flora and
fauna is the same as in the other parts of the lower Himalayas. This area has
imbibed culinary influences from Kashmir, North West frontier and the plains
and the plains irrigated by the Indus.
·
Baluchistan- Bounded on South
by Arabian sea and extending in the North to Afghanistan and NWFP, Baluchistan
touches Persia in the west, and Sindh and Punjab in the East.Food in the region
has been basic and robust. Breads are made with wheat and jowar (barley). Cheese
of different kinds are an integral part of the diet, and, among the vegetables
onion, garlic and fresh asafoetida stalks are used. Rice and fish are the
staple diet along the coast. Among the birds chakor and grouse relished.
·
Amritsar- Shaped like an
oblong between the Ravi and Beas rivers, the districts northeast of Gurdaspur
and south-west of Lahore. The forests of dhaak, mango and jamun abounded in the
district until recent times urbanization decimated most of them. The chief crops
are wheat, gram, barley, maize, rice, cotton, pulses and sugarcane. The region
is famous for its buffaloes and its milk product. Fish is also used very
commonly here.
EQUIPMENTS
USED IN PUNJAB CUISINE
·
Madhani: It is a wooden
churner fixed to a brass pot. It is used for churning out butter fron cream.
·
Chaklabelan:Chakla is a small
marble or wooden platform and belan is the rolling pin. These are usually made
up of wood. They are used for rolling the dough to make various Indian breads
such as chapattis and puris.
·
Kadhai: it is a deep,
concave utensil made up of brass, iron or aluminium and is used for deep fat
frying and also general cooking.
·
Kadookas
(grater):
This equipment has sharp grooves of different sizes meant for grating.
·
Channani
(sieve):
It is used to sieve or sift flour and commodities of similar nature. The
channani can have removable inserts that have varied sizes of holes for coarse
or fine sieving.
·
Masala
dani:
It literally translates to ‘spice box’. It contains the commonly used dry
spices, both whole and powdered.
·
Pauni: A perforated spoon
used for frying food commodities.
·
Karchi
(ladle):
It is actually a big round spoon for stirring dal or mixing food or even
serving it.
·
Tawa: This flat base
equipment is usually made of cast iron is used for making Indian breads such as
roti and parathas. They are available in various sizes, depending upon the
uses.
·
Patiala: It is generally
made up of brass and comes with a lid. It is used when something has to be
sauted, boiled or simmered. It is also used for making gravies and cooking in
bulk. These are also available in various sizes.
·
Tandoor: It is a clay oven
chamber, which is lit with live charcoal. It is used for baking various Indian
breads, kebabs (boti, white meat, fish, prawn etc)and other items.
·
Bhatti: It is used for
grilling kebabs. It is an open fire grill, where coal is the only medium of
fire.
·
Khoncha: It is a flat metal
spoon used for stir frying or sautéing the ingredients.
·
Chimta: These are meant for
holding the hot objects e.g. the roti on the open fire or the griddle, turning
items in hot oil while deep fat frying.
·
Hamamdista
(mortar and pestle):
It is a pair of tools used to crush, grind, and mix solid substances or masalas.
It is usually made of iron but can also be made of marble stone, wood, bamboo,
iron, steel, brass and basalt.
·
Doridanda: It is a stoneware
pot with a log of wood, used for pounding chutneys aor dry spices. The pestle
could be either of wood or stone.
Miscellaneous
equipments include:Chajj
is a kind of winnowing instrument. Ukhli is a mortar used. Charkha
is a spinning wheel. Dauri and kundi are kinds of stone
mortars. Gothna and danda are wooden pestles. Chaati is a large
earthern vessel. Takri is a scale.Loh is a large pan used for cooking
breads.
CUISINE
CHARACTERISTICS
·
Most
Punjabi menus are made according to the season. The universal favourite is chole-bathure which is a round-the-year
item and is available at every wayside dhaba anywhere in Northern India.
·
Wholewheat in
different forms
is the staple of this area.Rice is rarely cooked plain or steamed and is always
made with a flavoring of cumin or fried onions, which is the served with rajma
(kidney beans) or kadhi (curd curry). In winter, rice is cooked with jaggery - gurwalachawal or with green peas – matarwalechawalor as a delicacy called Raokikheer, which is rice cooked on a
slow fire for hours together with sugar cane juice. Even bajra is predominantly used in some parts of the state.
·
Use
of dollops of ghee and/or refined oil is commonly used as a
cooking media.
·
The
pride of the Punjabi winter cuisine is sarson-ka-saag
(mustard leaves) served with blobs of white butter accompanied by makke-di-roti and lassi (churned yogurt).
·
All
lentils, especially black gram and yellow gram, are a part of Punjabi cuisine.Rajma
or Chana are alo very popularly used.
·
The main masala in a
Punjabi dish consists of onion, garlic, ginger and a lot of tomatoes fried in
pure ghee.
·
Some typical ingredients
used in the cuisine includes black carrot (kanji),
mango powder (Aamchoor powder), dreid
fenugreek leaves (Kasoorimethi) and
Pomegranate seeds (Anardana)
·
Punjabi
cuisine is characterized by a profusion of dairy products in the form ofmalai (cream), paneer (cottage cheese),curd,
buttermilk and butter.
·
Though
chicken is a favorite with
non-vegetarians, fish is also
considered a delicacy, especially in the Amritsar region.
·
One
thing that makes Punjabi cuisine so special is the tandoor. In rural Punjab, the community tandoor, dug in the ground,
is a meeting place, just like the village well, for the women folk, who bring
the kneaded atta (dough) and sometimes marinated meats to have them cooked.
·
Tall
glasses of lassi, made of yogurt, tempered with either salt or sugar, are a
popular cooling drink of Punjabi origin but it is quite popular all over the
country.
·
Then
there is also paneer-a must in the
vegetarian Punjabi menu. Several delectable items are made out of this rather
bland derivative of milk. Creations like the Kadai Paneer and Makhani Paneer
are basically Punjabi but are well loved all over the country.
·
Phirni, a sweet dish made
of milk, rice flour and sugar and chilled in earthenware bowls is a typical
Punjabi dessert. Punjabi sweet dishes like gulabjamuns and burfi have a strong
percentage of khoya again made from milk.
·
Punjab's
other grand contribution is the dhaba
- the roadside eatery that has become a prominent feature on the national and
state highways. Earlier frequented only by truck drivers, today it is in vogue
to eat at a dhaba-urban or roadside.
·
One
of the salient features Punjabi food is the diverse range of dishes that can
suit any palate. The food could range from spicy to sour, and sweet to tangy.
FESTIVAL FOODS OF PUNJAB
LOHRI
In Punjab, wheat
is the main winter crop, which is sown in October and harvested in March
or April. In January, the fields come up with the promise of a golden
harvest, and farmers celebrate Lohri during this rest period before the
cutting and gathering of crops. For Punjabis, this is more than just a
festival, it is also an example of a way of life.
Lohri is a festival of zeal and verve and marks the culmination of the
chilly winter. In true spirit of the Punjabi culture, men and women perform
Bhangra and Giddha, popular Punjabi folk dances, around a bonfire.
Enthusiastic children go from house to house singing songs and people oblige
them generously by giving them money and eatables as offering for the festival.
Logs of wood are piled together for a bonfire, and friends and relatives gather
around it. They go around the fire three times, giving offerings of popcorns,
peanuts, rayveri and sweets. Then, to the beat of the dhol (traditional
Indian drum), people dance around the fire. Prasad of til, peanuts, rayveri,
puffed rice, popcorn, gajak and sweets are distributed. This symbolizes a
prayer to Agni for abundant crops and prosperity.
Lohri is
also an auspicious occasion to celebrate a newly born baby’s or a new bride’s
arrival in the family. The day ends with a traditional feast of sarson da saag
and makki di roti and a dessert of rau di kheer (a dessert made of sugarcane
juice and rice). The purpose of the Lohri harvest ceremony is to thank the God
for his care and protection. During this festival the people prepare large
quantities of food and drink, and make merry throughout the day and night.
Therefore everyone looked forward to this day.
BAISAKHI
Baisakhi,
celebrated with joyous music and dancing, is New Year's Day in Punjab. It falls
on April 13, though once in 36 years it occurs on 14th April. It was on this
day that the tenth Sikh Guru, Guru Gobind
Singh, founded the Khalsa
(the Sikh brotherhood) in 1699. The Sikhs, therefore, celebrate this festival
as a collective birthday. A sweet dish called Anaarse is prepared made using
fermented batter(rice or wheat) and shaped into a cup-shape.
BASANT PANCHAMI
It is a
festival that marks the onset of spring. It is a brightly colored festival,
with yellow as a symbolic color of harvest. This festival has a range of
Punjabi foods like the main course ones such as biryani, but the lighter and
excitable ones like jalaibees and pakoras are also common. A number of sweet
drinks are quite common as well at this time of the year. These are refreshing
and symbolize the joy during the season.
Aside from
the festivals like bassant, Punjabi food traditions include the all-important
heavy main courses at weddings. These might include heavy rice dishes and
curries as well. These are accompanied with salads and other side dishes as
well.
GURU PURAB
The Sikh festivals are celebrated as Guru purabs.
They either mark the birth anniversary or the martyrdom of any Sikh guru. The
devotees attend langar or the common meals where everyone eats the same food
irrespective of caste, class, or creed. Devotees offer their services for
cooking food, cleaning the Gurdwara or carrying out other chores. This is
called the KarSeva. The food is served with the spirit of seva (service) and
bhakti (devotion). On Guru ArjanDev's martyrdom day, sweetened milk is offered
to passers-by.
PUNJABI EATING STYLE:
Winter, in Punjab,
brings in the season of the famous makkikiroti(maize flour bread) and
sarsonkasaag(mustard leaf gravy). No meal is complete without a serving of
lassi (sweet or salted drink made with curd) or fresh curd and white butter
which is consumed in large quantities.
Connoisseurs of the
cuisine say that the gravy component of Punjabi cuisine came from the Mughals.
The most popular example is the murgmakhani. It served the state well to
combine this influence in its cooking since it had a lot of pure ghee and
butter. Murg makhani also provided a balance to tandoori chicken, which was dry
because it was charcoal cooked. Nans and parathas, rotis made of maize flour
are typical Punjabi breads. Of course, over the years the roti has been
modified to add more variety, so there is the rumali roti, the naan and the
lacchaparathas, all cooked in the tandoor.
LANGAR
– A SPECIAL NOTE
History
The institution of
the Sikh Langar or free kitchen was started by the first Sikh Guru, Guru Nanak.
It was designed to uphold the principle of equality between all people
regardless of religion, caste, colour, creed, age, gender or social status, a
revolutionary concept in the caste-ordered society of 16th century India where
Sikhism began. In addition to the ideals of equality, the tradition of Langar
expresses the ethics of sharing, community, inclusiveness and oneness of all
humankind.
Origin
Of Word 'Langar'
Guru kaLangar (lit.
'Gurus' communal dining-hall) is a community kitchen run in the name of the
Guru. Often referred to as the Guru's Kitchen, it is usually a small room
attached to a gurdwara, but at larger gurdwaras, such as the Harmandir Sahib,
it takes on the look of a military kitchen with tasks arranged so that teams of
sewadars prepare tons of food (all meals are vegetarian) for thousands of the
Gurus' guests daily. Langar, is said to be a Persian word that translates as
'an almshouse', 'an asylum for the poor and the destitute', 'a public kitchen
once kept by a great man for his followers and dependants, holy persons and the
needy.' Some scholars trace the word langar to Sanskrit analgarh (cooking
room). In Persian, the specific term langar has been in use in an identical
sense. In addition to the word itself, the institution of langar is also
traceable in the Persian tradition. Langars were a common feature of the Sufi
centres in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Even today some dargahs, or
shrines commemorating Sufi saints, run langars, like KhwajaMu’inud-Din
Chishti’s at Ajmer.
Rules
concerning the tradition of Langar
1. Simple vegetarian
meals
2. It is prepared by
devotees who recite Gurbani while preparing the langar
3. It is served after
performing Ardas
4. The food distributed
in Pangat without any prejudice or discrimination
5. All food must be
fresh, clean and hygienically prepared
Amar
Das
the third guru formalized the institution of langar, the guru’s free kitchen,
uniting the Sikhs by establishing two key concepts:
·
Pangat – One family
compiled of all of humanity, regardless of caste, color, or creed, sitting
together cross legged in lines, forming rows without discrimination or
consideration of rank or position.
·
Sangat – The ennobling
influence of people, who aspire to truthful living, and congregate with
like-minded company for the purpose of uttering the name of one God in the
presence of the Guru Granth.
When preparing food
for the Langar, the mouth and nose will be covered by a piece of cloth known as
a "parna". Also during the
preparation due regard is made to purity, hygiene and cleaniness, the sevadars (selfless workers) will
normally utter Gurbani and refrain from speaking if possible.
When the Langar is
ready, a small portion of each of the dishes is placed in a plate or bowls and
placed in front of the Sri Guru Granth Sahib and a prayer called the Ardas is
performed. The Ardas is a petition to God;
a prayer to thank the Creators for all His gifts and blessings. A steel kirpan
is passed through each item of food, after the "Guru-prashad" has been blessed.When serving the Langar, the
servers must observe strict rules of cleanliness and hygiene. Servers should
not touch the serving utensils to the plates of those they serve. When serving
foods by hand, such as chapatis or fruit, the servers’ hands should not touch
the hand or plate of those they are serving. Those serving should wait until
all others have been completely served before they sit down to eat themselves.
It is advisable not to leave any leftovers.
POPULAR ITEMS IN PUNJAB
·
RAJMA:These are red kidney
beans cooked with ginger, garlic, and tomatoes and flavoured with turmeric
powder and red chilli powder. They are normally paired with the jeerapulow and
commonly eaten with desi ghee poured on top.
·
SARSON
KI DAAG:
Fresh mustard leaves are combined with amaranth leaves and braised along with
ginger, garlic, onions and tomatoes until they become creamy. This dish is
garnished with white butter and eaten with makkiki
roti.
·
PUNJ
RATANI DAL:
It is prepared by cooking five dals with onion and tomatoes, symbolic to the
five rivers of Punjab. The most commonly used lentils are chana, split urad,
green moong, kidney beans and masoor dal.
·
MAA
KI DAL:
Broken black lentils are combined with Bengal gram and simmered with onions and
tomatoes on a low flame, until it is creamy. It is relished with the wholewheat
chapattis.
·
DAL
MAKHANI:
Black lentils are simmered overnight with tomatoes (finely chopped or puree)
and butter on slow simmering charcoals. It is finished with cream and
kasoorimethi and served with a dollop of butter.
·
AMRITSARI
KULCHA:
Wholewheatdoughis stuffed with fillings ranging from paneer to cauliflower,
potatoes, or a mixture of all of the above. It is cooked in the tandoor and
served with dollops of butter.
·
PINDI
CHOLEY:
This dish comes from Rawalpindi, where the chickpeas are boiled with black tea
to give it its traditional black colour. These cooked chick peas are then
cooked with onions, tomatoes and spices. These are commonly served with bhatura
for breakfast or even as snacks.
·
BAIGAN
DA BHARTA:
Large egg plants are char grilled in tandoor until soft and are then peeled.
This soft flesh is mixed with little tomato and onion gravy flavoured with
spices and chopped coriander leaves.
·
TANDOORI
CHICKEN:
Whole chicken is de – skinned and marinated overnight with curd, red chilli
powder and spices. Normally the bird weighs around 800gm to 900gm after
dressing. It is then skewered and cooked in the tandoor. Its reddish colour
with typical flavour of the charcoal roast makes it a gourmet’s delight.
·
MURGH
BUTTER MASALA:
Tandoor cooked chicken is cooked in creamy tomato gravy (in base of
butter)along with ginger garlic paste, red chilli powder and flavoured with
kasoorimethi. The gravy of tomatoes is also known as makhni gravy. This gravy
add moisture to the tandoori chicken which is otherwise eaten dry.
·
FISH
AMRITSARI:
The cubes of fish are first marinated in salt, red chilli powdet and lemon
juice. A thick batter is prepared with besan, ajwain, red chilli powder and
salt. The fish is coated in this batter and the deep fat fried. It is served
with aamchoor powder sprinkled on top and with lemon wedges.
·
PHIRNEE:
It
is a traditional dessert served normally during the summer months. Soaked rice
is ground into a paste and then added to boiling sweet milk. This is cooked
until thickened and poured into terracotta pots. The extra moisture from the
pudding is soaked by the earthenware pot and thus the pudding sets soft yet
firm. It is then garnished with slivers of pistachio and strands of saffron.
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