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« The March of Couscous by Farid Zadi | Main | The Perfect Sunday by Ed McGaugh »

August 01, 2005

Indian wedding feasts by Monica Bhide

Thank you so much Chef Zadi for inviting me to participate in your weblog.
I am honored to be here.  A brief intro - I am a food writer and love writing
about food and anything to do with life in general!

I am posting one of my favorite stories here -- it is on a wedding I attended
in India a few years ago. I think the food was amazing, but dont take my word
for it.. judge for yourself.

The Indian Wedding Feast, a Modern Marvel

By Monica Bhide
Special to The Washington Post
Wednesday, May 19, 2004; Page F02

Planning a wedding? Whether you're the bride-to-be, her mother or any
other participant, organizer or subsidizer of these complicated,
expensive and emotional events, it may help to hear about the wedding
I attended last year. Your life will seem, suddenly, simple and
uncomplicated, your guest list meager, your catering bill reasonable.

On Nov. 27, 2003, a day picked as auspicious by Hindu astrologers,
India's capital city, New Delhi hosted 14,000 weddings.
   (It hosted the same number again for the next two days in a row!)

Planning a wedding? Whether you're the bride-to-be, her mother or any
other participant, organizer or subsidizer of these complicated,
expensive and emotional events, it may help to hear about the wedding
I attended last year. Your life will seem, suddenly, simple and
uncomplicated, your guest list meager, your catering bill reasonable.

 

On Nov. 27, 2003, a day picked as auspicious by Hindu astrologers,
India's capital city, New Delhi hosted 14,000 weddings.
   (It hosted the same number again for the next two days in a row!)

Today's urban Indian weddings are a picture of national and international
integration. In earlier times brides and bridegrooms would be of the
same caste, perhaps the same geographic state and most assuredly the
same religion. Modernization of thought and tradition, socioeconomic
factors and a prosperous middle class have changed this. And nowhere
are these changes more evident than in the wedding feasts. From exotic
to authentic, from regional to international, the wedding banquets are
truly spectacular.

Armed with every single piece of formal clothing I owned, I attended
a week-long, 15-event family wedding in Delhi, culminating with the
wedding ceremony itself on that very lucky day. Wedding guests, flying
in from five continents, swelled to the thousands. (Wedding invitations are
often addressed to family, friends and even friends of friends. The hosts
consider it an insult if you do not bring along a huge group to the wedding.)

Breakfasts, lunches and dinners were seamlessly coordinated for hundreds
of people and their chauffeurs and servants. Each event (sometimes there
were four a day) required a unique feast and decor not to mention new
outfits, shoes, diamonds and other finery for those attending these
celebrations. The menus were dictated by the religious theme of the event
or the whim of  the bride. Chefs and cooks were ferried in from other cities
in India, along with their own mobile kitchens, haandis (cooking vessels),
enormous tandoors (clay ovens) and troupes of helpers.

The festivities for this Hindu wedding began at the bride's home on
Saturday, Nov. 22, five days before the wedding, with a prayer ceremony.
Hindu scriptures dictate the food for this occasion be free from garlic and
onion (known in ancient times as aphrodisiacs) to maintain its purity.
The vegetarian menu featured more than 30 choices, ranging from velvety
tomato soup tempered with mustard seeds to a creamy peas and almond
curry.

The next three nights seemed like one long endless party. At "cocktail
dinners" you had your choice of eight different pastas (farfelle to fettucini)
topped with five different toppings and served with one of four different
sauces (spinach, mornay, mushroom or arabiata). A more adventurous
(cocktail menu featured the Swiss specialty rosti: potatoes were shredded,
sauteed until golden brown and then served with generous amounts of cheese.
At another station at the same party, lovers of Indian food could sample
Kathal Biryani, a rice dish layered with curried jackfruits, or the Dal
Khushk Punjabi, a creamy combination of lentils simmered for more than
eight hours. Or (ignoring Dr. Atkins) a guest could head straight to the
bread counter for a choice of cumin, mint, butter or even chocolate-laced
Indian breads prepared in the tandoor by chefs flown in from the Indian city
of Meerut.

The morning of the day before the wedding began with a ritual for women
only called kwar dhoti. The bridegroom's sister visited the bride's family
with gifts for the bride, including a cup of henna and the first outfit to be
worn right after the wedding. For this event, a chef flew in from Punjab
to make his specialty -- Indian-style corn bread (Makkai ki Roti) prepared
on a griddle and pungent mustard greens (Sarson Ka Saag) served with
homemade white butter on the silver platters each guest received as
a party favor.

The night before the wedding is reserved for the tradition of henna.
The natural dye is used to paint intricate designs on the bride's hands and
legs. The myth is that the depth of the color of henna on your hand
determines the depth of your mother-in-law's love for you! It is the
bride-to-be's last night at home. Traditionally, a mother ensures that
her daughter's favorite dishes are on the menu that night, and so we
enjoyed deep-fried lotus stem, black chickpeas in a spicy brown sauce
served with piping hot Indian balloon bread, warm carrot fudge and
cardamom-scented tea.

The wedding, after four ritual-filled events earlier that day, finally arrived.
A red-and-gold royal pavilion with lavish seating, gorgeous floral
arrangements, buffet tables, silk draped reception areas, bars and dessert
lounges had been custom-built at a 50-acre farm. The bride, dressed in a
deep red Indian gown, studded with Swarovski crystal, and the groom in a
cream Nehru-collar suit, wed in front of 1,500 guests on a stage adorned
with more than 5,000 flowers. Four six-foot-long tables were covered with
nine different types of Indian dough balls ready for the oven, to be baked
fresh at the requests of the guests. Pasta, Mongolian, Mexican, Indian,
Continental and Chinese cooking stations provided ample choices. A
20-gallon terra cotta pot, on a slow flame, brewed milk laced with
cashews, almonds, pistachios, saffron and sugar -- the choice drink in the
bone-chilling Delhi weather.

After the wedding feast, came the wedding reception. For the first time in
seven days the menu featured alcohol and non-vegetarian food. The rush
to the Teppanyaki cooking station with grilled Japanese food and the salad
bar with more than 20 types of salads cued me into what was hot that night.
The dessert table served chuski (an Indian version of Italian ice laced with
sugar syrup), mille-feuille (the French dessert of puff pastry and cream),
chocolate truffle cake and apple strudel. Of course, when 14 cases of Scotch,
12 cases of wine and four cases of tequila are consumed in one night, you
can safely assume your guests had a happy night.

As we began to leave the reception, I noticed the mouth freshener table.
Yes, the final tables offered the departing guests a sweet token of thanks --
35 types of mouth fresheners, and the caterer was still adding more choices.

--------

Enjoy! You can visit me at www.monicabhide.com

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Comments

im happy to you, nice article here

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