Oh My Goodies!
Story of Anita Balami, a local restaurateur
by Eena Shrestha
We were all very very hungry and all we could see was a
sea of trees, grass and rocks. Now we can’t eat that! And to make things worse,
Pallav sir, Sabita didi and Bhagwati maam were talking about what to eat, where
to eat, and what would be really hot, fresh, tasty. My mouth was watering at
the thought of momos and chowmein and other meaty meats and I was asked about gwaramari,
sel rotis, samosas and pakodas. Only asked, mind you. We were still driving
away.
We had come back after a long time of walking and were
starving. We saw the KC shop and the other tea houses and small eateries. The
van sped on past them and Pallav sir kept saying no no no. And when he went yes
yes yes, Bhagwati maam and Sabita didi would say no no no.
Now it was more hopeful. We were in Thaiba. And this was
a township. He asked the driver to go through a smaller by way and pointed to
another street and asked that the van be stopped. The van stopped and we got
off in search for a place to eat. We would keep walking until we found
someplace we liked, he said. The kids were waiting where the van had stopped
while we, the olders were going through the street.
Far far away, we saw a glimmer of what we probably
sought, we had struck a bonanza three shops next to each other! A dairy where
they sold milk and tea and bakeries; a momo shop that sold meats like heads and
feet of chicken (which I did not want) and momos and sekuwa fried meat and
chowmein; and a samosa restaurant that had on display a big pot of cooking oil,
samosas, pakodas and gwaramari and jeri and sel roti.
The gwaramari is something I love, so I wanted to go to
the samosa restaurant… but Pallav sir had a different Idea and went to the
dairy to find that they only sold tea, milk and bread so I hoped we would go back
to the samosa restaurant but once again… nopes… we were left standing and
talking and he went to the momo place from where he came out and asked if we
wanted to eat chicken feet! I wanted to jump up and down because chicken feet disgusted
me, I don’t want to eat the feet of anything because… just no, Nooooooo! Yup,
it was right then that a pigeon pooped on the inside of Pallav sir’s glasses so
he had to go into the samosa place we were standing at to get that cleaned!
Finally at the samosa restaurant, we try a gwaramari, it
had been like 2 or 3 months since I’ve eaten one and it was great [By the way,
I had 5 gwaramaris for breakfast this morning]. After eating the gwaramaris
standing outside the shop, we washed our hands and went inside to have a seat.
When I went in I also saw jeris I wanted to eat them but no one ordered jeri and
that made me sad.
We then went on a eating spree: we then had pakodas, and
then it was time for spicy chowmein and then we had samosa. Utu couldn’t eat
the spicy chowmein so I got to eat more.
Then came our learning session. We had to interview the
shopkeeper. I found out that her name is Anita. And of course that was more
than a little interesting because Anita is also my friend at school and we went
to an art exhibition where the artist was also Anita!
This Anita’s husband was Bishnu and she had two sons: Abim
and Ashish. Anita was carrying her youngest son who was 19 months old. Her
older son, who is nine years old helped out at the shop as I talked to her. He
sold hot samosa and pakodas and took the money counted out the change and did
very good business.
Soon, all the gwaramaris, samosas and pakodas were gone
and another lady in the shop started making more as Anita talked to me and my
friends. She told us that they had owned the show for seven years. Her husband
Bishnu had been working as a waiter, helper, and cook at Indian food
restaurants since he was 12. He started by washing dishes and used to get paid 300
Nepalese rupees per month.
Over the years of watching and learning, he became an
accomplished cook. “We are famous around here,” he told us. Indeed, the
gwaramaris, the pakodas, and the samosas that we had were great. For me, I
would have liked them to be a little less spicy, especially the chunks of green
chillies he had put in the samosa and pakodas were something to watch out for! But
the others just loved their food hot in terms of freshly out of cooking oil and
super spicy.
They make everything in the shop and there were many sweets
and delicacies there also. I asked Abim what he liked best and he said that he
likes the samosa, (chicken), and jeri the most. He is in grade 3 and just a
year younger than me. It is wonderful how he balances helping out at the shop
and going to Everest School.
Now let us talk about the food that they sell:
Gwaramari: Most of us Newars have happy memories of
eating Gwaramari and
warm milk or tea for breakfast during the chilly winter months. In fact,
gwaramari wouldn’t taste half as good without some milk or tea. There is an art
to eating this food. First of all, you select the largest gwaramari in the
batch that’s in front of you so that no one else can have it. Then, you
carefully break it in half and keep the other half where no one else can get at
it. Then you eat the inside of the gwaramari until only the edges remain, it
becomes a tiny makeshift bowl. You now scoop up milk or tea in that tiny bowl and
eat it while still crunchy with milk or tea. In the Newari language ‘Gwara’ means round and ‘mari’ means bread so Gwaramari
means round bread, exactly. To people who have tasted it and liked it, it is not
just any normal bread but a very delicious one with a very different taste.
Sel Roti: Sel roti is very common and popular Nepali
traditional bread made by people who live in the hills. Sel rotis are thinner in
shape and larger in diameter than a normal donut. It’s made with rice flour,
sugar, oils, fruit such as banana, and other stuff. Sel rotis taste AMAZING
when it is fresh, it becomes slightly tough the next day, even though it still
tastes good this way. Well, sel roti can last for months and months and was the
main delicacy of Tihar, the festival of sweets so you can imagine that it
super. Sel roti is made and eaten throughout Nepal in Tihar (Dipawali), during
wedding parties and other special events as well. It is an important food in
most Nepalese cultural and traditional events. In Nepali ‘Sel’ means donut
shape and ‘roti’ means bread, Sel Roti is very enjoyable by itself, but
can also be eaten with plain yogurt, tea, and milk.
Pakoda: In Sanskrit pakoda comes from the
word pakvavata, pakva meaning cooked and vata
meaning small lump. The best pokodas have lots of vegetables held together by
besan, or chickpea flour. It is important to deep fry it in oil and eat it
while its crispy and hot. Onion, cabbages, spinach, cauliflower and other stuff
can be in it and the best ones have less flour and more veggies. Healthy and
often very spicy, pokodas are fun and warm you right up, especially your cheeks
if you are feeling cold.
Samosa: The samosa is claimed to have been created in
Arab countries such as Turkey and Egypt, where it is known as sambosa
previous to the 10th century. Now thaaaat is ooooold. I wasn’t even born then. I
have only been alive for a decade you know. Samosa comes from the Persian word
sanbosag. The name of other baked goods in other countries can also come from
this source, such as the arc sanbusak or sanbusaj in Arab, and samosa
in India. It is triangularly shaped with wheat flour exterior that has some
seeds. Inside is potatoes, beans, onions and spicy stuff. Lovely. The samosa is
deep fried in boiling hot oil. It is yummy. And we were wondering how much more
yummy if it were filled with chicken mince instead of potatoes!
Sweets: The Rajkarnikars are Newari, supposedly
the original people of the Kathmandu Valley, which is the capital of
Nepal. Kathmandu, Lalitpur, and Bhaktapur are in the valley. The
traditional Rajkarnikar occupation is making candy and sweets, known as
"mithai" in Nepal. Although slowly falling in number, hundreds of
Rajkarnikar sweet shops can still be found in the valley and in other cities
and towns with traditional Newar communities. Some of the popular
sweets from sweet shops are Jeri Swari, Puri, Burfi, Laddoo, Malpuwa, Halwa, Guwaramari!
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