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Healing Power Of Indian Curries

indian curry

On my trips abroad, I have rarely found an Indian restaurant that would satisfy my native taste buds. In the West, there has been a “curry” revolution and its impact has been the most in Britain. However, there is a growing realization that Indian cooking is not just meant to set your tongue on fire or titillate the palate, it actually mixes common sense with the ancient science of Ayurveda, gaining popularity as alternative medicine.

“Ever since the first British curry house opened its doors (the country now has an estimated 9,000 Indian restaurants) Indian food has become synonymous, in many minds, with the macho pursuit of tongue-bothering spice and fattening takeaway blowouts washed down with gallons of beer,” reports The Independent.

“Of course, there is another side to Indian food, and in recent years a small but determined group of cooks have sought to break through the stereotype.

“Monisha Bharadwaj is one of Britain’s top Indian cooks and an award-winning writer. Her latest book, Healthy Indian in Minutes, is mouth-watering collection of dishes… ‘The majority of British takeaways do not offer the best example of good Indian cooking,’ Bharadwaj says. ‘But you have to think about what they are. When they first opened, curry houses were catering to people who were used to eating heavy food with all its gravy, cream and stodginess. Takeaways offered something similar but with added spice.’

“But Bharadwaj says there is a growing demand for something different. I meet her in Hounslow, where she moved from her native Mumbai 22 years ago. As well as writing she now runs a cookery school in her kitchen. ‘More and more people want to cook home-cooked Indian food that’s fresh and healthy,’ she says. ‘They know that it is something different but they don’t know what it is because you can’t get it in restaurants.’

“Bharadwaj’s courses are proving a hit with everyone from housewives and husbands short of inspiration to top chefs looking to expand their repertoires.

“Bharadwaj is particular in the kitchen but that’s just how she learned to cook. Indian home cooking is governed by rules, some of them common sense but others more complex and founded on the ancient Indian science of Ayurveda. First recorded more than 5,000 years ago, the world’s oldest known system of medicine casts the kitchen as an apothecary in which herbs have healing powers.” More here…

Amazon website has this to say about Bharadwaj’s book: “People often see Indian food as greasy, fatty and labour-intensive, but everyday Indian home cooking is neither unhealthy nor difficult to prepare. Monisha Bharadwaj will prove that it is in fact a highly nutritious, gentle cuisine that has always included natural and whole foods such as whole wheat flour, raw cane sugar, lots of vegetables, beans, lentils and any number of healing spices.

“Indian eating is based on the ancient science of Ayurveda, a system of holistic living that is the oldest form of medicine known to man. Broken down into straightforward chapters – curries, dry dishes, light one-pot meals, salads and raitas, chutneys and relishes, drinks and sweets – ‘Healthy Indian in Minutes’ will give readers the tips and strategies they need to cook healthy home-style food in a matter of minutes.More here…

  • joegandelman
    How great to see this! Three things for Swaraaj and readers:
    1) My mother is now 88 and she STILL talks about when we had a great, hot curry dinner in New Delhi and my friend, a young Times of India reporter named Swaraaj, joined us and told her to have some yogart to cool her mouth.
    2. I LOVE curry and go to restaurants here but also order Patak's online at Amazon. Last night I made the Rogan Josh. My niece Kayla lives here and her Dad Thomas and 18 year old brother Greg have all become HUGE curry fans.
    3. Indian curry is an anti-inflammatory. Tumeric is a great ingedient. I have not posted as much on TMV the past few weeks partly because I really hurt my right index finger which I use to write with and also do my shows with (if it was the MIDDLE FINGER I would have a driving disability here in California). Rice and curry are anti-inflammatories. Almost all curry you buy in jars, or even the powders is far far better than any fast food or processed foods. I ordered two big batches of powdered curry dishes. In one I used lamb, but later used beef cube stew meat. All were delicious. Also: curry is starting to catch on here in the US. When I came to San Diego in 1982 to start work as a reporter on the San Diego Union, there was ONE Indian restaurant in Oceanside: I did a story on it and the owner and they got lots of business (the owner would ask you if you wanted the "rocket fuel" since all curry is NOT hot and he would ONLYgive the very hottest version to people who really insisted on it). Today there are many many Indian restaurants to choose from. Ditto on the East coast.

    So BRAVO on this post...and to readers who have not tried Indian foot I RECOMMEND IT. I've been taking tumeric pills and have had curry and rice twice int he past week. That and other herbal pills I take have greatly reduced my problem and I hope to be back to regular blogging in a week or two. JG
  • Looking to protect your memory? Try adding a little spice to your life. Turmeric, to be exact.
    Read in interesting article " Curry to remember" at http://ayurveda-foryou.com/archive/curry.html
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