Friday, April 03, 2009

 

The Golgappa race

They’re called Paani Pooris in Maharashtra, Phuchkas in and around Bengal, Gup chups in Orissa and Jharkhand and Golgappas in most of North India. According to Wikipedia, they originated in Uttar Pradesh- literary sources indicate Benares. Gradually they spread, literally by word of mouth, to other parts of the country and then to Bangladesh. Golgappas generally mark the end of a chaat eating session.


In the heydays of my childhood, I confess I wasn’t too fond of these miraculous snacks. I was even more rigid when it came to sour or chili food then and Golgappas in Patna tend to be on the khatta side. But following our move to the capital, it became next to impossible for me to stay away from these orbs of temptation. In the city where there’s an Aggrawal (various spellings included) at every nook and cranny, ready to dish out lip smacking plates by the dozen, the tongue learns to make allowances and discover new tastes. Delhi is the land of aaloo-chaat after all and eating golgappas here is an adventure by itself. The local thelas will give you a plate (5-6 pieces) for 5 bucks. Aggrawal or Evergreen, will have their proper token system, will offer both aata and suji golgappas and will charge 10 bucks. Nathu, the MNC, draws the health conscious. They use Bisleri and accordingly charge 25 bucks per plate. As far as the taste is concerned, I’ve found all 3 classes more or less the same- and that is extremely delicious. You could avoid the thelas perhaps, if you’re concerned about the dust and the grime and feel that ambience does matter.


For me, Suji golgappas win over their aata counterparts any day. I know the shell is supposed to be tasteless, but suji does seem to taste better. Perhaps it’s the texture- Suji being smooth and aata being rough and porous. As far the stuffing goes, I’m not too fussy. Mashed potatoes with the usual jeera, black salt and some chili powder is perfectly fine. I’ve been to places where they stuff the golgappa with chana and that’s ok too, but I’m just more comfortable with aaloo. The stuffing doesn’t really contribute to the taste. It just makes the golgappa substantial, you feel that you did have something solid. I guess it’s the reason why I’ve never gone beyond 3 plates at once. In my opinion, it’s the water which really makes or breaks the golgappa. There are generally two kinds of people- those who prefer the golgappa khatta (sour) or those who prefer it meetha (sweet). Since Facebook as declared that I’m ‘sweet as pie’, I suppose it makes sense that I fall in the latter category.


When I bite into the phuchka, I like the golgappa to explode its various flavours right then. The sour taste generally engulfs my mouth first, making me all the more eager for the meetha to hit the right taste buds. When that happens, bliss. At that moment, I find it the easiest thing in the world to forget everything and just savour the tangy sweet taste that holds me in a trance. I’ve tried golgappas that are predominantly sweet but they’re not the same. Just like you need to cross a desert to taste the elixir in water, you need the khatta to love the meetha. Somewhere during this heavenly moment, I chew the crust and aaloo and swallow it, not really noticing when. The process over, I hold out my plate eagerly for the next one.


The golgappa eating ritual is particularly interesting. As most of you will doubtless know, you order a plate and stand there with the bowl in hand, while the vendor stuffs the phuckha and gives it to you one by one. In case there’s more than one person, as is usually the case, he follows the card dealing routine- one golgappa to everyone, two, three etc. Whenever this ritual is enacted, I always have a mental race with the vendor. The rule is simple. If at any point of time, there are 2 golgappas in my plate, I lose. Otherwise I win. Nice and easy. I’ve seen that when there are 3 or more people, I usually win and rejoice in my puerility. In case of 2 people, the going gets tough, and the tough bites on the golgappa, desperate to win on one hand and eager to enjoy the golgappa on the other- pondering on the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe and Everything in the meantime.


As the first golgappa is served, I take a bite and am hit by ecstasy. Having been told that it is healthy to chew the food 42 times before swallowing, I’m somewhere around my 20th munch when the worthy opponent, may he serve many more golgappas, pops the second into my plate. A couple more munches, a gulp and the next golgappa is in my mouth. Not to be outdone, the vendor has already prepared his third round and it lies on my plate now. Frantic chewing follows amidst silent mmmm’s and I manage to pop the third one in before the fourth golgappa finds its way to my plate. Things are difficult now. I’m on the brink of defeat. I resort to grey tactics. There shouldn’t be two golgappas on my plate right? Very smartly, I pick up the fourth one with my free hand. So now, there’s a half-eaten golgappa in my mouth, one in my hand and my slimy though respected opponent has put one on my plate too. Recognizing that defeat is near now, I turn philosophical, thinking- there’s more to life than winning the golgappa race and its in my mouth, hand and plate right now. The fourth golgappa is taken, the fifth is still on my plate and the final blow is dealt. The last one slips into the place left on the plate and Lefty bites the dust. Or Suji and aaloo to be more precise. With grace, I finish off the last 2 pieces with great relish; think about having another plate, occasionally do and toodle off towards the sunset. Chequred flag.


Comments:
Absolutely mouth-watering!! You're right about the meetha one (and the sooji-mixed crust) being far superior-what adds the sweet flavour is the liberal dose of sweet chutney that they put into it. Great stuff-the golgappa and the write-up!!
 
Surprisingly, you get better golgappas in Bengaluru than Roorkee, and that's not just my humble opinion. Having had two obsessive compulsive doctors at home (now 3) kept me away from these watery ellipsoids (orbs are spherical) for most of my life and I'm yet to figure out whether I like the khatta or the meetha more.
Keep writing and maybe you can combine it into a Definitive guide to all that is Food-da and Good-da.
 
Amen to that. As one of my geekier friends put it, the golgappas in Banga Lore have an inexplicable sharpness that makes the ones elsewhere seem strangely 'uni-dimensional'.

Very Rapu-esque comment that. In my defence, I was only quoting.
 
Somehow I'm not surprised at Banga-lore's GG's being better than R-lands. The only decent golgappas I've had here are the ones you get at that permanent tikki place. Yet to try Bangalore's fare, though.
I once had the hygiene lecture when I tried the 'ganna ka juice' that is sold on thelas. Those used to be great too. Wonder if you still get them.
Regarding food-da and good-da, the title is amazing. Very Shrey. In case, a collection is ever started, that is what the title will be.
Regarding Rapu, there's a funny story. Remind me to tell you sometime.
 
Brilli-aunt post, da! Loved biting into into every single bit of it!
Although my house has one doc lesser, the result was pretty much the same. If you're bothered, Visakhapatnam's GG (!) vendors like a lot of onion, for some reason, but the best ones are those with a hint of sesame in their aloo fillings- my brother happened to take me to one such vendor, and it's sheer bliss!

Never got to going to Delhi's too often, though, sadly.
 
Phuchka?!
Wasn't aware of that term...makes it sound all the more delicious!
Lucky you...here in Roorkee most of them have the sweet ones, sadly for me!
And the supposedly khatta ones are pathetic...
How I miss my home town then!
Also, Aggrawals/Agrawals/Agarwals/Agarwals, to list a few, aren't all about phuchkas you know!
Scrumplicious post...
 
@ Murty
How could you have lived in Delhi for 10 years and not eaten Golgappas frequently? Oh I forgot, you lived in the far flung corner- Dadri. But still. Onions in GG's sound weird to be frank. But with food, you never can tell, can you? Would like to try the sesame ones sometime.

@ Prachi
Yeah, the GG's being sweet here are a bit of a blessing. I didn't know there were golgappas in Mathura (it is Mathura, right?) And yes, they are called Phuchkas, no prizes for guessing why. And Aggrawals (all spellings included) rocks. Golgappe specially, but even tikki, sweets, chaat and noodles too.
 
As mentioned earlier, a doc in the family, da. Golgappas were the forbidden fruit. *Sniff.
 
to add 2 ur xperience , try adding some vodka instead of ur khatta-meetha stuff :P
 
Yeah...it is Mathura...Didn't expect this from a GG fan though!
Ofcourse they are there in Mathura!
They are omnipresent!
And you again forgot Pavbhaji, Shakahaari Khaana...You name it...They have it!
 
They are called Paani Pooris in Chennai as well. (Yes we do have GG's.. Muahahaha!!!)

A thesis on GG's? You fourth years are really vela. :P
 
tum itne patle kaise ho? sob! sob!
 
@ Yadav
Vodka sounds promising. Will have to think of a way to mix the two, however.

@ Prachi
Agreed.

@ Shreyas
I know. Isn't there a song on Paani pooris, tomato ketchup and chinese food, too? And regarding vella-panthi, right you are.

@ Srishti
He he.
 
Come to my hometown someday buddy... i assure you'd love the special varieties of ghup-chup there..and even 5 plates of those would prove less for your appetite.
 
That this post attracted so many comments has left me with a weird taste ... so here I am, joining the club ..

Have you written a paper or sth about this ??
or u plan to make a documentary ?
 
btw,
but for this one , i ve generally enjoyed reading ur posts quite a lot.
 
@ Amul
I'll take you up on that someday. And I look forward to that day.

@ Priyanka
Regarding a paper/documentary, not yet. But I wouldn't mind giving it a shot. And I'm surprised. People's opinions, mine included, are generally the other way round.
 
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