Showing posts with label goa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goa. Show all posts

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Chorizos Or Five Centuries Of History?

A few months back I had written about how food travels. This post is about exactly that.
Recently, on my weekly rounds to Haiko, Powai, I was pleasantly surprised and rather overjoyed to see Goan sausages in stock.
Goan sausages or chorizos as they are called, are of Iberian origin, Portuguese, to be precise, and were brought to this part of the world by the Portuguese pirates in the 1500s when they assumed control over the sea-based spice trade routes.
The brutal colonisation of Angola, Mozambique, which was then known as the Portuguese East Africa and Goa (Estado da Índia as the Portuguese called the place) in the 1500s brought about a swift imposition of religion and alien customs in these lands. The natives had to comply or face brute firepower or torture. That explains why Konkani Brahmins adopted Christianity and took to eating pork, which was unusual for Indians then.


And the art of Goan Chorizo making (which has vinegar as a preservative) tells a tale of conquests, wars, explorers, a tale of travels of the barbaric pirates from the Iberian peninsula through Africa into India.
The Chorizo tells us how India has been a melting pot, a sponge that soaks in all influences, a story of how alien cuisines have been adapted by locals with Indian spices, something, that is uniquely "Indian" or "Goan" and that's how, today, it found its way into my plate.
(The Chorizo also travelled into Orient as well - the Portuguese posession of Macau too adapted the Chorizo in its unique way.)
Instead of having the traditional sausage-pao, I had a smorgasbord - sautéed Chorizo with onions, herbed mushrooms, fried egg and toast make for a hearty breakfast. That's a good piece of history on my plate!
Wonder what more secrets do other culinary delights hide?

Monday, February 28, 2011

Votti (ਵੋੱਤੀ), Sotti (ਸੋੱਤੀ), ACL Tears and Getting Fit Again!

After successfully poxing out the pox in August last year, I was again forced to be off everything (I mean that literally too!) in December again.
Towards the end of November, after having done a lot of travelling, I was drained and exhausted and a bit under the weather - just wanted to be off for a weekend at least, to sleep early, wake up late and just laze around. But as some Murphy's Law would have it, it was exactly then that we from office had to travel to Goa over the weekend for an offsite.
The super-lazy me wanted to drop out, but then super-wifey, Neeti, admonished me for my laziness, moralised on what is right and pepped me up. And then, the "right"-side of me woke up and I hurriedly packed to sleep in time for the early morning departure to Goa. Was that feeling that I should not go a premonition (of sorts) of a forthcoming event?
Goa was as lovely as could be. The early morning air was as fresh as it could be, the morning sun was warm and soothing but the icing on the cake was Dabolim Airport which was a spotters' delight - being the tourist high season, Dabolim's tiny remote parking bays were teeming with jets (with exotic liveries) from western Europe and Russia. Just as our Air India Airbus A321 was taxiing in, a Monarch Airlines Boeing 757 was being towed out. The board in the terminal showed an arrival from Yekaterinburg - Екатеринбург, the city infamous for the murders of the Romanovs in 1918, following the Russian Revolution, and that gave me an eeky feeling.
Soon we were on the tree lined road to our resort on Arossim Beach. My memories took me back to May 2006, my first time in Goa, when Neeti and I had a lovely time cycling on the same road.
The first day was pretty enjoyable with a number of fun filled activities and it went off before we thought it was over. The second day went off pretty well until we went into the last activity of the day - dodgeball. I was a bit exhausted after the whole day in the sun and felt like dropping out, but the rational side of me forced me to play. On one occasion, when I was inside the circle, I stumbled over a colleague as I attempted to avoid the ball which was coming towards me. And I fell on my right side, twisting my lower leg. But I got up and within seconds, I was back in the game, only to get out after a few minutes.
The evening passed by, and we went to a beachside shack for a party. I never realised anything was amiss until the next morning, when I was unable to move my leg - the knee was swollen. Somehow, after mustering all energy I managed to get ready to return back to Bombay. Getting on to the flight on the ladder was a task - it took me a full 5 minutes, but I was aided by my helpful colleagues, Suyez, Pankaj, Nilesh, Deepak, Rajnish and few others. On reaching home, my personal physician, Neeti, took charge of me - my knee was liberally coated with Volini and I was padded up with tight crepe bandage. We were convinced it was a minor sprain, which would heal up by morning. And then we called it a day!
The next day, a Monday morning, the situation had worsened, the pain was as intense as ever, and I was not in a position to move. And my in-house physician decided it was beyond her, so our ever helpful physician, Dr. Ullal was called. He suggested an immediate MRI scan of the knee, before we met him in his clinic. And we quickly rushed for scan. The scan began - I was strapped on the couch, which then moved in, into the tube and a series of jarring, creepy noises started. In all, it felt as though I was being abducted by an alien spaceship!
The results showed a tear in the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), a critical ligament for stability of gait. On reviewing the report, Dr. Ullal classified this as a sports injury. In all the physical pain, that was a source of jest for Neeti and me - "How the hell can a lazybone like Rajeev get a sports injury?"
Dr. Ullal referred me to Dr. Dinshaw Pardiwala, a sports injury specialist, at the Kokilaben Dhirubhai Hospital and also was kind enough to speak to an administrative person at the hospital to facilitate an early appointment, as Dr. Pardiwala's appointments runs into a waitlist of upto a fortnight! Dr. Pardiwala recommended conservative treatment - no surgery, which relieved me. Immediately my leg was immobilised in a full-knee brace, with minimum movement, that too with a walking stick, which I never imagined I would ever use, at least before the twilight years set in.
Meanwhile, Neeti's Mom figured out that her ex-student, Dr. Jashan Vishwanath, was also an orthopaedic surgeon at Jaslok Hospital and suggested we meet him as well. That was quite useful as he reaffirmed that we were on the right track, but also suggested immediate physiotherapy to prevent muscles from wasting away, which was a distinct possibility.
My immobility made me quite a kid, and Neeti played parent to perfection - dressing me up, getting the shoes on, getting me food and all that was required. I remember the day I rejoined office two weeks after the accident, Neeti came with me downstairs to the car, just as a parent would go to see off a kid to the school bus!!!!
Then my folks came visiting. My Dad insisted on massaging the injured area himself, while Mom ensured an endless supply of great food to elevate my spirits!
In a few days, as recommended by the two doctors, my physiotherapy started - that helped to get the strength back in the limbs. My physiotherapy started under Heath Matthews and his team. Heath had treated quite a few Indian sports-persons and is a renowned name in that field. During the first session I had with him, he mentioned that Sania Mirza had a similar injury in 2007, but had recovered with conservative treatment, and went to achieve some success. That reassured me and also was another source of jest as Neeti often jocularly said that I was in the same league as Sania Mirza!!!!
Slowly and gradually, but convincingly, as the physiotherapy sessions by Heath and Shraddha progressed I limped back to normal. I gradually increased my time in office, started moving around at home and even went for a short vacation to Kodagu, which was covered in my photo-blog earlier, alongwith my folks, though Neeti's folks could not make it. There too we had our share of fun. The photographs that had Neeti, me and my stick were called votti (ਵੋੱਤੀ) and sotti (ਸੋੱਤੀ) photographs -- what a rhyming caption! The word, votti, means wife in Punjabi and sotti, stick!!! That became a joke in the family!!!
As my phsyiotherapy became intense, I was require to spend at least an hour in the gym. And then the next thing that started off in the family, initiated by who else but Neeti, that this was the only way to get lazybones of mine to exercise, a wake-up call! True, it was after nearly 3 years, and a few kilos of weight gain that I was getting back to serious exercising.
Religiously, I started going to the gym early in the morning, after a round of persistent persuasion by by my votti! And I have been doing the rounds of the gym regularly, with a few exceptions (yes, these were exceptions!). I did find that the seriousness was missing in most of the people visiting the gym. Most seemed to be there just to gossip, some to flirt with the supposedly, hot chicks, while the gym instructors would enjoy all the attention they got from the females. Some would spend just two minutes exercising, the next five minutes wiping off the sweat, and then gossiping around for the five minutes before getting back to the next round! Is that exercise? Perhaps, flirting and gossiping does burn a lot of calories, for some, at least.
My rounds to the gym, after intense persuasion by Neeti, and through weekly interventions by Heath and Shraddha, I have regained almost full functionality of my knee and all should be well in the next few months.
In a sense, my ACL injury was indeed a wakeup call - to eat right, sleep right and exercise right! I only pray that I have the strength to continue with my exercise regimen.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Things to Do, Before I Die....

There are things that I want to do, to complete in this lifetime, so when I kick the bucket, I have no regrets. This list has a bit of everything, from all aspects of life. Some of these, I feel, are worth dying for....

Here goes....



  1. Drive from Bombay to Goa, along the Ghats, and spend a week in Goa - a guided tour conducted by my in-house 'Goan' guide, Neeti


  2. Meet Mr. Ratan Tata in person. Thank him for all that his Group has given us

  3. Join Anthony Bourdain for a culinary tour across India


  4. Open a French - Mediterranean cuisine restaurant by the waterfront - the USP would be that guests would get an opportunity to play Chef for their meals...


  5. Visit the Golden Temple, be there from dawn to dusk, engaging in sewa


  6. Drive from Delhi to Ladakh, and have my music CD collection playing in the car




  7. Meet Tom Hanks and Morgan Freeman in person


  8. Take parents back to Kampala and Mwinilunga for a visit. Also show Neeti where I came from


  9. Spend a week in an Israeli kibbutz, a fun filled week of work....


  10. Laze in a hammock on the slopes besides the Nakuchiataal lake in Nainital, with my favourite book


  11. Publish a compilation of my poems


  12. Hike along the Black River Gorge in Mauritius


  13. Learn French, bon jour


  14. Have a greasy porky breakfast of bacon, ham, sausages, without having the guilt of cholesterol




  15. Do a Serengeti safari


  16. Do island hopping by boat through the emerald atolls of Palau


  17. Dance and sing in the rain - perhaps somewhat like Shahid in Jab We Met, I wonder?


  18. Go on a Victoria trail - Lake Victoria followed by Victoria Falls


  19. Do a road trip across the cradle of Aryan civilisation from Turkey into Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan - rolling green hills, blue streams and an unspoilt environment


  20. See Tibet free again - visit Lhasa's Potala Palace




  21. Open a small farm growing organic herbs and vegetables and raising animals for milk and meat


  22. Fly in the cockpit of a Boeing 747


  23. Travel in an Ilyushin IL76 - I am in awe of this amazing beast after I saw this aircraft at Jamnagar airport


  24. Visit the Sunderbans for tiger spotting, before they vanish


  25. Feed the elegant beast, the elephant


  26. Visit the Sun Temple


  27. Meet all the people, family, friends and colleagues, who have helped shape me, all at one place for a big bash


  28. Donate my organs


  29. Learn wine making


  30. Trek in the Valley of Flowers in Uttarakhand


  31. Gorge on the Nawabi delights of Lucknow, chaats of Delhi, Vada-Pavs of Bombay (in the rain)!


  32. Observe life as it goes on in the backwaters of Kerala...

But for now, I am enjoying the rain, with nice music playing.....

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