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Nostalgia isn't what it used to be

Delhi Lights, Shades, Shadows

Last weekend, I was driving out from home and saw my friendly neighborhood dogs getting under the cars parked on the street. This was a sure sign that spring had arrived. The weather in Delhi gradually changes in February and March from the chilly winters to pleasantly warm. Eventually, these change into the searing hot days of summer.

There was a time in 80's and early 90's when one could drive through the city and feel a certain laziness in the air that came about because of the weather. Last weekend, I felt the same, except that the city had grown much bigger than anyone could have imagined, CNG had dropped the air pollution levels, cellphones are ubiquitous and a myriad other advancements have happened.

As my friend Sriram Rajamani says, Nostalgia isnt what it used to be.

February 16, 2006 in Delhi | Permalink | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)

Good Book Shops

Brij asked me about some good book shops in and around Delhi. As an avid reader I go around and buy books from anywhere and everywhere... whether its Amazon or an airport book shop or a book shop in a mall or in Chandni Chowk.. here is my list of regular hangouts in no particular order

Galgotia's in B-Block Connaught place is a good source of all kind of books (computer, business, travel etc)

For technical (especially computer books) BPB Pulbications in Connaught Place and Jawahar Book Depot in Ber Sarai (JAWAHAR BOOK CENTRE DDA Shopping Complex, Ber Sarai, Opp. J.N.U., New Delhi Phones: 26528601, 26564337) are very good.

Jain Book Depot further ahead in Connaught Place is the definitive source for law, property and accounting related subjects.

There is Variety Book Depot (AVG Bhawan,. M-3 Connaught Circus) close to the Outer Nirurla's in Connaught Place which also has lots of books on cooking, travel, coffee table books etc.

Of course, nothing beats Nai Sarak in Old Delhi! The whole street is lined with bookshops on either side.

Faqir Chand & sons in Khan market is another upmarket bookshop.

Here is a list

Aparna Bhandar
16, Netaji Subhash Marg,
Daryaganj
Atma Ram & Sons
Kashmere Gate
Book Centre
69,Yashwant Place Shopping Complex,
Chanakyapuri
Book World
7, Palika Bazar
Jain Book Agency
C-9, Connaught Place
Delhi Book Co.
M-12, Connaught Place
E.D. Galgotia & Sons
17-B, Connaught Place
The Book Shop
Regal Building, (Parliament Street),
Connaught Place
The Bookworm
29 B, Connaught Place
The English Book Store
L-7, Connaught Place
The New Book Depot
18 B, Connaught Place
BPB Publications
B-Clock, Connaught Place
Twentieth Century Publications:
N-1, BMC House,
Connaught Place
Fact & Fiction
39, Basant Lok,
Vasant Vihar
Friends News Agency
Community Centre,
Friends Colony
Mascot’s Book Shop
6, Sunder Nagar Market
Midland Book Shop
20, Aurobindo Place Market
Janata Book Depot
Aurobindo Place Market
The Empire Book Depot
Janpath
New Book Land
Janpath
Paramount Book Store
88, Janpath
Lakshmi Book Store
18, Indian Oil Building,
Janpath
Famous Book Store
25, Indian Oil Building,
Janpath
Cross Word
At Ebony D-4,
South Extension-II
Sehgal Bros. Bookshop
E-78, South Extn. Market, Part-I
Teksons Bookshop
South Extn. Market, Part-I
Oxford Book & Stationery Co.
Scindia House
St. Paul International Book Centre
H-30, Connaught Circus
Amrit Book Co.
N-Block, Opp. Escorts (Outer Circle)
Connaught Circus
Bahri Sons
Khan Market
Faqir Chand & Sons
15-A, Khan Market
Tharia Ram & Sons
24 B, Khan Market
The Book Shop
14-A, Khan Market,
& 13/7, Jor Bagh Market
Times Book Gallery
25-A, Khan Market
Timeless The Art Book Studio
46 Housing Society, South Extension, Part I.

January 25, 2006 in Books, Delhi | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

January 17, 2006 in Delhi, India | Permalink | Comments (0)

January 10, 2006 in Delhi | Permalink | Comments (0)

Bunny and Chow

I like trying out different cuisines once in a while and this time, I had the pleasure of eating at Bunny and Chow, courtesy Swetank and Heidi who were visiting us from US. Bunny and Chow is located at the Food Court at DLF CyberGreens in Gurgaon.

Bunny and Chow started in Africa, where an innovative entrepreneur realized that white men who were not allowed to visit the restaurants of non-whites could be served food on a platter by putting curry inside a shell made from flour buns. Interesting lesson to be learnt for anyone. Dont let limitations stand in your way. Find innovative solutions around them.

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From the web...

http://www.congocookbook.com/c0192.html

It's not food for rabbits. It's not made from rabbits. Bunny Chow is the result of an only-in-South-Africa combination of Asian curry, European bread, and South African apartheid.

What you need

  • unsliced loaf of white bread (the kind used for making sandwiches or toast, baked in a standard 8 ½ x 4 ½-inch (22 x 12 cm) loaf pan [one loaf for every two servings]
  • curry of your choice

What you do

  • Cut the bread into two halves, by cutting halfway between the ends of the loaf. Put each half on its end, pressing down a bit to make it stand upright. From the top of each half (where you made the cut that divided the loaf into halves) scoop or cut out the soft middle of each half and set it aside. Fill each half with curry. Put onto a bowl or plate (if desired) with the soft bread that was scooped out.
  • Serve immediately. Use the scooped-out bread to sop up the curry. Then eat the remaining curry with the bread it was served in. Use a spoon if needed.

Enslaved Asians from Indonesia and Malaysia were brought to South Africa soon after the first Europeans arrived. Later, servants and workers from India arrived. And more than any other African country, South Africa was the destination of European migrants, who grew European grain and made European bread. Malay and Indian influences became a fixture of South African cuisine, and by the early 1900's curry restaurants were found in every South African city. An inexpensive meal was a bowl of curry served with a few slices of bread. Over time, apartheid laws were tightened to enforce strict segregation of black, colored (Malay, Indian), and white people, and many restaurants were not allowed to seat black patrons. They could sell take-away (carry-out) food to anyone, but this was before disposable plates and bowls. An enterprising restaurateur in Durban hit upon the solution: put the curry inside the bread -- the bread doing for the curry what the cone does for the ice cream. Somehow this "bread bowl" of curry came to be called bunny chow. (Why? Putting curry into half a loaf of bread hardly makes it look any more like a rabbit than it did before it contained the curry. Or is it that half a loaf of bread looks like a bun?) Bunny chow became a tradition in South African take-away food. And though the apartheid era is over it is still a popular item, especially in Durban.

December 24, 2005 in Delhi, Food and Drink | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

September 30, 2005 in Delhi, India | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 26, 2005 in Delhi, India | Permalink | Comments (0)

September 26, 2005 in Delhi, India | Permalink | Comments (0)