Flattered by chapathi,
Ajith M S
My mom and I are truly impressions of each other, during my early days I used to think of her as someone who imitates me, later did I realize that this resemblance was not learned but was something that came in, bloodwise.
Among the traits that were passed, the one thing that
we had very much in common was the fact that we both were buyers, we loved
buying which included even the eatables. But we both tanked miserably in
culinary expertise, thankfully we had my dad to fill in there, a man with
heightened sense of cooking.
It was his absence that pushed us into the kitchen instead of the tables, being a Sunday it was ritual for us to cook something special, and my resolute mother decided to do the shopping for lunch leaving me with my long pending assignment work. An hour later she walked in without heavy shopping bags, surprisingly, and to my amazement she came to me and took out a bottle that read ‘sauce-pizza topping’.
As much as I loved the
idea of eating home-made pizza at the same time I was also confused about, the
‘who is going to make it’ question. But with the clock and our tummies ticking
up time, it was imperative for us to proceed with pizza cooking, but like
always my mom was frank about it, “we will make it together since you eat it a
lot”, I was speechless at this, but the hunger inside me prompted a “get back
to the kitchen” movement.
In the kitchen, amidst all the memories of those good savouries that my dad made, we turned to one deity that every single human being on this planet owes to, ‘the google,’ it did not disappoint us, a ‘simple pizza' recipe query, gave us many useful responses.
Aided with the information
I got into the shopping bag for the ingredients, but to my shock I could not
find anything else other than the pizza topping sauce, pizza cheese or the
Mozzarella and few veggies. “where is the pizza base” I asked her, “ it is more
like a roti, I think we can make it here, easily”, it was offending on several
counts for a devout foodie like me but I was famished to silence, after all we
have Indianized every cuisine that we are familiar with from Chinese to
Arabian, I sighed before committing the
treason.
We started off with the ‘roti’ base, we made the dough with the right amount of water, oil and salt much like how the chapathi dough would be made, but we followed my dad’s techniques to make it softer, first is one table spoon of milk and the second is to keep the dough under a wet cloth for half an hour. After all these, we made the chapathis to heat for the right time to prevent drying up, in the mean time we had sautéed onions, capsicum, tomatoes, salt for a minute.
And as google told us, we spread the pizza sauce brought from the shop onto the chapathi while it was getting heated again, we also grated the mozzarella cheese over it followed by the sautéed vegetables, to spice up things we added few chilli flakes from our last week’s pizza delivery, and as cheese lovers we splurged another layer of cheese grated over the vegetables.
After two minutes the canvas gave us a melting
cheesy Indian pizza and the resemblance did not end with its appearance, it
somehow did taste like a pizza except for the crust!
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