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"People here in Mumbai don’t know much about North-east cuisine, let alone explaining to them that each state has a diverse culinary history. I used to be taken aback when people would ask me if momos were a staple for us,” says Gitika Saikia, who quit her marketing job to become a home chef.
Saikia hails from Assam and is based in Mumbai. She holds many pop-up dinners and lunches introducing the foodies of Mumbai to the regional varieties of the North-east.
Saikia insists that her food can’t be clubbed as “North-east food”. Each state has its own style and it will take more books than one to explain the complexities of food from each state. When one goes for a North-east pop-up, she suggests, one should be open about the facts... like that most of the dishes would have less oil and not a lot of masala.
Saikia was so passionate about popularising the cuisine that back in 2014 she quit her regular marketing job and decided to take her hobby to the next level. During her early days, she started off by marketing bamboo and pork pickles, and later moved into supplying full-fledged meals.
With the help of a friend, she has even held a pop-up in New York, which was attended by a completely non-Indian crowd. "People liked the food and still write to me about holding more pop-ups there."
In her later pop-ups, Saikia started introducing more "exotic" vegetables and meat, that were unique for the palate and "would require getting used to". She says, "Some people might have un-followed me on social media but I don’t care. This is a part of my growing up and I don’t want to shy away from it.”
She now divides the culinary fare of her pop-ups between "mainland" and "tribal” cooking. She feels, “mainland” North-east is more acceptable to people in Mumbai where she prepares dishes such as khar (indigenous soda or alkali), and dhekiya (fiddlehead fern) cooked with guti aloo (small potatoes) and pork. "Tribal cooking has less oil, less masalas and different kinds of meat, if people are skeptical then they can skip it."
Saikia travels to various parts of the North-east and tries to pick up as much as she can from every state.
Even in today’s day and age, when everything is available by booking online or by going to a fancy department store, Saikia prefers to get all her meat and vegetables from Assam. "My mother-in-law is a great cook, she excels in indigenous cooking. Can you imagine; she sends me smoked pork via Blue Dart! I have to bear the cost of it. But that’s okay because everything I am using is fresh and from our farms and kitchen garden back home. When I cook pork with black sesame, the pork and the black sesame are both from Assam."
Saikia, who harbors a dream of owning her own café, wants to have customised meals every day in her menu so she could do justice to the diversity that exists in North-east cuisine. "It will be a big challenge but one can always try."
(Sanskrita Bharadwaj is a freelance journalist based in Guwahati. This is a personal blog and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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