Posts tagged "city"

THE CHANGING FACE OF FOOD IN THE INDIAN CITIES

 

Over the past few years, the way we perceive food has changed drastically. Today, family dinner outings aren’t simply about going to a restaurant and ordering your favourite dishes.Technology, evolving lifestyle trends and innovations have revolutionised the A-Z experience of food. From homecooks to molecular gastronomy , Mumbaikars are exploring newer dimensions of the culinary world.Here’s what’s trending…

 

QUIT COOKBOOKS, GO FOR READY-TO-COOK MEAL KITS

Jennifer Aniston’s Rachel in her popular television show Friends once said, “Cooking is easy . Just follow the recipe. If it says boil two cups of salt, then boil two cups of salt.“ Rachels of the world can now breathe easy as cooking for dummies has become simpler with ready-to-cook meal kits that contain pre-portioned ingre dients with simple recipe cards. All one needs to do is follow the instructions and since the boxes come with the right por tions of each ingredient, the risk of get ting it wrong is considerably reduced.

Since most of these meals are put together by professional chefs, the recipes are fool proof and ensure a lip-smacking dish! These are time-saving, healthy and great for working people, who want to cook a quick meal for friends and family .

 

HOMECOOKS ARE IN VOGUE

For a city like Mumbai, homecooks are a natural resort. Their food is preferred by young working professionals who live alone and crave for homely meals as restaurant eating is neither healthy nor feasible on their pockets.Food enthusiasts are now tapping into the idea of homecooks and aggregating them on their platform and then reaching out to people via mobile apps and websites. Most of them curate homechefs -amateur as well as professional cooks. Unlike dabbawallahs, these pocket restaurants serve food that is better packaged, fresher and healthier. They are low on spice and oil and provide more variety .Homecooks also make specific diet food for people of different age groups. Be it proteinheavy meals for those who work out or a balanced plate for people hoping to shed a few extra pounds; one can pick what suits their palate and need. Saurabh Bharadwaj, owner of a homecook start-up says, “We have a bunch of chefs delivering different dishes to us every single day of the week. They submit a collated list of the recipes they will cooking a day before the week begins. We have a tast ing expert on board, who gives us regular feedback on chefs and their cooking. We also have a feedback button on every order that is placed from our app or site. A few years ago, it was all about fast food but now it is more about healthier food and homecooks are definitely growing in number.“

 

FOOD PORN IN THE SMARTPHONE ERA

The digital age has infused a new breath of energy into culinary culture all around the world. Local food bloggers are increasingly using social media apps to reach out to gluttons and gourmands across the city . But what has changed most significantly is the language of these bloggers. Today , food blogs are more pictorial and not verbose, focussing mostly on what is popularly known as food porn. Because of smartphones, we are consumed by the tendency of clicking pictures of food that catch our fancy and instantly post them on social media.Food bloggers do the same -they go from restaurant to restaurant, click tempting pictures of decadent dishes and desserts and post it on their photo-blogging sites. “Food is the best way to leave behind the drudgery of one’s mundane life and the whole idea is to brighten people’s day with good-looking items. Today , there is certain reverence towards food and so we are careful to not post anything negative about any restaurant. We need to make sure that our pictures look nice before we go on to talk about the taste.These social media platforms are giving more importance to the visual appearance of food, over its flavour,“ says food blogger Ronak Rajani.

 

TECH-ING UP REGULAR RECIPES

Want to challenge your taste buds? Nowadays, restaurants in the city are redefining tra ditional recipes using molecu lar gastronomy, one of the most popular culinary trends in the world. Modern food entrepreneurs are combining their fascination for chemical reactions and science with cooking, to form newer tastes and textures. While some five star restaurants have had these `lab kitchens’ for some time, today , more and more eating joints are using cut ting-edge scientific tech niques to serve preparations like pav bhaji fondue, foam gaajar ka halwa, soap cakes, paan candy floss etc. Some are also using liquid nitrogen and dry ice to create items like snow dhoklas, bubbling kulfis and chai ice-creams!

 

OFF-THE-BEATEN-TRACK DINING OPTIONS

Instead of regular restaurants, Mumbaikars are stepping out to eat in alternative venues and spaces to get a taste of carefully-crafted cuisine. On the top of the list are home kitchens where food connoisseurs are dishing out community dining experiences. The Kapadias, a Colaba-based family, opens up their home every weekend to a small set of peo ple and serves them an authentic six course Bohri meal, which includes delica cies like Karamra (dessert made from rice, curd, nuts and pomegranates) and mutton undhiyu (a mixed vegetable dish with meat).Another example is of Juhu-based Gitika Saikia; she serves rare tribal Assamese food in the city. Foodies can get a taste of recipes made from silkworms and red ant eggs! Also hot on heels are food trucks. These mobile eateries that have sprung up all over the city serve a variety of street foods like burritos, kathi rolls, kebab, cupcakes etc., and cater to those people who want to gorge on junk food, but without compromising on the hygiene factor.

 

A MASH-UP OF FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT

An interactive play in the city has actors cooking up a three-course meal and serving it to the members of the audience! Called supper theatre, the idea is to watch a show over food and drink and enhance the level of relaxation.

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Posted by admin - October 14, 2015 at 5:18 pm

Categories: Article   Tags: , , ,

Krakow: Two Tales Of A City

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In the Polish town, it’s hip to be (in the) square. It’s a vantage point to the past and future

Krakow is abound with dark tales of witches, ghosts and vampires

IN EVERY other city in the world you’re running; in Krakow you walk.” Magdalena Drazba, my host in Krakow, knows this first hand. She gave up a high-flying corporate job three years ago to settle here, take it easy and start a homestay. Honestly, though, I didn’t even walk. Most of the time, all I did was sit. In Poland’s second-largest city, the best way to see the people is to find one of its many town squares, pick a spot, and gawk.

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STARTING POINT Wawel Castle is where Krakow’s history really beginsThe Rynek Glowny is Krakow’s (and Europe’s) biggest, and for many the most beautiful town square. At exactly 200m x 200m, it dates back to the 13th century and is laid out in the centre of the city. The Cloth Hall is bang in the middle, the 13th century St Mary’s Basilica (a huge brick church with gothic spires) takes up the north corner, the tower of a former town hall is diagonally opposite and Renaissance and art nouveau buildings line the square. White horse-drawn carriages totter around a perfectly paved, mirror-smooth ground, making for a fairy tale setting. Play out your Cinderella fantasies and linger into the night, especially after all the food and shop carts have packed up business. It looks frozen in time.A little more than two kilometres away is another square, the Plac Bohaterów Getta (Ghetto Heroes square), a stark contrast to the resplendent beauty of the Rynek Glowny. This is the spot where people were gathered before they were forced into concentration camps by the Nazis. By 1943, the square was strewn with furniture, clothes, luggage and other belongings the victims had to abandon. Today, 70 empty bronze chairs occupy the square as a reminder of the Holocaust.

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FEAR FACTOR

Krakow is an old city. And you can see right where it all began. The city dates back to the seventh century and legend has it that the first settlement began on Wawel Hill: the site of the present-day Wawel Castle. Prince Krakus is supposed to have slayed the dragon, Smok Wawelski, and built the castle foundation above its cave.

Today, the castle is the crown jewel among Krakow’s sights. A bronze dragon stands at the gate of the cave, breathing fire via a natural-gas nozzle every three minutes, much to the amusement of children. The Wawel Catherdal itself is a chaotic mixture of gothic, baroque and Renaissance architectural styles. Inside, royal tombs fight for space with those of the saints, while many altars and chapels jut out from the side walls.

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THE DARK SIDE

Krakow has been a trading hub and the seat of Polish royalty. More recently, in 2000, it was named European Capital of Culture. But like most European cities, Krakow abounds with dark tales of witches, ghosts and vampires. Especially vampires.

This is no Twilight world, with glittering, handsome, animal-blood-sucking undead. The Kracovians believed that vampires were ordinary men and women when alive, and harmful only when they rose from the grave. So they’d tie corpses to their coffins or chop off their heads and place it between their legs. Some of these graves are on display at the underground museum in the main square.

If Krakow’s myths and legends let your imagination run wild, Kazimierz should jerk it back to reality. The district came into being in the 14th century, when powerful Krakow Catholics rose against the growing Jewish influence on trade and culture. King Casimir, after whom it was named, was forced to establish a separate city for Jews across river Vistula. It was an expanding, flourishing town in its own right, but was swallowed up by Krakow in 1792.

But while Krakow emerged unscathed from the Nazi blitzkrieg in WWII, Kazimierz wasn’t so fortunate. Most Jews were taken to the death march. The 15,000 who remained, were packed into a ghetto in nearby Podgorze. A wall was built to keep them locked. The Plac Bohaterów Getta at the heart of this ghetto was where Jews were rounded up, sent to concentration camps or executed. A tram and bus line still runs across it while the chairs sit empty, in memorial of the murdered Jews.

Today, while most residential buildings are still dilapidated, they’ve been taken over by artists, writers and students, most of whom cannot afford Krakow’s city centre. The cobbled alleys are now alive with cafes, bars and restaurants, resurrecting the area as a youthful, vibrant party district. Eclectic, colourful decorations adorn the buildings, as if to cover up years of sorrow and neglect.

It’s a bittersweet place; at the crossroads of a poignant history and a promising future. While historic Krakow lends the city its famed, and slightly haughty, beauty, Kazimierz gives it soul.

TRAVEL INFO

There are no direct flights from India to Krakow, most visitors take an express bus service from other Polish cities or fly via another city

The Polish currency is the zloty. One zloty is a little more than ` 16

Info Krakow (the tourist centre) is open daily 9am–7pm

Visit www.en.infokrakow.pl to plan your trip

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Posted by admin - March 22, 2015 at 7:36 am

Categories: Article   Tags: , krakow:, tales

Oberoi International School Oberoi Garden City, Goregaon (East)

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6) Oberoi International School

Oberoi Garden City, Goregaon (East) | Website: www.oberoi-is.org

History: The school was founded in August 2008, as a social initiative of the Oberoi Foundation. Currently, students from 35 nationalities are studying at the school.

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Unique features: The school has clubs for Model United Nations, Habitat for Humanity and Operation Smile. Students also volunteer for Teach for India, Udaan Foundation and Indian Cancer Society. It is a member of East Asia Regional Council of Schools.

“I am very proud of Oberoi International School and its community. It is a very young school and has achieved a lot, in its own right, for its own merit. We are not better or worse than others, we are simply one of a kind.” — Vladimir Kuskovski, principal

Highest ratings for: Infrastructure and facilities, teachers-student relationship, safety, health and hygiene, teachers

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Boards: Class 10-IGCSE, Class 12-IB

Annual fee: Rs. 5,00,000 on an average (except for bus transport and after-school activities)

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Students: 1,450 boys and girls

Student-teacher ratio: 7: 1

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Posted by admin - February 22, 2015 at 3:14 pm

Categories: Mumbai Schools   Tags: , , , , ,