Curry… cooked in a hurry

Posted on July 10, 2008
Filed Under >Owais Mughal, Food, Humor, Society
28 Comments
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Owais Mughal

Our home in Karachi had a cricket ground next to it. Being a ‘puraana chaawal’ (seasoned rice) of the area, I became manager of this ground in early 90s. My duties included assigning the cricket ground to different local teams as well as arranging a match or two on special occasions.

Once I arranged a match for a neighborhood team but the local players didn’t show up on time. After doing a typical eleventh hour calling and rounding-up of players, I was able to field a ‘pakaR dhakaR XI’ (rounded-up XI). It was a very colorful team in a sense that eleven players spoke at least five different languages and yet understood each other very well.

At lunch break all the players gathered around me and demanded lunch. Some claimed that I owe them a lunch because they have done me a favor by coming to play to Federal-B-Area from far flung areas of the city such as North Nazimabad. Those familiar with Karachi geography may know that North Nazimabad is located right next to Federal-B-Area. Only a 30-feet wide drainage stream called ‘Gujjar Nala’ separates the two localities.

Being outnumbered 1 to 13, I gave in to their demands. I was still a student so did not have money to buy 13 people any kind of lunch. Not even the cheap ‘bun-kababs’. So I walked inside home to see what was ready for lunch. I saw cooked ‘aaloo-shorba’ (Potatoes with curry) on top of stove. It was of course not enough for 14 people. Since necessity is the mother of invention therefore I took a huge bowl out of closet and poured some curry in it. A quantity, that was just enough for probably 4 people.

Then I filled up a jug with water and mixed it in the curry. Curry’s volume now increased by a gallon and its density decreased to a state of matter called ‘Bose-Einstein Condensate.’ See to the left below.

Cooking on a budget or with limited ingredients encourages creativity, and sometimes the simplest adjustments can lead to the most satisfying meals. Sharing a meal, even one made under pressure, creates a sense of togetherness that goes beyond the food itself.

Cooking becomes more approachable when you realize that a few basic ingredients and a handful of spices can create something memorable. Cooking isn’t just about feeding people; it’s about creating moments of comfort and connection, one meal at a time.

I then sent our 12th man to the nearby ‘Gharib-Nawaz tandoor’ (Poor people’s clay Oven) to get a few naan (flat round bread). 12th man was an aspiring young cricketer and in an aspiration to debut from our team, he happily went to get the ‘naan’. Our team management used 12th man not only for on-ground services but off-ground services too. Long story short; when bread came; 14 people ate my specially prepared ‘pani-shorba’ (water-curry) without any complaint. I do however remember some of the remarks made at the occasion. They were a pure delight to hear such as this famous one coming right out of Urdu literature:

‘kiya piddee aur kiya piddee ka shorba’
(What little bird and its little curry)

Then there was a remark given in a complete state of denial and astonishment:

‘ye kis cheez ki yakhni hai bhai?
(What is this soup made of?)

Note: In an ideal world of culinary delights, a curry is supposed to be thicker than a soup.

Another:

ye tou shorbay kay shorbay kaa shorbaa hai
(
This is an extract of an extract of an extract of a curry)

And yet another was when somebody called this curry in Punjabi as lamma shora (tall curry).

The voices of dissent soon died down as getting free food was an incentive enough to shut up and eat whatever was available. To this day, whenever I remember this indigenous recipe’ of mine, it makes me smile. Conclusion is that curry is such a form of food which can be diluted as needed and can be fed to a varied number of people ranging anywhere from 1 person to many (or any).

For the welfare of general public I want to key down the recipe’ of Curry in a hurry:

Recipe’ of Curry in a Hurry

1. Volume of already cooked curry (any kind): 100 ml or as much as one can afford.
2. Count the people available: x (say)
3. Glass of water: One. It doesn’t matter if it is half empty or half full. We’ll fill it up to the brink in a bit.
4. Curry bowl: One and empty
5. Pour 100 ml curry in the empty curry bowl and pour a glass full of water into curry ‘x’ times.
6. ‘ae-lo mazaydaar shorba tayyar hai’ (lo-behold. tasty curry in a hurry; is ready)

The End

28 responses to “Curry… cooked in a hurry”

  1. Owais Mughal says:

    Bilal
    The ground mentioned in this article is alsomulti-purpose. It is used for Eid prayers as well as weddings too. Also you can play other games like hockey, soccer on the same ground where Live cricket is getting played. Everyone shares without much complains. Sometimes more than 1 cricket matches are played side by side in the same ground with their boundaries overlapping eachother, therefore a batsman never knows if a fielder is fielding for you or against you.

    Once I was fielding in such a ground (APWA College Ground) where multiple cricket matches were being played. I was fielding on the boundary line which overlapped with the ‘covers’ position of another match getting played in the same ground. The other match was more interested than our match therefore my attention got diverted to the other match. In the meantime a batsman in our match hit a ball towards me but I was not paying attention. The hit was not a powerful one so the ball got stopped by itself near me. I was still oblivious to what was going on. My team mates started shouting ‘ ball pheNko’. The batsmen saw my inattentiveness and were kind of hesitant whether to run an extra run or not. i finally realized what was going on, got my attention back, looked around for the ball, found it and threw it to the keeper. The batsmen in the meantime had run for an extra run but apparently they decided too late as my throw reached the keeper and a batsman got runout. This was the most hilarious runout I’ve ever done in my life :)

  2. Bilal Zuberi says:

    Since we are talking about the ‘dilution effects’, I remember how I often had to dilute coke 1 liter bottle to a 2-liter serving during cricket matches.

    Speaking of which: nothing better than playing cricket with the hard ball with only one pad and 2 gloves on because our team could only afford a single pair. And ofcourse when one person would get out, everybody would wait until the batsmen exchanged pads…If you have never seen a 4ft 6″ guy running in pads that are made for a 6ft guy, you should try. You will be amazed at hwo the pad hangs on like a diaper on a little kid :).

    Owais: you invoked some great memories of our cricket ground, which also served as the Eid prayer ground, the Qurbani ground, and the Shaadi ground. We tried to extract the maximum benefit out of a small park that had little greenery to speak of, no seats, no slides, and a plant ‘nursery’ on one end manned by a guy who hated the hard ball because it cracked his pots…

  3. ayesha says:

    A very good post indeed! :D

  4. jugnoo says:

    lol. I am impressed the way you managed a “tall curry lunch” for your team mates. it is a nice recipe indeed but for me its useless because i am not living in Pakistan but outside. But still it brings smile to me. You should have written it almost 3 years back. hahahahahaa. very interesting post really

  5. Asma says:

    Lolz … very interesting post :)

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