This past sunday I got chance to buy halwa puri breakfast for the family. My brother and I drove to a halwa puri vendor near Aisha Manzil in Federal-B-Area. It is called Dhamthal sweets Bakers and Nimko. Time was around noon and I was surprised to find a long queue of people waiting to buy breakfast. When we left home I thought we’ll have hard time finding breakfast, but seeing the crowd it seemed like whole city now eats breakfast fashionably late.
Dhamthal sweets had set up breakfast tables on a covered side walk. On one table a whole cricket team was sitting and enjoying greasy puris with boistering talk of cricket heroics. At another table a whole extended family was sharing family gossips over niwalas of sweet halwa.
Customer cars were double parked on the main road interjected with motorcycles between them. Amidst all this hustle bustle a queue of take away customers was waving around the sidewalk like a snake. This queue was atleast twenty five people long and I was standing at position 25.
Look at the photo below which I took on the occasion and it shows the scene that I described above.
People were hungry but still full of manners. I had to ask the person infront of me to move aside a bit so when I asked him:
bhai saheb zara hatiyay ga
he replied polietly:
aaiye saheb aaiye
I was impressed but my impression was quite short lived as very soon I heard a middle aged lady shouting at the management. She was complaining that whole queue comprised of men and the Dhamthal management didn’t make adequate arrangements for women customers. Many people in the queue agreed with her and the matter was escalated to the manager-on-duty who was feeling very important in this escalation.
While all this action was going on the queue kept moving quite fast. Within five minutes I had advanced to position number ten. At this time I saw another matter which surprised and un-surprised me at the same time. A guy wearing police uniform and accompanied with a Dhamthal employee, bypassed the whole queue and went directly to the distribution point where the escorting employee told the cashier:
ye police ka aadmi hai – is ko pehle do
I was surprised that such blatant disregard of common social etiquettes by police was still going on – but then a part of me was not surprised at all.
Within few more minutes I reached the top of the queue, paid money to the cashier and another guy started filling our breakfast in a brown bag. The line behind me was still 25 or so people long.
As I was paying for the breakfast, a person just walked to the cashier and demanded that he be served breakfast right then. He had come up prepared with some excuse on why he could not wait in the long queue but the cashier was not buying it. A heated argument ensued with lots of arms and hand gestures. Finally the customer walked off without buying any thing.
While all this was going on the lady who had earlier escalated her complaints to the manager was still arguing. The manager who had earlier felt important now looked quite bored and was scratching his face with one hand and his head with the other. He was trying to find a way out. At this instance I remember one sentence of the complainig lady which went like this:
ab mein line mein khaRa karne ke liye mard kahaaN se laaoN. kia mard market mein milte haiN?
Quite a few people were on her side by now and I saw many people moving their heads up and down in agreement with her.
Finally the manager reached a deal by shouting to his staff:
oye yaar, is amma ko hamesha pehlay naashta dia karo
This solution seemed to pacify everyone including the lady and after that it was business as usual.
The photo below shows the price list of other things for sale at Dhamthal sweets Bakers and Nimko. I wonder why the word ‘Pak’ is added to all the eateries?
We brought the breakfast home. By then the time was well past noon and I thought it was time well spent. The 30 minutes experience of buying breakfast was a live course on human anthropology and behaviors of Pakistani society.
The breakfast itself proved to be a good buy. There were ‘puris’ in it as well as two different curries made from chick peas and potatoes (tarkaari). There were some pickles to go with the curries and above all there was a very tasty halwa (sweet dessert). After eating this heavy duty meal nobody in our family was ready to have another meal for several hours.
I thoroughly enjoyed my experience of buying and eating halwa puri from a local vendor after several years.
Photo Credits: Title photo by Ejaz Khan
Brilliant article again….tasty & mouth watering one too!!!Probably timed to perfection..its sunday again!I am forunate enough to have tried Dhamthal sweets Baker’s tasty hulwa puri and went through pretty much the same circumstances.I have always been a huge huge fan of sweets and specially halwa puri….oh yes..halwa puri rocks!I’m lost some where in the memmory lane,bringing back all those sweet memories.Back in lahore,i remember after i was done with my high school exams and i was free,we friends used to go to JALLO park every sunday for early morning tape ball cricket matches.Jallo was about 20 miles from where we lived and we had to reach there by 7 AM by all means.One of our fantisies on our way going there was to have HALWA PURI…yah..and that too at around 6 in the morning.Interestingly we never went to the same shop twice,so we travelled to most of the famous sweet shops in Lahore.Lahore was always open to serve us mind blowing,freshly made puris straight from ‘karahi’ with yummy halwa and curry(I love halwa).Those 2-3 months are some thing i can never forget,simply out of this world.Although playing hardcore tape ball cricket matches stuffed with halwa puri sounds insane but i guess that halwa puri kept our energies and spirits high all through the thrilling cricket till afternoon.
Sridhar, thanks for the details on the word ‘pak’ as used in sweets. This is very informative for me.
Owais,
Very interesting article. Reminds me for some reason of the festival called “Kanchak” (celebrated in North India) when neighborhood children are invited home and fed Halwa-Puri-Chana and given money. It was a great feeling to be fed delicious food (by multiple neighbors) and get money for that!
Another fact you might find interesting. You ask why the sweets have the word “Pak” at the end. It comes from the Tamil word “Paagu”, which stands for sugar syrup. Over time, the word has been corrupted to “Pak” and the meaning has altered to mean a sweet of some kind, not just sugar syrup. The word has the same meaning in (or has been adapted into) other south Indian languages – Kannada, Telugu and Malayalam.
One of the most famous sweets from South India is Mysore Pak, made of Besan, Ghee and Sugar (like a Besan Barfi). Another sweet is Doodh Pak, made of milk as the name suggests. In the past, the term “Pak” in names of sweets was used exclusively in the four Southern states of India. It then travelled to Bombay. From there to many other parts of India (though it is still relatively rare in North India). I don’t know how it traveled to Karachi, but am reasonably sure the origins lie in the Tamil word! Perhaps your Halwai traces his origins to South India! Or perhaps he saw the term in his travels and found it interesting, due to the Urdu meaning denoting pureness.
Keep these posts coming! Have a safe trip back from Karachi. Happy New Year!
Sridhar
I hate it when ATP posts such things which make me miss Pakistan more than ever!
Thanks for sharing. Brings back memories of Pakistan from frigid Canada.
It’s Sunday morning here, but the most I can go out for is Coffee and Doughnuts!