Saturday, 8 August 2020

The Kitchen

 The kitchen . It was a separate building . It still beats me , as to why was this so ? A small passageway connected it to the rest of the house . This passageway was unroofed , originally . So , during blazing summers , you could be roasted to a crisp by the fiery sun , or drenched to the skin during the relentless monsoons , on your way to and from the kitchen .

Later my grandfather built a roof over it , so it became a hideaway , a passage to culinary delights , and a clean cricket pitch . The cricket pitch ended the day my smashing delivery broke one of my grandmother’s enormous water pitchers .
There were raised platforms , where one could sit and eat , discuss politics or peel and chop cucumbers.
They were strategically placed . One could flee at the sound of my grandfather’s walking stick on the cement .
The kitchen floor was smooth , cool , cement . It was mopped countless times through the day . We sat around the open fire , and ate , laughed , joked and became adults . 

My sister , fresh from her hostel , reed thin , would be plied with mounds of soft, steaming, white rice . The moment my mother turned her back , she quickly distributed her rice amongst us younger siblings . We were three of us . Three fistfuls , and her rice mound would disappear , by the time Maa came back with dal or curry . Surprised , more rice would be piled onto her plate , and we all would be in stitches , rolling on the floor .


My father worked in a far off metropolis . He would come occasionally . So , whatever he said or did , however ridiculous , was considered sacrosanct . Not so in our eyes . We were growing , rebellious teenagers , and looked at everything with curious , unsullied , critical eyes . 


So , when he sliced tomatoes , we would wait with bated breath and true enough , he would either squirt tomato juice onto my grandmother's hitherto unsullied kitchen walls , or send one half tomato rolling down our cricket pitch . 


We would all disappear to burst into giggles , some place else , as we were not allowed to make fun of my father in plain sight . 


Best days were the poori days . When my mother served us with hot mini balloons of delight , crisp , sizzling . To go with heavenly coconut laced chana dal . 

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