I've been losing track of what food I've posted and what I haven't, so I'm finally going to post this round-up from my time in the north.
I'll start with gazak, the sweet we ate all over the north:
|
Gazak, a sweet made with white sesame seeds -- said to keep one warm in winter. |
On Wednesday, our first day in Chandigarh, we had a delicious lunch in the sun room: |
Daal, roti and delicious chicken. (Pardon the green light -- it's from the sunroof overhead.) |
|
We finished the meal with Bengali sweets, including this chum chum. Yum! (Finally had one, Vivek.) |
Tea that afternoon included snacks, of course: |
Masala mix in front with a plate of biscuits, including sweet pistacio ones, behind. |
That night, we had chaat for dinner! And what the chaat counter it was:
|
Chaat, including panipuri, very light chana, aloo (potato) tikki and tiny potatoes in green chutney. |
|
A close-up of the panipuri. |
|
A close-up of the dahi vada. |
On Thursday in Chandigarh, Vinita-didi made a Kashmiri tea preparation that included slivered almonds:
|
Kashmiri tea warming on the stove. |
On Thursday, we had a special meal for a festival celebrating the arrival of mustard flowers in the fields: |
Yellow rice, sweet rice and pickle with yogurt on the side. |
As we've traveled around the north, we've been munching on delicious dried fruits and nuts.
|
'Dried fruits,' typically with sweet cashews, almonds, walnuts and golden raisins. |
In the course of sightseeing yesterday, we ended up eating dosa at Sahastradhara:
|
Masala dosa with coconut chutney and sambar. I ate mine with fork and spoon, just like Pops. |
Finally, my dessert following the dosa -- this time at Town Table in Dehradun: |
Green tea (a bit of change) and a brownie with ice cream. |
Look for another post on any missing southern foods soon.
Yum! Love, love, LOVE all your posts! *crossing fingers that this comment gets posted*
ReplyDeleteThank you, Devrani! (I also had trouble replying, ha!)
ReplyDelete