Namak - Svaad ke Anusaar
Leading a bachelor life is an adventure, especially if you don’t know the amount of salt to be put in the food while cooking. I always feel mesmerized when my mom adds salt with bare hands. Be it the breakfast or lunch, vegetarian or non-vegetarian, small or big occasion, she just takes the salt with her hand or spoon, just takes a look at it and adds. It has worked countless number of times. It’s very rare that she miscalculates it. The same goes with the other ingredients too—spices, chilli powder, seasonings, etc. How she’s able to do it? Only she knows.
A
year and half ago, me and my friends started living in Hyderabad as roommates.
Though we used to buy curries from the curry points, we thought of doing some
experiments in cooking. We started with fried rice. Nobody among us knows
cooking. So, we took the help of Youtube, as everybody does. Lots of channels are
in the air for us to learn cooking. We carefully noted down the amount of
ingredients to be put in and watched the procedure. When we started cooking,
everything seemed fine until we reached a point where we needed to add salt.
But everybody, be it Sanjeev Kapoor (Sanjeev Kapoor’s Khazana) or Kabita
(Kabita’s Kitchen), mentioned the same thing, namak-svaad ke anusar (salt: add
as per your taste). They leave the taste to the whims of the person who does
the cooking. What about the guys like us who only know how to taste salt but
not how much to add? What about the rookies at cooking? They did not show us
any mercy. If we add more, we cannot eat
what we cooked. If we add less, we have to add it again and mix thoroughly
which consumes extra time and effort. After a small round table conference, we
added some amount which turned out to be very less, and somehow managed it later
by repeatedly adding salt for two to three times—an adventure.
For
few days, we watched more videos on more recipes such as upma, poha, chicken,
lemon rice, etc. We used to hate that part of the video when the phrase
‘salt-as per your taste’ cropped up in the recipe. We hated the line ‘namak-svaad
ke anusar.’ We thought that adding salt is a pre-requisite to learn cooking.
But
as the days passed on, with more experiments, we got more experience. Our
courage to add salt as per taste started to improve with time. That phrase did
not haunt us anymore. Maybe, that’s what the chefs’ intention is—get more
experience to add the right amount of salt. Vijay Devarakonda is absolutely
right in saying, ‘cooking is an art form.’ The way we cut vegetables, add them
to the wok, sprinkle the spices and mix the ingredients are all art forms. For
me, adding salt is also an art. It gets better and better as we cook more. Even
though salt is the cheapest of all the ingredients, it gives us the taste and
thus shines bright among them.
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