Parsi corner shops

Mar 13 2016 : The Times of India (Mumbai)

 

Parsi corner shops give city its quick fix of dhansak, kebabs & lagan nu custard

 

 

If you have a sudden craving for Parsi cuisine, don’t wait for your pal Khushru to wed Perin at Colaba agiary. Just order some dhansak and kebabs to your Fort office or step off Nana Chowk’s circuitous skywalk and dig in to some lagan nu custard at Belgaum Ghee Depot. The city is dotted with Parsi food stands that sell and deliver a host of community snacks and packed meals.Nergish Sunavala rounds up these hole-in-the-wall eateries.

 

Pervez Hall | DADAR PARSI COLONY

Established by the Tarapore family in 1947 and named after Pervez, a young relative who died of typhoid, this charitable institute hosted typing classes before morphing into a community eatery , employing poor Parsis, in the 1960s. Today , it is famous for its chicken na farcha with pulpy fries, patrel (Parsi alu vadi) and vasanu, a winter specialty that resembles a spicy, gritty fudge.

A portrait of Pervez as a solemn eight-year-old in a floral frock, hangs near the ceiling. She’s watched generations of colony residents wolf down frilly meat cutlets and badam pak made from pure ghee. On auspicious occasions, the staff cooks all night to meet the demand for their crusty , deep-fried daar ni poris. This item is so popular that one trustee proposed naming the institute’s website “http:www.daarnipori.com“.

 

Belgaum Ghee Depot | NANA CHOWK

In 1943, Farrokh Workingbox walla’s grandfather set up a depot to sell pure ghee from Belgaum. By 1987, it was converted into a utilitarian eatery selling snacks and confectionaries to the neighbourhood’s Parsis. But the name stuck. Today , traditional Parsi fare like titori, a legume dish, and maledo, an almond-cashew wheat pudding, rub shoulders with chicken tikka and puri bhaji. Among Parsis, it’s customary to throw an egg atop any vegetable and at the depot, customers can choose from egg on potato, tomato or methi.

 

Roshni Food Point | FORT

Around lunch-time, high court lawyers and judges make a beeline for this hole-in-the-wall eatery off D N Road, famous for its chicken mayo sandwiches and mutton dhansak. It was used to store sandalwood around 235 years ago until in 1947, Viraf Katgara’s father converted it into an electrical store. Its current red-and-white avatar dates back 20 years to when Katgara decided to put family recipes for kid gosh, which is mutton in a white gravy , to good use.

 

Parsi Amelioration Committee | NANA CHOWK

This nearly 75-year-old institution serves all the usual fare, including mutton kebabs, bhakras and sweet Parsi pancakes or chapats. Established to help poor Parsi women, today all the cooks are non-Parsis. Some of its specialty items include ghari khamun, a coconut pie, and kumas, a Parsi cake. Lassie, a stray dog, has adopted the eatery and judging from her girth, she seems to enjoy their food.

 

Café 792 | DADAR PARSI COLONY

Started by three friends in 2014, this eatery, located in a revamped outhouse, is frequented by youngsters who lounge on the porch snacking on mutton botis. Public demand forced the owners to also serve Parsi lunches like chicken ras chawal and prawn saas (prawns cooked a tangy sauce) with khichri. Last year, during wedding season, caterer Tanaz Godiwalla came on board and the café stocked select items like her celebrated pulav daar and saas ni machhi. Proprietress Jehan Nargolwala says, “No community gives as much importance to food as the Parsis.“

 

imggallery

 

Source : http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Article.aspx?eid=31804&articlexml=Parsi-corner-shops-give-city-its-quick-fix-13032016010029#

 

2 comments

  • Very Nice of you to give a list of food points. I want to post this item on Facebook on my time line so my friends can view the same. Please help

  • Kashmira A. Rao

    We can add “Grub Corner” at Flora Fountain run by a Parsee, Kersi Gazdar. The items served are always fresh. It is a favourite joint of the lawyers from the High Court and the City Civil Court nearby.

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