The Wizard of Cooking
For many Indian foodies and educated – and also the somewhat
educated-women of a certain age, today’s papers brought an end to an era –an era
of good, simple, old style cooking , taught to the masses in a language and
idiom almost everyone can understand. It announced the end of the Tarla Dalal
era.
Years before most Indians knew the meaning of the word chef,
and long before chefs started sporting the cylindrical headgear(a part of the
kitchen hygiene drill), Tarla with her lose hair tied into a neat bun, sporting
only a smile to accessorise her saree, she appeared in photographs—generally in
the Femina of the yore. She did two, three even ten to fifteen pages of recipes
when the size of the page was bigger, and the number of photographs much
smaller. People knew her as a great cook.Possibly she taught at a well known
catering institute in Mumbai that was Bombay. Her envelope-sized books on
different styles of cooking and veg and non veg recipes, regional and other
food etc sold more than hot cakes did
those days. And then she moved on to the traditional book format, wrote cook
books for microwave manufacturers, thus moving ahead with technology. She also
constantly reinvented herself. Hugely popular master chef Sanjeev Kapoor may or
may not have been the first to hit Indian tv with food shows, but Tarla was not
far behind. In one show , there she was , playing not the master chef, but the
experienced aunty teaching chefs to
cook. And of course, her website, which also credited many of her young
students, friends and fans for recipes contributed by them.
I will never forget two things about the lady I have
unfortunately never met in person. One
is the fact that many young ladies—daughters of friends—learnt to make the
mango cheesecake, using her recipe. From her web site, they learnt how to make
it without having to take the trouble of sourcing cream cheese –not easily
available in most of India and not
affordable in any case.
The other is the two bound volumes of the cookery pages of
Femina from the late 60s through the 80s—my mother subscribed to the magazine
because of these pages that helped her stay afloat in the very competitive
world of cookery for army wives! The pages are much thumbed, dog eared,
yellowed, brittle and all but falling apart. But when I am not very sure that
any of the zillions of recipes on the net will work for me, I go back to those
pages, with Tarla Dalal smiling at me as she teaches me how to make….the best
Shahi Tukre !
Rest in Peace Tarla Aunty. We love you. Will miss you..
PS: Have downloaded the first picture on the net, simply because this smile was her permanent accessory.

A fitting homage to an icon, immortalised through her recipes and books. You have traced her journey from Femina's pages to her website and if her recipes have retained their flavour over four decades, it is a tribute to her adaptability to changing trends and technology.
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