Tut tut,
click click, tut tut tut, click, click, click...
That was me typing
furiously all this week looking up recipes involving apples. After making a few pitchers of fresh apple
juice, a pot of apple rasam and a bottle of spicy apple pickle, I ran out of
ideas but sadly, not apples.
Around this
time every year, most Indian homes experience an avalanche of fruits. It’s Navarathri season which roughly
translates to fun, comradery and an unholy amount of fruits for most people. It
is the season when Indian women systematically empty the local stores of all
produce and buy fruits by the truckloads.
Interestingly, they will not eat a single fruit from that purchase. Say,
a woman buys 100 apples. She will
distribute all of it to her friends who visit her golu giving the illusion of
an empty fruit basket.
Forgive me
for this quick detour. I have only recently
started to appreciate how math is interwoven in our everyday lives so here is a
brain-teaser for you. If I bought 100 fruits and distributed 2 fruits per
person, how many friends visited my golu? It is such a rush of power to know I can make
my own word problems. 😊
Getting back
to the fruit distribution conundrum, now that the woman had given away all her
fruits, where do you think she was headed next?
To her friends’ homes, naturally.
It was her turn to receive fruits now so she would patiently haul her
collection bag, visit every golu house in town and get her share. Odd? Yes, but also totally fair.
This is my
story every Navarathri season too. At
the end of Saraswathi pooja last week, I was back to being in possession of
over 100 fruits. If you think, this is
the sum of all my problems (oh wow Meena) you have never been a performing arts
teacher on Vijayadasami day.
I love
Vijayadasami. It is the one day when my
students lose the strained, constipated smiles and seem genuinely happy to see
me. I get warm smiles and cozy hugs generously
that day. To me, it is the best gift
ever but the parents of my students are not so easily impressed. They are convinced that nothing short of
multiple bags of apples, oranges, bananas, pears and clementine will convey
their love effectively to me. While I truly
appreciate the sentiment, I do wish they will take pity on me and throttle back
their love just a bit.
When my
doctor advised me to include fiber in my diet last year, I don’t think she
meant this much. Any more fiber and I will have the shiniest colon this side of
the States.
Last night,
I dreamed that I was being held hostage by a giant red apple who was holding a
banana to my head. An orange was shoving a clementine down my throat. I was so glad to wake up from the nightmare
right at that moment. It was scary
stuff.
After
consuming apples in all possible forms for a few days, I did what any teacher
worth her salt would do. I threatened my
students with extra homework unless they each took a bag of fruits home. A little harsh may be but hey, it
worked. The mountain has now shriveled down
to a manageable mound. Hallelujah!
6 comments:
Haha, truly understand the situation. I experienced this during Varalakshmi nombu vehtala paaku. Recently during a navaratri invite a friend put a note,saying, please don't bring any fruits or nuts or gifts.
Btw you can make apple kheer too :)
Apple rasam sounds interesting too !!!
"Shiny colon"- I am laughing out loud.
Glad you enjoyed reading this Jeyamma. Will look up the apple kheer recipe in your cooking blog soon. Might help the remaining mound disappear eventually. :-)
Ha ha...
Like gift registry, you should publish what you want.
1. Ulundu vadai - 2 dozen
2. Thayir Vadai - no limits
3. masala vadai - x dozen
what do you say?
I was searching for apple recipes too when I chanced upon your post ..ROTFL.
Good one Meena!
@Nagu - I say amen to that Nagu. :-)
@ Prashanthi - Thanks Prashanthi. Came across any interesting apple recipes?
LOL ROTFL... Sounds so familiar!
Though I'm not as blessed with Golu families - so I have the last zero removed,
which makes it a lot manageable!!
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