Tuesday, 14 April 2020

‘Lion’ A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley




The Incredible Journey Starts Here ....


                                                         



            Five year old Saroo from a remote Indian village, ventured out one night with his big brother  hoping to bring back some food for his family only to fall asleep on a decommissioned train and find himself nearly 2000 kilometres away from home.   Reviewers say this is a book of courage and survival but at five years old it’s very difficult to comprehend.

Saroo, wakes up to find himself on a non-stop train to Calcutta.  A place where he doesn’t speak the language, doesn’t know his surname, doesn’t know the exact name of his hometown and is all alone, hungry and homeless and unable to ask for help.  He miraculously lived on the streets of Calcutta for months, narrowly avoiding people traffickers and drug gangs, whilst hopping on and off trains desperately trying to find his home village. Then, quite by chance, he was found by someone who took pity on him and took him to a police station and luckily, the adoption process began, aided by the infamous Mrs Sood, who was to become his saviour.
Red tape cut and paperwork accelerated, Saroo found himself on an aeroplane bound for Australia. He was to be adopted by the Brierley’s, a couple who chose not to have their own children but to adopt and save a child. Again, unable to speak the language and alone in a strange place he was introduced to his new family but this time he was safe.  After a loving and supportive upbringing littered with outbursts from his adoptive brother, Mantosh, Saroo left home to follow a career in a hotel management. It was during this time he met up with other people from his own culture who persuaded him to look for his birth mother through the newly developed technology of  ‘Google Earth’. For years it consumed him until one night out of sheer frustration he flicked forward along the hundreds of train stations he had investigated to see the water tower that had been imprinted in his mind since he was five. And there where one journey ended, another began. He discovered who he was, where he had lived and all about his long lost family. Now with two families, he was happy and finally at peace.
Saroo, pronounced Sheroo, had been mispronouncing his name all his life, as most children do when they mis-hear names.

The Incognito gang agreed this was a page turner of a book depicting an amazing tale of hardship.  Both uplifting and heartbreaking, the story emphasised the importance of family and roots. It was difficult to assess the quality of the writing because it is a factual true story, but, nevertheless, it was a quick and easy read, whereby the story is more powerful than the writing. An incredible story that will stay with us.

This book is accompanied by a movie which follows the book very well although never in the same amount of detail and imagination as a book delivers. It is also distracted more by Mantosh who was a much tortured soul, but still worth a watch. You cannot help but shed a tear for the cute boy who played Saroo in his early life.

After a three week lockdown and over 10,000 deaths in the UK, Covid 19 has closed all our pubs and restaurants. So again, we are still isolating and sharing at home recipes on-line, longing to have something cooked for us by someone else.

Below is a copy of an Indian street food, sweet treat, Saroo longed for but could never afford. Then at a student gathering in Australia, he bit into a Jalebi which sparked his memory and a longing to find home.

Indian Fried Dough | Jalebi

  • (1)
  •  30 M
  •  55 M
  •  Makes 12 to 15
Special Equipment: Deep-fry or candy or instant-read thermometer

INGREDIENTS

Email Grocery List
  • For the jalebi
  • For the syrup

DIRECTIONS

Make the jalebi
In a large bowl, combine the all-purpose flour, gram flour, if using, yeast, and sugar and mix well. Make a well in the center of the flour mixture. Pour the oil, almost all of the water, and the food coloring, if using, into the well and stir until no lumps remain. The texture should be slightly runny, like pancake batter. (This is also known as “ribbon consistency,” which simply means that when the batter drips from a spoon, it falls like a ribbon onto the batter that remains in the bowl.) If necessary, add a touch more water. Let the batter rest at room temperature for 20 minutes.
Make the syrup
Place all the syrup ingredients in a small saucepan and bring to a gentle boil. Cook until the sugar dissolves and the mixture thickens slightly, 5 to 7 minutes. Reduce the heat to the lowest possible setting to keep the syrup warm while you fry the jalebi. 
Fry the jalebi
Place a wire rack over a baking sheet or grab a brown paper bag and place it on your work surface. Pour enough oil into a skillet or a deep-sided pot to reach a depth of about 1 1/2 inches and heat over medium-high heat. The oil is ready when you drop a tiny amount of batter into the oil and it immediately sizzles and resurfaces without changing color. (If the batter colors straight away, the oil is too hot. For those of you who crave certainty, attach a deep-fry or candy or instant-read thermometer to the side of the pot and heat until the oil registers about 350°F (176°C).)
Pour the rested jalebi batter into a piping bag, a plastic squeeze bottle with a pointed nozzle, or a large resealable plastic bag whose lower corner you snipped off with scissors. (We find a plastic squeeze bottle to offer the most control and ease in creating your jalebi squiggles.)
Squeeze some of the jalebi batter into the oil in a squiggly coiled circle or flowerlike shape approximately 2 inches in diameter. Repeat 2 or 3 times to create just enough jalebi so as not to crowd the pan. Fry the jalebi until they’re the color of golden honey on both sides. Using a slotted spoon or tongs, gently transfer the jalebis to the pan of warm syrup. Let soak, turning at least once or twice, for no more than 2 to 3 minutes. Transfer the jalebis to the wire rack or brown paper bag. Serve immediately or let cool completely and rewarm in a low oven or in the microwave.

Our next read keeps us somewhat local, just down the road in Yorkshire, where Mr Herriot barely needs to leave his own back yard. Join us for entertaining veterinary shenanigans




Next text along will be Tuesday, 5th May 2020, with a review of James Herriot, plus a new read for May and, hopefully, a report of a slowing of this worldwide pandemic which is currently upon us.



Tuesday, 14 April 2020.  


Sunday, 12 April 2020

84 CharingCross Road

Two decades of correspondence between London and New York 



In simplest terms, this book is a collation of letters between the American author Helen Hanff and the staff in a London based (84 Charing Cross Road) second hand bookshop  - “the loveliest old shop straight out of Dickens”. 

With a style which is charming and economical, the correspondence starts in 1949, ends in 1969 and includes sufficient detail to illustrate British life during this period.  It also portrays Hanff as forthright and independent with a passion for English literature and the classics. 

Against the backdrop of a changing Britain  - the sudden death of King George VI in 1952, Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation,  the Beatles and their swooning fans – we become embroiled in the lives of the book shop staff, their families and even their neighbours.

Currently, the UK is under lockdown to control the spread of the Covid19 pandemic and the mainstream media make daily comparisons with the hardships of British life during the 2nd world war.  Hanff shows us that  - so far anyway – our cries of suffering are rather weak.  As we complain about social distancing and having to queue for our groceries, in 1949 the British people faced far greater challenges.  Food was still rationed and entailed an allocation of 2 ounces of meat per family per week and one egg per person per month, there was no sugar, sweets or nylons to buy.  By contrast, as a New Yorker, Hanff was not subject to the same restrictions and greatly endeared herself to the bookshop staff and their families when she generously sent them food parcels of eggs and tinned meat. 

The start of the book is strongest and promises more than is actually delivered because without a plot, there is no middle or end but rather a sense of anticlimax. Nevertheless, the collection transports us to the cosy nostalgia of an old bookshop, in a London lost in the mist of time. The tales of the characters' lives seemed mundane and superficial, but we still experienced  a sense of loss when one of them unexpectedly passed.

Overall, this collection covers a lot of ground in a remarkably few pages and is a quick, easy and worthwhile read. 

For those seeking Hanff’s suggestions for future reading, her demands and purchases included (in her words):

  • John Donne
  • William Blake (not a fan - he swoons too much)
  • Virginia Woolf’s Common Reader
  • The Pilgrims Way
  • Sir Roger de Coverley papers
  • EM Delafield’s Diary of a Provincial Lady
  • Oxford book of English Prose
  • Pepys diary
  • Waltons Lives
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Tristram Shandy
  • Catullus 
  • De Tocqueville’s Journey to America
  • Wind in theWillows
  • Plato
  • Lamb’s essays of Elia
  • The memoirs of the Duke de Saint Simon

Due to the pandemic control measures, we have not been able to give a restaurant review this month.  Instead, we can recommend a recipe for Yorkshire pudding which was sent to Helen Hanff in February 1951.  

A verbatim extract from one letter:
A cup of flour, an egg, half a cup of milk and a good shake of salt into a large bowl and beat together until it is the consistency of thick cream.  Put in the frig for several hours. When you put your roast in the oven, put in an extra pan to heat.  Half an hour before your roast is done, pour a bit of the roast grease into the baking pan, just enough to cover the bottom will do.  The pan must be very hot.  Now pour the pudding in and the roast and pudding will be ready at the same time. 


Completely new to Yorkshire pudding, Hanff wrote that it was “out of this world”.   We have put the recipe to the test and confirm that it is quick, easy and definitely tasty.  

Our next book takes us to India and to Australia.  Why not share our pleasure as we read Lion by Saroo Brierley?