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'Food fascism': Critics slam India's beef police

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-36366140
The Indian state that is obsessed with beef fry
By Divya Arya BBC Hindi
  • 18 July 2016
  • From the section India
Image caption The Kerala beef fry is the stuff of legend
Not many people would associate India with beef. Spirituality yes, perhaps even vegetarianism, but certainly not beef.

But then they have probably never been to Kerala, the south Indian state that loves its beef - preferably fried.

The Kerala beef fry is the stuff of legend.

The best sort, I was told, is served at tiny shops by the roadside, so nondescript that you might miss them completely if not for the aroma wafting out.

It is a truly delicious smell with hints of coconut, curry leaves, cinnamon, cloves, coriander powder and roasted chilly.

I visited one such shop, called the Paputty hotel.

This is the 13th article in a BBC series India on a plate, on the diversity and vibrancy of Indian food. Other stories in the series:

The dark history behind India and the UK's favourite drink

Why this Indian state screams for ice cream

The street food that silences even the most heated debate

How home chefs are helping uncover India's food secrets

Amma canteen: Where a meal costs only seven cents

Paputty does not bother with unnecessary items like menus. If you have bothered to come in, it's assumed you want the beef fry.

That's the only thing my hosts, Hari Lal and Ranjeet PA, want to eat, but to humour me they order a lavish spread including beef fry, beef curry, beef roast, as well as the quintessential Kerala bread, "Malabar parantha" and thin rice noodles called "idiyappam".

"When I put beef fry in my mouth, my tongue tells me I am in real heaven now," Hari tells me.

The key to this "heavenly" dish is coconut, a selection of Kerala spices and a lot of patience.

To make authentic beef fry or "Thanga Kotthu Irachi", the meat has to be stir fried along with coconut flakes on a slow flame for half a day.

"Visitors prefer beef curry, made in a gravy of tomatoes and coconut milk, since that is what they associate with Indian food, but it is the beef fry that is the most popular preparation with locals in Kerala. Full of flavour, it can be had every day or made part of a special Sunday lunch," Kerala chef Nimmy Paul, who organises cooking classes for tourists, tells the BBC.

Image caption The key to this "heavenly" dish is coconut, a selection of Kerala spices and a lot of patience
Her recipe for beef fry incorporates a special preparation of ground spices that include coriander powder, chilli, black pepper, cinnamon and cloves.

This fragrant mixture is massaged on to small cubes of beef along with an equal portion of coconut chunks.

This is then all slow cooked in a pan with a heavy bottom. The more the beef is roasted, the darker the colour and richer the aroma of the dish.

"I love that it is so succulent and melts in my mouth, and unlike mutton and chicken, it is light on the stomach", Ranjeet tells me at the hotel.

Image caption The meat has to be stir fried along with coconut flakes on a slow flame for half a day
It is also light on the pocket. The entire beef spread at Paputty hotel costs us a mere two pounds ($2.68).

This love for beef is, as mentioned before, unusual for Hindu-majority India, where the cow is largely considered sacred.

Most parts of northern, central and western India, in fact, have a complete or partial ban on cattle slaughter and beef consumption.

However Kerala, despite having a 55% Hindu population is one of the few Indian states with no ban.

Executive Chef at Brunton Boatyards, Manoj Nair, explains that beef in fact, is a "secular meat" here.

"Beef is very important for Kerala. There can be a Hindu, Muslim and Christian sitting at one table and they'd bond over a plate of beef fry and parantha despite any differences of caste and class," he says.

Beef is such an intrinsic part of the Kerala identity in fact, it has even become political.

Like a group of youngsters who started a Facebook page by the name "Beef Janata Party", a spoof on the country's ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, which has been perceived to be cracking down on the slaughter and consumption of cows.
 
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Critics are from BBC so why point your fingers at muslim dominated areas?
Muslim countries have been selling pork without food fascism. You are in no place to lecture them on ethics
My post was for India, and what happens in India. You are also in no place to comment on India.
 
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Should have kicked out Muslims after 1947 instead of keeping them and banning beef.

This is ridiculous. Everyone knows how much Muslim love beef. They cannot survive without consuming beef.
 
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Should have kicked out Muslims after 1947 instead of keeping them and banning beef.

This is ridiculous. Everyone knows how much Muslim love beef. They cannot survive without consuming beef.
When we go we will take all landmarks, achievements and work of muslims with us. We made India what it is today with the charminar, taj mahal and other things. As a Lucknowi I support full succession from India. This kind of mindset you represent is the most common one we have seen. True secularists are in reality so small a minority that they can barely make a difference.
 
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Lucknow again?

:lol:


You're as Lucknowi as Ranbhir is Peshawari.


"We made India what it is today?" Who's we? You're a nobody and a big fat nothing! Also, you're no different from the thick-in-the-head muppets who rant off about how they're better than everyone else out there because they claim to come from a certain lineage or religion. You're all retards.
 
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When we go we will take all landmarks, achievements and work of muslims with us. We made India what it is today with the charminar, taj mahal and other things. As a Lucknowi I support full succession from India. This kind of mindset you represent is the most common one we have seen. True secularists are in reality so small a minority that they can barely make a difference.
I defended Muslim's right to kill cows and eat them.

Why are you bragging about being lucknowi? You bhaiyyas are the worst people in sub-continent.
 
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LOL.... don't worry about my spine. Its strong enough to kick your @ss from here to kingdom come.

Every criticism from white christian supremacists against India is personal for me. So don't bother to 'educate' me, go help europe from collapsing on itself. That should give you a purpose to last your lifetime.

He is a Muslim Pakistani living in Netherlands.
 
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LOL.... don't worry about my spine. Its strong enough to kick your @ss from here to kingdom come.

Every criticism from white christian supremacists against India is personal for me. So don't bother to 'educate' me, go help europe from collapsing on itself. That should give you a purpose to last your lifetime.

VivasvatManu you're right. I hope my lines in the sand that i have put onto defence.pk/forums this sorry year do not lead you to think of me as a supremacist. I'd would get sad emotions, if too many people primarily think of me as a supremacist.. The term that i like to use for my own character type is : socialistic realist, with ability to (up to) admit my mistakes and want stated for the record that i do have almost always enough motivation to fix my own errors as soon as humanly possible. etc etc etc. i'm in read-only mode this week, lots to learn on this forum. Your posts (@vivasvaManu and @yourOnlineOpponent) have been a valuable non-painful lesson for me. And i also see others who are currently my teachers, Allies and Frenemies and Enemies, i learn from you all. And i thank you for that.

All praise be onto your own God.

>help europe from collapsing on itself
I'm on it.. See the video selfies i made last year in 2015..
 
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