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Without borders - Foodistan’ is more than Indo-Pak rivalry

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Without borders

Foodistan’ is more than Indo-Pak rivalry. There’s enough culinary skill on display


Unlike the widely popular MasterChef, the contestants of Foodistan, the food reality show on NDTV Good Times that will air from Monday, are not amateurs. Created by NDTV Good Times and produced by Siddharth Basu’s BIG Synergy TV, it is reminiscent of the American reality show Top Chef Masters, where professional chefs vie for the prize.

Foodistan, a 26-part series, will have 16 chefs from some of the best hotels in India and Pakistan competing with each other, in team as well as individual challenges. Don’t go by its gimmicky hoardings, Foodistan has enough healthy competition, judging by its first two episodes.

The Indian team includes Manish Mehrotra of Indian Accent, New Delhi, with his signature blend of Indian and world cuisines on the same plate; and Meraj-ul-Haque, a third-generation chef from the Qureshi family of Lucknow and the man behind The Great Kabab Factory’s kebabs. There’s Nimish Bhatia of The Lalit Ashok, Bangalore, who has applied the concept of cold cuts to kebabs to come up with “thande kebab”; and Madhumita Mohanta from The Claridges, Surajkund (Haryana), the sole woman in the Indian line-up.
On the Pakistani side, among others, are chefs with experience of working in Dubai, London, Hong Kong, the US and Pakistan’s premier restaurants. Besides Mohammad Ikram of Dumpukht, Pearl-Continental Lahore, a specialized dum pukht chef who also loves to cook Chinese, there is Akhtar Rehman of Marriott Islamabad, who specializes in traditional Pakistani dishes. The executive chef at Park Plaza Lahore, Mohammed Naeem, wears multiple hats—author, blogger, traveller and racing enthusiast, who specializes in Mughlai dishes and pastas. One of the strongest members of this team is Mehmood Akhtar, who spent his initial years cooking for Mehmood Sayeed Sakhery’s Palace in Saudi Arabia before returning to Pakistan to work with Avari hotel, Lahore.

They are set tasks by a panel of three judges - Merrilees Parker from London, a chef and TV show host; actor Sonya Jehan, granddaughter of the legendary singer Noor Jehan, who helped her French mother set up the Café Flo restaurant in Pakistan, and critic and journalist Vir Sanghvi.

In the first round, the judges kept things fairly straightforward. Parker, probably because of her experience as a food show host, was the most effervescent and Jehan the most diplomatic, but all three were largely understated, compared with other Indian reality television judges. Sanghvi’s opinion seemed to matter the most, at least to the Indian contestants, judging by the Indian skipper’s reaction to being awarded a point by the critic.

Based as it is on the theme of an Indo-Pakistan conflict-the teams are outfitted in predictable blue and green, respectively-the first episode is shamelessly dedicated to fake nationalistic fervour: opening shots of mustachioed guards on their routine war dance on the Wagah border, opinion from the streets about which side is likely to win—some of the masala you associate with an India-Pakistan cricket match is unfortunately present. Thankfully, it does not descend to vulgar jingoistic depths. There’s dollops of food culture served up from both countries.

Food historian Pushpesh Pant holds forth on the impact of refugees on both nations’ cuisines over the last half-century. There are cross-border vignettes such as an interview with an Indian gentleman whose sister-in-law in Pakistan requests some mixed vegetable curry every time he visits them.

The live action that followed wasn’t hunky-dory. The challenge set for the two teams was easy enough—a curry, a kebab, a biryani and a dessert. With so many professional reputations on the line, the knives were out and, surprisingly, between teammates. In the Indian team, the classical techniques of Haque grated on the day’s captain, Mehrotra, and the four Pakistani contestants worked themselves up into a tizzy. Matters almost came to a head between captain chef Ikram, and his sole female teammate, the lively Khursheed Amina Agha, or chef Poppy, as she is known. A chef with her own culinary institute and TV show, she failed to earn her skipper’s respect when entrusted with making the shahi tukda dessert. Ikram’s snide remark that a TV chef didn’t have to serve customers, and that made all the difference, added to the tension, but the shahi tukda was one of the dishes that impressed the judges. The other was Haque’s gosht (mutton) biryani.

If there’s one bone to pick in this well-produced show, it’s the hosts. It’s not clear what makes actors Ira Dubey and Aly Khan qualified to anchor this show. In the second episode, Ikram tells Khan that the Irani seafood biryani is not being made with fish like salmon and tuna but ones from the Indian Ocean. Khan sagely quips, “Ah, bhetki!” Bhetki is a freshwater fish, as every discerning Indian foodie knows.

Foodistan will air on NDTV Good Times from 23 January, Monday to Wednesday, at 9.30pm.


Without borders - Culture - livemint.com


 
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Could be tough fight, both claim to be Super Power. Will be interesting to see who wins. Hopefully no B.S will happen.
 
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It's being billed as an "epic battle" between India and Pakistan.

But instead of being fought on the battleground, it's being fought in the kitchen.

The armies comprise eight professional chefs from each country, fighting to conquer the taste buds of judges.

This is Foodistan - a new show that begins on Indian television channel NDTV Good Times on Monday night.

The programme-makers say it's a cook-off between "highly talented chefs from Asia's two most culturally rich countries".

"India and Pakistan are two nations which share a common passion for good food," says Smeeta Chakrabarti, chief executive officer of NDTV Lifestyle.

"And this love for food is something that binds the two nations in spite of their numerous differences."

Actress Ira Dubey, one of the hosts of the 26-part show filmed over 40 days in October and November, told the BBC: "The atmosphere on the sets was bubbling, quite literally.

"It's an India-Pakistan show, so there was crazy competition, but there was also a crazy kind of brotherhood. There was great rivalry, but at the end of the day we are also brothers."

'Bonhomie'
The participants were all professional chefs with at least eight years of work experience and the food they were asked to cook was the sub-continental cuisine popularly known as Mughlai food.

Among the contestants was India's Nimish Bhatia, who has been a chef for nearly a decade now.

"It was good fun to be part of this competition, it was very exciting, very enjoyable. It was also very nice to meet people from across the border. We have the same food, the same culture, but we are separated by this border."


The judges were from India, Pakistan and England
Mr Bhatia said there was a lot of bonhomie on the sets and it was not about winning or losing, but it was about having fun.

"There was competition in the kitchen, but it was not a competition between good and bad, it was a competition between good and good."

Pakistan's Mohammad Ikram is the chef de cuisine at the Dumpukht restaurant in Lahore. He says they were made to feel very welcome in India and were well looked after. "It felt like we never even left Pakistan," he says.

"The judges appreciated my cooking a lot. They loved my ras malai (a milk dessert), my rice biriyani and my fish tikka."

But Mohd Ikram's butter chicken, the staple in many Indian and Pakistani restaurants, didn't go down well with the judges.

"The food in Pakistan is different from the food here," he said.

"The Indian curry looks more colourful, whereas we fry our gravy a lot more so our butter chicken looks and tastes different. The judges are more used to eating the Indian variety so they didn't much like what I cooked."

'Incredibly competitive'
Well-known Indian food critic Vir Sanghvi, one of the three judges on the show, said they tried as much as possible to level the playing field by asking the contestants to cook food that's shared between the two countries.


Team Pakistan gets cooking at Foodistan
But, he said, it was "like a competition between English and European cuisines".

"Pakistani cuisine is essentially Punjabi with influences of Sindhi, Afghani and Balochi cooking. But the range and variety of Indian cuisine is more diverse. There are 26 different kinds of cuisines in India. Indian food uses coconut and tamarind and many other things which the Pakistani chefs have never used."

Mr Sanghvi says there was a lot of bonhomie between the chefs from the two sides but once the action shifted to the kitchen, "it became incredibly competitive".

"It was quite intense. Passions ran high and they fought to the last pinch of salt.

"We had chefs crying on several occasions, we even had one chef walk out of the set. One of the contestants was very dismissive of British judge Merrilees Parker; one Pakistani contestant accused Sonia Jehan (Pakistani actress and judge on the show) of not being patriotic enough.

"There was a lot of drama."

With 16 chefs, three judges and two hosts, the "culinary encounter between India and Pakistan" promises to be "an exciting battle".

The food fight has begun.
 
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i actually watched the first episode yesterday . was nice . after the boring one hour intro of all the contestants , they started cooking . it was nice :)
 
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I wonder how many of us here watch this programme on NDTV.

I find it fascinating. The food cooked is wonderful ( to see) and I envy the judges.

Someday I hope to see mixed teams of Indo Pak chefs .
 
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such "reality" shows are just drama..... Most of events are scripted......
 
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Dont miss the woods for the trees.

The focus is culinary skills in S Asia.

We already have 3 food channels in Pakistan.... And i am sick of them..... After starplus now we have to deal with zubaida apa and shereen apa..... Dont want another apa or Bhai on my television.....


+ There is no fun when people are doing over acting of showing love towards each other.
 
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We already have 3 food channels in Pakistan.... And i am sick of them..... After starplus now we have to deal with zubaida apa and shereen apa..... Dont want another apa or Bhai on my television.....


+ There is no fun when people are doing over acting of showing love towards each other.

Why you guys love Starplus so much?
 
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i dont understand, who will eat the beef curry from pakistan?? or even lamb or chicken curry, we make karahi dishes with beef and its taste is unparallel in the world and nehari and haleem

we pakistanis will lose :cry:
 
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i dont understand, who will eat the beef curry from pakistan?? or even lamb or chicken curry, we make karahi dishes with beef and its taste is unparallel in the world and nehari and haleem

we pakistanis will lose :cry:

I ll do the tasting, wheres the food?:lol:
 
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