Chaat: Recipes from the Kitchens, Markets, and Railways of India: A Cookbook
Chaat: Recipes from the Kitchens, Markets, and Railways of India: A Cookbook book cover

Chaat: Recipes from the Kitchens, Markets, and Railways of India: A Cookbook

Hardcover – October 6, 2020

Price
$21.49
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Clarkson Potter
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1984823885
Dimensions
7.7 x 0.9 x 9.78 inches
Weight
2.2 pounds

Description

“Maneet Chauhan’s new cookbook takes us to where her obsession with food began: India’s railways.” —Food Network Magazine “Take a train trip across the subcontinent with Chef Maneet Chauhan’s guide to regional variations of chaat. ” —Travel & Leisure “Travel with James Beard Award–winning Chauhan as she trains her way through India, stopping at each station to sample the regional chaat. . . . You’re on the street here, you meet the vendors, you’re completely transported.” —Cup of Jo “I was happily switching from being a consumer of one of my favorite foods—the Indian snack food known as chaat—to making it myself, thanks to a fantastic new cookbook. . . . Chauhan’s book is your passport to this joy.” — Wired “In Chaat , you’ll take a railway journey yourself, traveling from the east of India to the west, from the north to the south, buoyed by bite-sized snacks and full-blown meals along the way.” —Chowhound “The book takes us on a trip through the diverse cuisines of India with chaat as our guide.” —Epicurious “The vibrant cookbook is a sumptuous display of the riches and diversity of Indian cuisine. Most of all, Chaat bursts with color, flavor and aroma, and it’s impossible not to smile and enjoy the fun of cooking when you’re preparing dishes like Chauhan’s Tokri Chaat.” —SFGate “ Chaat is a delicious journey through India’s rich street food culture. But it’s more than that, too— Maneet takes your hand and, in a friendly informative way, demystifies the flavors, geography, and dishes. This is a must-read book for anyone who is interested in cooking Indian cuisine from one of the foremost authorities.” —Jet Tila “Maneet’s new book, Chaat , is gorgeous, vibrant, heartfelt, educational, and fun. Her passion for food and cooking has always been contagious and it’s on full display in these pages. Chaat makes me want to run to the nearest Indian grocery, get lost in all the exotic and delicious spices, and start cooking.” —Martina McBride, recording artist, cookbook author “Maneet is a treasure, a culinary ambassador from India to the United States. Thanks to her we can learn about chaat, which is the perfect lens to see the many colors, flavors, and cultures of India. This book is bright, spicy, salty, sweet, tangy . . . flavors that you will want to have in your kitchen!” —José Andrés “ Chaat is a sumptuous whistle-stop tour of India’s diverse food ways. It is the food of our shared childhoods, it is the joy of the tasty discovery that comes from travel. Every page is a feast for the eyes and the palate. It will make you hungry for more.” —Padma Lakshmi New York Times bestselling author of Love, Loss, and What We Ate and The Encyclopedia of Spices and Herbs andxa0Host/executive producer of Top Chef and Taste the Nation Maneet Chauhan is a James Beard Award–winning chef whose restaurants include Chauhan Ale & Masala House, Tànsuŏ, The Mockingbird, and Chaatable, all in Nashville. Prior to becoming an executive chef and judge on Food Network’s Chopped , Maneet worked in some of the finest hotels in India before moving to the U.S. to study the culinary arts. She lives in Nashville with her family. Jody Eddy is a food and travel writer whose work has appeared in Saveur, Food & Wine, Vogue, and more. She coauthored the IACP award-winning cookbook North and the James Beard–nominated cookbook Come In, We’re Closed . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Introduction The train wheels screech to a stop at the Jaipur Station. My mother, Hardeep, clasps my hand tightly, pulling me through the densely packed crowd of passengers also disembarking from the train. The sweltering air is thick with the bracing aroma of lemon and chiles. My anticipation grows as the sound of hundreds of chattering people fills my ears with a cloud of white noise until one piercing voice cuts through the chaos—the shrill cry of the bhel puri vendor, at last! My hungry eyes dart around, trying to locate the origin of the voice through a sea of vibrant saris and luggage porters clad in red linen shirts deftly balancing stacks of suitcases on their heads. There he is, behind a makeshift stand of metal tins overflowing with tomatoes, onions, cilantro, puffed rice, and limes. This man, a flavor alchemist, will transform these humble ingredients into an explosively delicious sweet, spicy, tangy, crunchy, creamy, and spicy snack called a chaat, the very chaat I dreamt about and pestered my mother about during the entire eight-hour train ride from New Delhi.Chaat are the iconic snacks of Indian cuisine. A literal translation of the Hindi word chaat is “to lick,” and chaat have therefore come to describe almost anything that is so good you find yourself licking the palm leaf or banana leaf that it was served on. Each train station in India has a unique specialty, a quick bite that is not only tasty but also represents the culinary traditions of the region. I adore chaat itself, and as an adult looking back on these experiences of traveling throughout India by train, I realize I not only ate deliciously well, but also learned about the food history of my nation through these humble dishes rich in nuance, regionality, and character. My mother, a high school principal with an unwavering patience for my culinary desires, laughs and shakes her head as I drag her through the tightly packed throng of people, a human sea of motion, toward the bhel puri vendor. She knows me too well to deny me this singular pleasure. A crowd is gathered around him and I fear I will never get close enough to place my order. I bravely let go of my mother’s hand and use my tiny fingers to push through the swell of people until I am eye to eye with a bowl of crunchy, airy puffed rice. I inhale deeply and my nose fills with the scent of raw onions and mint chutney. I catch the vendor’s eyes through the telepathic strength of my longing just as I feel my mother’s hand on my shoulder. I do not break my gaze with him to acknowledge her because I fear that if I do the next bowl of bhel puri will not have my name on it. The vendor grins and nods at me before he begins his magic show. He spoons puffed rice—rice that has been heated with hot air (like popcorn kernels) until it puffs up and has an airy texture—into a bowl made of pressed palms. With a flourish, he tops it with crunchy chickpea noodles called sev, raw onions, tomatoes, boiled potato cubes, and cilantro. He sprinkles it with a chile powder and pungent chaat masala and drizzles it with vibrant tamarind andfiery mint chutneys. My mother hands him a few rupees, about five cents, and I offer a smile as I reach greedily for the bhel puri. My mouth waters in anticipation of this bewitching marriage of flavors and textures that is crunchy one moment and soft and tender the next, offering a flash of tanginess that succumbs to the heat of chile before it is tempered by the sweet tamarind and cooled by the mint. I can’t focus on anything but getting a spoonful of bhel puri into my mouth until my mother leans down to my ear and whispers, “There is more to life than food, Maneet.” I stop to contemplate her words for a moment, wooden spoonful of bhel puri hovering in front my mouth. Ixa0suspect she might be right and wonder what a day that did not pivot around food would be like. I decide to ponder her words later. For now, my bhel puri commands my undivided attention.I grew up in the small town of Ranchi in eastern India (map, page 19), the capital of the state of Jharkhand, famed for its malpua, crispy spiced pancakes drenched in sugar syrup. Every summer, my family embarked upon a long train ride to the steamy town of Bangalore in southern India to visit my maternal grandparents. For our winter holiday, the train took us north to my paternal grandparents’ home in Ludhiana, in the state of Punjab.No matter whether we went north or south, our train journeys required two to three days of jangling over the rough steel tracks of the Indian rail network, a vestige of the British colonial era. The journey was typically a long, cramped, sweaty endeavor, but I never complained. This is because I knew every station delivered an endless picnic of chaat, inexpensive delicacies that my parents purchased from vendors clamoring for our rupees. Between stations, which for me translated as chaat stops, my sister would devour books while I daydreamed about food as well as the stories my father told me about his own experiences riding the rails in Russia, where he was occasionally sent for his job as an engineer. While the Russian dishes he described were different from the chaat of India, the romance for rail travel and culinary adventure was the same.I first realized that food had power when I visited my older sister at university, arriving with containers stuffed with food that I had prepared at home before hopping on the train to reach her campus. I was only around fifteen at the time, but I realized at that young age that the person who brings the meal is the one who receives the love, and I craved seeing that first flicker of wonder and joy flashing in a person’s eyes. I might have realized food’s ability to conjure love from others in my teenage years, but my actual obsession with the flavors, textures, colors, and aromas of food was sparked during those formative train rides when I was just a girl.At the stops we made during our train trips throughout India, snacks and chaat were always waiting for me, calling to me long before the train pulled into the station. On my mental map of India, the pins for each station conjure the taste memory of each chaat I devoured as a kid, each bite illuminating a chapter of the grand culinary history of my nation. I can’t wait for the day when my husband, Vivek, and I will bring our own children, Shagun and Karma, on a train journey through India. I hope it will inspire the same love that I have for my country and its cuisine. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “A sumptuous whistle-stop tour of India’s diverse food ways. Maneet has penned a love letter to the best of Indian food.”—Padma Lakshmi, host and executive producer of
  • Top Chef
  • and
  • Taste the Nation
  • IACP AWARD WINNER • LONGLISTED FOR THE ART OF EATING PRIZE • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST COOKBOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
  • Food Network
  • Salon
  • Epicurious
  • Garden & Gun
  • Wired
  • Explore the bold flavors, regional dishes, and stunning scenery of India with over 80 recipes from
  • Chopped
  • judge and James Beard Award-winning chef Maneet Chauhan.
  • In
  • Chaat,
  • Maneet Chauhan explores India’s most iconic, delicious, and fun-to-eat foods coming from and inspired by her discoveries during an epic cross-country railway journey that brought her to local markets, street vendors, and the homes of family and friends.  From simple roasted sweet potatoes with star fruit, lemon, and spices to a fragrant layered chicken biryani rice casserole, and the flakiest onion and egg stuffed flatbreads, these recipes are varied, colorful, and expressive. Maneet weaves in personal stories and remembrances as well as historical and cultural notes as she winds her way from North to South and East to West, sharing recipes like Goan Fried Shrimp Turnovers, Chicken Momo Dumplings from Guwahati in Assam, Hyderabad's Spicy Pineapple Chaat, and Warm-Spiced Carrot and Semolina Pudding from Amritsar.  With breathtaking photography and delectable recipes,
  • Chaat
  • is a celebration of the diversity of India's food and people.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(407)
★★★★
25%
(170)
★★★
15%
(102)
★★
7%
(48)
-7%
(-48)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Disappointing, inaccurate and misleading

I was very excited by the title of the book. I actually pre-ordered it. I couldn’t wait to try to make ‘chaat’ at home in an attempt to recreate what I experienced back home in India. I have tried more than a few of the recipes in this book and they have all fallen flat. It’s very disappointing. In contrast to other Indian culinary books I have purchased this has been the biggest let down.

I would personally recommend Vibrant India by Chitra Agarwal and Seasons by Nik Sharma - technically far superior and also really dial in to what it’s like to experience Indian food in all its diverse flavors. Not mention the instructions are accurate and easy to recreate.

I am sure Maneet Chauhan is an excellent cook. She is probably the most visible Indian personality on the food network (unfortunately). However this book and the instructions it provides is LACKING.

Here is an example pg-140 “Khaman Dhokla”
1. She lists 1 cup of chickpea flour
The only liquids in the recipe is 2 1/2 tablespoons of oil. And then she says “the batter should resemble slightly fluffy sponge cake batter” - either that’s a horrible comparison or it’s inaccurate cause there is no way you achieve that consistency with the ratios she lists for “Khaman Dhokla” on that page.

To sum it up. I wasted time cooking stuff from this book. I would recommend purchasing other books by authors who are able to pen their recipes with more accuracy and tact. DO NOT BUY this book if you want to give a legitimate shot at making Chaat at home. It’s a disappointment.
157 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not for me.

A love letter to Indian cuisine, specifically street food. Includes beautiful photography, however there really aren’t any recipes in it that call my attention (flipped through it twice to no avail). It also calls for a lot of ingredients you may not find at your local grocery store. If you’re the adventurous foodie type, this book might be for you. Sadly, not for me.

I’ve received a free copy from Clarkson Potter in exchange for a free and unbiased review.
19 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Delightful But Elusive For Me

I bought the book because many reviewers emphasized the author’s inclusion of her childhood memories of Indian cuisine. Manet Chatham is a delightful personality on television, and I looked forward to knowing her better through her anecdotes. Unfortunately, most of her descriptions and stories are out of my reach because the font chosen to print them is very small and faint. I suppose if I were 30 years younger, I might have less trouble, but, alas, for me the book is just not worth the effort.
The index is printed in an even smaller font, which would necessitate my using a magnifying glass. However, I’m glad to say that the cooking directions and ingredients are printed in a larger, readable font. Many of the recipes are enticing and not overly complicated, so I don’t regret fully the purchase. But for anyone over the age of 60, I offer a caution.
16 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Compilation of Chaat Recipes

If you are interested in the Indian street food Chaat, this is the book for you. Many recipes. Personally, I liked the notes before each section though I know a lot of people hate headnotes. The book is organized along railway stations, where many chaats are sold, which I like.

Someone said that this contained many complicated recipes and sauces you'd never use again. I have to disagree. If you cook Indian food, you are used to many spices per dish. The dishes are not complicated, just have more than a couple of ingredients, and if you plan to try chaats once, sure you'll end up with sauces you won't use again. But that is not the point of this book. You'll quickly understand why you get a mint/cilantro chutney, a tamarind chutney and red onions at the beginning of most Indian restaurant meals. Recommended for those who are interested in chaats and frankly, after a taste or two, who wouldn't be?
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Beautiful but Too Complicated

The book conveys a lot of love for India and its food - great stories and regional overviews, beautiful photos. But most of the recipes are complicated - multiple steps, many ingredients not found in regular grocery stores - would have to order them on-line, and lots of time needed for preparation. I bought the book because I saw Maneet Chauhan prepare a recipe from it on a TV show - looked interesting and easy enough. Turns out she prepared one of the easier recipes. I've read through many of the recipes three times now - most of them are so complicated, take so much time, and require so many unknown to me ingredients it's unlikely I'll ever decide to prepare them. There may a total of 3 or 4 recipes that are simple enough I may eventually try them. Beautiful book - hoped for the best from it - but in the end, I'm likely to give it away or donate it as it's just not practical for even weekend cooking much less for cooking on work days.
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Beautiful Book - But Beware

This is an absolutely beautiful book with interesting recipes, vibrant text and gorgeous pictures. I say beware because it isn't what I thought it would be, in the sense that it is not a traditional Indian cookbook. You won't find Americanized Chicken Vindaloo in this book, or dishes that might be considered main dish selections. It's essentially a book of Indian snacks.

Having said the above, it's a great book. Not being Indian myself, I can't comment on the variety or accuracy of the recipes, but it looks like it will be fun to try some of them out.

Enjoy!
11 people found this helpful
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Very complicated with hard to find ingredients

Had hoped this would be a more useful cookbook, but it really is a collection of tapa-style appetizers with ingredients that could never be found locally in most areas. The recipes are very complicated, as well, and I’m a fairly experienced cook. The travelogues are interesting.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

nothing wrong with recipe instructions for Khaman Dhokla

If the recipe was read correctly, the person giving the book only 2 stars must have erred on following through on that in her or his haste to make the recipe.

Instructions ( from book) for batter. Note is states quite clearly, if mixture looks to dry, add a tablespoon of water at a time until batter has an airy texture.

Excerpt from recipe instructions.
Make the dhokla batter: In a large bowl, whisk together the chickpea flour and semolina. Whisk in the sugar, ginger, hing, salt, 2½ tablespoons of oil, citric acid, and chiles. The batter should resemble a slightly fluffy sponge cake batter. If it’s too thick, add water 1 tablespoon at a time until it has an airy texture. Cover the bowl with a damp cloth and set aside at room temperature for 8 hours to ferment.
6 people found this helpful
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Journey through Eating

The breath of the journey she takes through India in her childhood and thus in her cooking offerings makes this both an interesting and stimulating read. One of the best books i have read in a long time and especially stimulating to my desire to cook and eat! And I bought a second copy!
5 people found this helpful
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As Close As I'll Get to India This Year

Ever read something with such evocative descriptions that you feel utterly transported?

Well, that's exactly what Maneet Chauhan and Jody Eddy's new cookbook Chaat does. All the way from DFW, I can smell all the warm spices sizzling in oil, see all the vibrant colors and textures that make Indian food such a delight, and feel like I'm getting to know the people, the culture, in the process.

These aren't the same handful of dishes we eat in Indian restaurants across the United States. This is the authentic experience from someone who has grown up in India, someone who has experienced what makes every region unique.

While the food is rightly front and center with most of the ingredients accessible at your local grocery store or online, one of the best features of Chaat are the personal stories from Chauhan yourself. You get her personal connection to each dish, what makes it special, and that's what makes you want to try it for yourself. It's a valentine to the country she loves so much, and her joy is palpable.

And during a time where travel is severely limited, it really was the next best thing, a perfect escape from the suburbs. It made me want to travel all through India just to try all the Chaat (Indian street food) she's recommended along the way. So much more than a cookbook, it's the perfect travel guide from an insider who knows all the best places and snacks you should sample along the way.

Note: I've received a free copy from Clarkson Potter in exchange for a free and unbiased review.
5 people found this helpful