As I pressed and shaped these cookies while the oven was heating, I wondered why they looked familiar, and wasn't sure what they reminded me of - but the shape, the size and the edges were exactly like something I'd seen somewhere.
After they'd cooled a bit, I broke one into pieces and tasted it - and memories came rushing back. Memories of the 'tuck wallah' who sat near the junior school building at break time and outside at the car park (the one inside the big gates, where we never saw a single car parked, ever) when the going home bell had gone. We had junior school morning assembly there, and later, as seniors, that's where we played throwball.
I can actually see the tuck wallah, with his big, bony frame, hair and beard orange* with henna, loose pajama-kurta and small neat trunk of goodies. And the goodies, all packed carefully in packets of see through butter paper, folded and stapled at the top. He had a sort of tray with compartments and it held all the items, arranged so attractively!
For 15 paisey, he sold a cookie like the one in the picture, packets of salted shelled peanuts, thick salted potato chips, red hot chilli potato chips and little squares of light brown or white fudge. There were small samosas, priced at 25 paisey, and I think there were veg. and mutton patties as well. The mutton patty was the 'expensive' item.
The bestEST thing in his trunk were 'sticky chips'. I'm sure none of my friends has forgotten the taste! Deep brown shiny sweet coating on cruchy pieces of chips. Oh it was heavenly, especially if you'd bought one just as the bell rang after break. You could open your desk and eat a little bit in the Sanskrit period (always the first period after break)!
The sticky chips came from the same source as the other chips - they were deep fried sun dried sliced potatoes. The fried chips were broken into little pieces and coated in really dark caramel and allowed to dry. My adult mind worked out the composition of course, those days they were just deliciously sticky and mysterious and never to be seen anywhere else.
Please write to me if you want the cookie recipe.
*I remember asking my father how some men had orange and red hair; was it because they used red coloured hair oil?



9 comments:
Such a cute schoolgirl pic.
Nice nostalgic piece. Recreated the atmosphere of school days and snacks pedlars outside the school gates.
Enjoyed reading it
Your own Proustian Madeleines :)
Loved it! Forgotten many things but not the trunk Bhaiya! Sticky chips were my favorite. I would never have guessed that it was the humble potato dipped in caramel that filled those little packets. You are a true genius! Somebody needs to put all that deliciousness in a bag and spread the joy worldwide.
Excellent read. Brought back tons of school memories.
Gowri..your article brought back a rush of memories for me as well! My favourite were the samosas and sticky chips!!
Great read...enjoyed the taste of everything you described deliciously��
Hi Gowri - nice story, although I was not in school in India, I am sure I would have enjoyed the fare offered for sale. I am sure my wife Jackie, must have had similar experiences when she was at the Little Flower School in Dibrugarh, and possibly during her time at the St Agnes Convent in Haflong, Mikir Hills in Assam. All men that I had seen with 'red' beards were Muslims who had done the Haj to Mecca, and were usually addressed as Haji.
Further to my comments, Jackie said that she never saw a 'tuck wallah" at the schools in Dibrugarh and Haflong. No doubt because the sisters ensured that their pupils were kept 'safe' from such vendors. However, during the Chinese invasion of India, Jackie had to attend school in Agra and used to have a 'chaat wallah' who came along with his four wheeled barrow. Jackie says that the wagon often had loads of flies accompanying it and she wondered how they didn't get any upset tummies from eating the nuts and chaat. The same applied when the friends went to the bazaar and ate Sandesh/gulab jamuns/hulwa/and ladoos!
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