Similar Posts

Leave a Reply to IdeaSmith Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

9 Comments

  1. @ Ankur: Which would be the UK equivalent of the sabzi-mandis I guess..

    @ Shantanu: We like to call it bhelpuri, sir.. 😀

    @ Renovatio: Heard and understood, as befits a rookie!

    @ shub: I just heard it might be available on the epaper. It was under the ‘Blogosphere’ section.

    @ Sense: Thengyu, thengyu! Kem cho, yenna yepudi, kemon achche, wossup and all that…

  2. Hey thanks for the heads up about the HT mention. Could you email me a link if you don’t mind? I can’t seem to find it 🙂
    Thanks.

  3. See, this is what happens when you silly non-chronic-cooking types try to get vegetables. The key is to start picking out the good ones, by which point the sabzeewaalah notices you and hands you a basket. Then you just tell him how much you want without naming it, and he’ll weight it out. Never hurts to pick too much of the good stuff, that makes the guy respect you, and only throw out the not-so-good extra.

  4. I don’t think I can ever bring myself to say Aloo and Pyaaz….Its always kaanda batata for me…. 😀 There’s a charm in dealing with the bhajiwalas/waalis that can never be replicated anywhere else 🙂

  5. Compelely agree with the later part of this post…I love the look and feel of the Indian subzi mandi. I just hope they can co-exist with the upscale retail stores and don’t completely disappear in the coming years.

    Re: Kanda, Bhaaji and Batata. Haha, having come to Pune from Delhi, I must say I had to re-learn Hindi all over again! Mumbaiyas have butchered both Hindi and Marathi 🙂

  6. Yes.. retails cannot match the freshness and feeling of buying it from a ‘sabzeewala’.

    But guess the convenience of having eveything under one roof has to take over. In UK we have special farmer markets where we can have farm fresh vegetables. The older generation still prefers it over chains like Tesco and Sainsburys