28 May 2021

Shimla's Indian Coffee House

For those who live in the Tricity (Chandigarh, Panchkula and Mohali), Shimla is a weekend destination. For the daring ones, who have the stamina for the four hour uphill ride and back, it is also a day destination. It has gone downhill since its glory days as the summer capital of the British Raj but retains enough charm to tempt tourists to its doors.

You can look up lists that tell you which are the best spots to visit; without them, most tourists spend their time walking on the Mall Road, hanging out on The Ridge, the Lakkar Bazar, going down to the Kali Mata temple. Then there is the increasingly naughty monkey infested Jakhu Temple.  

There are two famous food landmarks in Shimla. One is a corner booth on the Mall Road which serves soups and snacks. I loved their coffee in a paper cup. Maybe it was the invigorating air of Shimla that made the coffee so tasty. Another must try item of this booth was the Slush. One sip could give you a brain freeze. At any time, you can see people crowded outside the booth, picking up their food and enjoying it lounging around near by. There is a booth on the ridge too but I haven't tried it. I hope these places are still functional. 

 


 

The other iconic landmark of Shimla was the Indian Coffee House on the Mall Road. The first time I went to Shimla, as a young fifteen year old girl, I remembered eating at the Indian Coffee House. I have seen these cosy cafes in many places. They boast a vast clientele. They are renowned for nourishing many impoverished artists who could not afford fancy dining. To enter an Indian Coffee House is to admit your pockets are not lined. It is unabashedly middle class. The furniture is a collection of Sunmica top tables and chairs that make a terrible squeak when you drag them. The dosas are invariably soggy, the idlis hard, the sambar and chutney are a sham. Their cutlets get more minuscule by the day, there is no kick in the coffee, shakes look fake and their cutlery is terrible. Yet you will see people make a beeline to these cafes during lunch hour or any other time.

When you are wondering which to pick between two equally evil looking cafes, it is safer to pick Indian Coffee House because it is predictable. Which was why my parents chose Indian Coffee House for eating often when we were in Shimla. Years later, when I visited Shimla again I was thrilled to find the cafe safe on its spot on the Mall Road.  It brought back memories of my first visit to the place.

Today I hear that the cafe is set to close down.  I feel as if a trusted friend is going away forever. Corona has hit us hard in so many ways that it is difficult to fathom. So many things that we took for granted are snatched away from us. We are no longer free to travel when the mood takes us, we cannot eat out when we wish, we look at people with suspicion, wondering if they are carrying the dreadful disease, our children are holed in at home, we are living like rats, poking our noses out of home only to ferret for food. 

In such times, closing of a familiar cafe in a beloved spot may not mean much to us personally but it is the death of one more memory, one more icon that bites the dust.

28 March 2020

Beautiful Pattaya



The day I was to leave Pattaya, I wanted to spend the morning strolling on the beach. It is one of the things I had dearly wanted to do for a long long time. The temperature was perfect, not more than 26C. The beach was about 200 meters from the hotel. It was easy-peasy to walk down and walk right into the Gulf of Thailand. I walked for a while in the water, feeling the warm, fine sand between my toes. Some parts of the sea are cordoned off using a rope and barrels so the tourists may swim in safety.

Like a blessing from heavens, a light rain began to fall. The blue seas you see in the picture above with dark green trees are from the spot I chose to walk in. It was even more gorgeous when laid out in all its rain drenched glory right in front of my eyes. It was a beautiful moment. I walked all the way to western most end of the beach.There was a cliff at the end with a wall from a resort blocking my way. I walked to the edge of the wall and spotted a secluded beach that the resort probably used as a an exclusive offer to its clients. It was no better or no worse than the public beach that was on offer for me. I raised my eyes to the sky and spotted a perfectly curved rainbow dipping into the sea.

It was a perfect end to a perfect stay in Pattaya. I had arrived there with a bunch of friends just a couple of days ago. We were booked into a hotel right on the Pattaya's beachfront area. We went walking through the unbelievably glittery, glamorous walking street of Pattaya. At the far end, we sat and ate french fries and cold drinks before heading to the view point area. On our way back we stopped at a Punjabi dhaba and tried their delicious food. We got chatting with the owners about places to go and they helped us book a boat ride to Coral Islands and Tawaen Beach right there. Next morning we were picked up with a bunch of other people and taken to a parasailing spot. Some of us tried there. On Coral Island we dropped off another bunch of people who were going underwater. We were then dropped off at Tawaen Beach.

Tawaen Beach
 It was glorious. There was fine white stretch of sand and water so blue that it dazzled our eyes. We were let loose to go banana boating and frolic on the sand. I tried swimming in the sea and got mouthfuls of salt water! It was exhilarating. That evening we were to try another of Pattaya's exotic offerings- the transgender cabaret. It is hard to do justice to this stage show. The color, the fantastic dancing, the music, the lighting, the costumes are so worth the hype.

One of the benchmarks of a good experience is your wanting to do it all over again. Whenever I think of my time in Pattaya, I want to be back there again. There is so much we hear about Thailand, its sex trade, the dangers we were likely to face and how unsavory it could be. We were in Thailand for five days and never once did we feel unsafe. We were walking around late in the night, just a bunch of women. Living in India has taught us to always put our safety first, here we are always watching our backs and trying not to get into a dangerous situation. Maybe that training helped us and we were unscathed.

Now that traveling for fun is put on indefinite hold, it may be a long long time before I am able to return to this lovely beach city. If you are lucky to be there remember: There are plenty of Indian food stores to eat out if you are the kind who cannot do without home food. Try not fall into tourist traps and do your own thing. You can spend a lot of money and do things flamboyantly, on the other hand you can have a budget holiday and enjoy yourselves to the maximum. There are many bloggers who write in detail about how to travel around the cities cheaply. Do try to read up as much as possible while planning your trip.

Pattaya Skyline seen from the steamboat

20 February 2019

Life marches on

Cool weather and warm socks
watching rain from the window
a cup of tea
fresh made food
nowhere to go
quick naps when I want
long walks when I want
watching the sun span the sky
watching the moon bloom at night
happiness lies in counting your blessings
they say

The poem is probably bad but I didn't want to pick up one written by another to indicate the state of my mind. Why not write it myself? I love poetry but probably suck at it. It is so hard to evaluate yourself. Why is it so hard to write something and not be able to tell if it invokes the kind of feelings in others that I am trying to express.

What I am trying to say is, it can be a lot of fun to be alone. It is fun when you are not under constraint to do things. Such a time can come only under two circumstances, 1. You are unmarried and living on your own. 2. Your children have grown up and moved away. Unfortunately, this state has come to me at 2. I wish I had been courageous enough to live on my own when I was younger, I may never have changed that. I realize that I am a natural loner. Even in company it is my tendency to keep me to myself. I am like a fakir inside.

I have changed the name of my blog and will try to post more. More snapshots of my past, more about my doings.

Shimla's Indian Coffee House

For those who live in the Tricity (Chandigarh, Panchkula and Mohali), Shimla is a weekend destination. For the daring ones, who have the sta...