Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Brunch

The Bake Up In The Lockdown

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Unless you know North India well, you won’t be familiar with the town of Hoshiarpur. Nor am I as familiar with Hoshiarpur as I would like. But that’s not for want of trying. Last year, I was invited to the Hoshiarpur Literary Festival to interview Captain Amarinder Singh about his latest book on military history. I accepted but then, at the last moment, the Captain couldn’t make it and our session was cancelled. The Society invited us again a few months later but bad weather made it impossible for the Captain’s chopper to land in Hoshiarpur.

But I sort of kept my date with the Hoshiarpur Literary Society. The bright young author, Khushwant Singh, organised a Zoom session, where he would moderate my chat with the Society during the lockdown. Apart from my joy at discoverin­g how much people continue to prize books all over India (as the members of the Society clearly did), I was also intrigued by how many of their questions to me had to do with baking.

Yups. Baking.

At one stage in our conversati­on, Khushwant told me that nearly everyone he knew had taken up baking in a big way during the lockdown. In fact, he said, it was hard to find somebody who still bought shop-baked bread. They just baked their own.

I gulped and did not mention that I had never baked a loaf of bread in my life.

Khushwant lives in Chandigarh, so clearly baking is a big thing all over Punjab, not just in Hoshiarpur. But is it also an all-india thing?

It is. The more I look, the more newly-converted baking enthusiast­s I seem to find. They bake everything from cakes to fancy breads to biscuits to buns to scones, and God alone knows what else. The lockdown has turned into a Bake Up.

This surprises me because home-baking never used to be an Indian thing. Americans baked apple pie and

English people baked cakes for tea. But, at least when I was growing up, we bought our cakes and our bread from profession­al bakers.

In fact, we did not even have an oven at our home in Mumbai. Nor did most people I know. Even when Gujaratis made pav-bhaji at home, they stuck to cooking the bhaji and bought the pav from outside.

Yes, we all had friends whose sophistica­ted mummies baked (disgusting) stubby maida biscuits with synthetic vanilla essence, but there weren’t too many of them.

And by the 1990s, when most middle-class homes had microwaves, old-fashioned ovens seemed redundant.

So, when did it all begin to change?

I reckon the change came in phases. The first phase was when the kitchen equipment industry persuaded us to trade up from simple cooking ranges to fancier installati­ons. These came with an oven and were not prohibitiv­ely expensive, so more and more people moved away from the simple gas hobs they had used in their mothers’ kitchens.

The second phase came with television. For some reason, baking is now big in the UK and to some extent in the US. With the globalisat­ion of television, it was inevitable that the trend would spread here.

In India, we didn’t have our own bakery TV shows (well, not shows of any consequenc­e, at any rate) but we had an explosion of bakery stores and cake-based cafés.

Till about two decades ago, upmarket baking remained the preserve of five-star hotels and their chefs. Then, a new generation of bakers took the cakes out of hotels. In Mumbai, young chefs like Pooja Dhingra became stars. In Delhi, bakery shops likes L’opéra and The Artful Baker ate into the business of the hotel pastry shops.

The younger chefs took inspiratio­n from global trends. Americans who had survived on muffins for years took to cupcakes and such New York bakeries as Magnolia Bakery became world famous. (Magnolia now has new owners and is not much more than a global franchise operation.) Even doughnut places (think of the heyday of Krispy Kreme before its financial problems and sale) became part of the trend, though doughnuts are usually deep-fried and so technicall­y, are not baked goods.

As the backlash against gluten began, the macaroon

(or macaron if you want to get all French about it) became ubiquitous. Unlike doughnuts or cupcakes, macaroons are difficult to make but no matter, people loved them regardless of their quality. And truly, at no time in the history of mankind have as many third-rate macaroons been made as there are today.

And then, there’s the final phase: the one India is in now. Because people are stuck at home, they think of cooking as an entertainm­ent/timepass option. And with

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