Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Brunch

Raising A Toastie

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Whether it’s those stubby keema-stuffed sandwiches or the melt-in-your-mouth ham and cheese combo, toasties are comforting to boot

Hemant had the right idea because in my house (and I suspect in most other people’s houses too), the toastiemak­er was usually used to turn left-overs into sandwiches. And keema was perfect for this kind of sandwich. You could just put last night’s keema into the device or you could, as I did, add chopped raw onion (I used to eat keema at dinner with bread and kachcha pyaaz so this was a logical extension of that principle) or, if the keema had not been very good at dinner, then I would zing it up with a dollop of achar. (All badly-made keema improves with a little achar and possibly, some dahi.)

It didn’t have to be keema, of course. In my house, we made toasties with all kinds of leftover sabzis. I have had a cabbage sabzi toastie and a gobi sabzi toastie. I drew the line at an aloo toastie myself but I am sure a masala dosa-type potato filling would have worked well for starch-on-starch fans.

The toastie was – at least in my house – the first taste of a new phenomenon: the hot sandwich. We ate sort-of-hot sandwiches when we went out: grilled sandwiches were very popular in those days at Mumbai restaurant­s. But the filling was nearly always cold. For a leftover toastie however, the filling (gobi, keema or whatever) always had

to be a little warm and by the time the toastie-maker was removed from the flame the bread was hot too.

Till that point, we had been used to cold sandwiches. We would cut cucumbers into thin slices, slather the bread with a green (kothmir) chutney and make cool cucumber and chutney sandwiches. At restaurant­s you would get cold chicken sandwiches. (These were hard to make at home because you needed roast or poached chicken, not the kind of thing we had readily available.)

And we had toasted sandwiches, which rarely worked well with the commercial bread of that era which broke and cracked when you toasted it. (We had a much better way of getting the best out of commercial/industrial toasted bread. We would butter it when it was hot so that the butter melted. Then we would smear some pickle masala-oil on the toast. Try it. It is delicious.)

Besides, the classic flat sandwich was useless when it came to Indian fillings like keema or sabzi. For that you needed a paunchy little fellow that could accommodat­e the sabzi till it bulged in the centre.

You could however, make Western-style toasties and we did. The most common was the classic sandwich combinatio­n of ham and cheese. The beauty of this sandwich, which most of us still remember fondly, was that it transcende­d its (mostly third-rate) ingredient­s to become a dish of beauty.

Ham and cheese is a combinatio­n that you will find all over the world. It is at the heart of a French Croque Monsieur. A Cubano sandwich is basically a ham and cheese sandwich with a little salsa dancing thrown in.

In the heyday of the toastie, most sandwiches were made from industrial bread. (And frankly, the bread at five-star hotels was not much better.) We had local cheese in India, from Mumbai’s own Aarey Milk Colony and from such places as Kalimpong and Ooty, but none of those cheeses was suitable for toastie making. Until Amul started making cheese slices, most of us relied on gray market supplies of Kraft slices or took normal Amul and grated it. Most (if not all) processed cheese is fairly revolting if you eat it on its own but it undergoes a magical transforma­tion when you combine it with any meat and let it warmly melt. (Think of the cheeseburg­er and how all fast food chains use cheese to add flavour to their tasteless burger patties.)

Then there were the ham choices. The public’s idea of ham is of a piece of pig (say the back), which is cured and then cut into thin slices to be sold as ham. This is true of a lot of ham but sadly the majority of ham is not made this way.

While we may love eating slices of ham (is there a better ham in the world than Jamón Ibérico?) most ham goes into institutio­nal kitchens and is used in catering.

The toastie was the first taste of a new phenomenon: the hot sandwich

So, quality is rarely a priority. A lot of ham is so-called ‘sandwich ham’ or ‘pressed ham’.

Pressed ham is the luncheon meat of the ham world, which is to say that it is made by taking leftover bits of ham from more expensive cuts and pressing them together to form a block. When you cut pressed ham into cubes for cooking, it works well and adds a ham flavour to the dish. And if you slice it for a sandwich, you can probably get away with passing it off as the real thing.

(Remember this the next time you see something described as “sandwich ham”: they are not offering little suggestion­s about what you can do with the ham. They are just trying to avoid having to tell you it is the Spam of hams, made by pressing bits of pork together.)

But here’s the thing. Take processed cheese and sliced (or cubed) sandwich ham and put them between two slices of any commercial bread. Add a condiment of your choice (ketchup, English mustard etc.) and make your toastie. It will be delicious.

How do I know?

Well, because I just made one while researchin­g this article and am eating it as I write!

I don’t use an old-fashioned toastie-maker any longer, though. My wife has bought one of those fancy sandwich machines where you put the sandwich on a griddle, shut the top, flick a switch and wait for the machine to cook your sandwich.

It is not as wonderful as it is cracked out to be especially if you want to make plump little keema sandwiches and pack your bread with leftover gobi sabzi but it gets the job done. (My wife disagrees. She says the machine is fine. I am just too stupid to know how to use it properly.) I used gluten-free bread from Sprinng Bread, which is good for sandwich-making, some pressed ham cut into little cubes and lots of grated basic-quality cheddar. (I am sorry but I didn’t have any processed cheese in the house.) Every ingredient was bought in Delhi and home-delivered during this lockdown.

The cheese melted into the bread and the ham rendered its flavour throughout the warm sandwich. It was totally delicious.

What else can you make with the new kind of fancy sandwich-maker? Quite a lot, actually. It just won’t be as filling as an old-fashioned toastie. I’ve smashed up a cooked burger patty (from Artisan meats) and made a burgerkeem­a sandwich. My wife has made a real keema sandwich from leftover keema. She makes sandwiches with Spanish chorizo and fancy cheese. And I am now experiment­ing with cooked Goan chourico as a filling. (The chourico is home-made by Crescentia Fernandes who I have written about before.)

So go on. Make a sandwich. Make it fat! Make it warm and crumbly!

It’s fun. It’s easy. It’s delicious.

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 ??  ?? MEATY FILLING
The keema ghotala toastie in Sea Lounge, Taj Mahal Hotel, is inspired by the Mumbai street dish of keema with scrambled egg
MEATY FILLING The keema ghotala toastie in Sea Lounge, Taj Mahal Hotel, is inspired by the Mumbai street dish of keema with scrambled egg
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 ??  ?? CREATIVE CALL Chef Hemant Oberoi came up with the idea of a keema filling for toasties
CREATIVE CALL Chef Hemant Oberoi came up with the idea of a keema filling for toasties
 ??  ?? AUGUST 23, 2020
AUGUST 23, 2020
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