Daily Mail

Irresistib­le India!

Charming, chaotic Calcutta goes by a new name now, but the city still has echoes of Empire

- by Lucy Hughes-Hallett

KOLKATA is a slow-burner. At first glance, the indian city, formerly known as Calcutta, is a haze of pollution, incessant honking of horns and half-built skyscraper­s with bamboo scaffoldin­g hanging off them like cobwebs. How can anyone stay sane in a place so raucous, so grubby, so hectic? But then you venture down a side street, flanked by grimy but grand 19th-century villas in italian style, its pavements cracked by the roots of banyan trees. the traffic noise recedes.

For 7p or thereabout­s, you can buy chai, spiced with ginger or cardamom. the vendor scoops it out of a great iron pot and, with theatrical flourish, pours it from a great height into a clay cup. kolkata has begun to reveal its charms. Here’s how to enjoy it . . .

BEST FOOT FORWARD

PeoPle do everything on the street — washing under standpipes, taking their morning shave with pavement barbers, and having shirts pressed with flat-irons heated over charcoal stoves. Wander through the city and you’ll see its life.

For more formal sightseein­g, Calcutta Walks has a team of well-informed young guides who lead small groups. they’ll show you the grand architectu­ral remnants of the Raj.

their Confluence of Cultures Walk winds through the old town, taking in a Chinese temple and market, a synagogue, Hindu temples, Christian churches and mosques, all within trafficfre­e lanes. From £24 pp, calcutta walks.com

BEAUTY OF BOATING

JAM-PACKED public ferries travel along the great Hooghly River — from the Botanical Gardens south of the city to the kali temple at Dakshinesw­ar in the north. Hire a brightly painted private boat, so you can feast on biryani as you watch people crowding down to the water in the numerous ghats ( steps), public gardens and temple precincts that line the shore.

TOP SHOPS

DAKSHINAPA­N is a market devoted to indian textiles and handicraft­s. it is controlled by the government, so prices are fair and the choice huge: from saffron-coloured quilts to gossamerfi­ne Bengali muslin. Rendezvous at Dolly’s cafe, which is famed for its ginger-scented tea.

GREEN SPACES

PEOPLE will tell you that the Victoria Memorial looks like the taj Mahal. it doesn’t. But lord Curzon’s grandiose, palace-sized, white marble monument to the Raj is splendid. Spend an afternoon people-watching in the formal gardens, where families loll on the grass in their glittering Sunday outfits. Go, too, to South Park Street Cemetery, the 18th- century burial ground for the young englishmen who came here to work for the east india Company and died with pathetic swiftness — to be commemorat­ed with tombs as splendid as their lives were short.

TUCK IN

FOOD stalls are everywhere, selling paper cones full of bhelpuri ( fresh herbs, tamarind and tomatoes with crunchy puffed rice) and plates of fragrant papri chaat (fried dough wafers with potato and yoghurt). Bakers make a variety of nut and honey-filled cakes and pastries. if you prefer to eat indoors, try Flurys, the Art Deco tea-room where smart kolkata ladies have been lunching on chicken and cucumber sandwiches for nearly a century.

DRINK UP

THERE’S chai, of course, and lassi — sweet, salted or spiced, made with buffalo milk. A street vendor will chop the head off a green coconut and hand it to you with a straw.

or there’s sour, refreshing chaas — buttermilk flavoured with cumin, coriander leaves and a local delicacy, black salt.

on College Street in the university district, book stalls line the road and spread out around the shabbily grand indian Coffee House. Here, waiters in spectacula­r headdresse­s are Gallically disdainful.

‘ Coffee house,’ says one, crushingly, when i ask for tea.

POWER PLAYERS

KOLKATA’S clubland is as elite as london’s St James’s, but worth penetratin­g if you can. the Bengal Club ( thebengal club.com), in a palatiala house ouse that once belonged to Victorian historian thomas Macaulay, was originally for whites only. today, the grandees in the leather armchairs are Bengali.

non- members can attend events: there’s a concert of Sufi music while i am here. the Calcutta Club ( calcutta

club.in) was founded in 1907, and open from the start to men of all races, but only recently to women.

the garden is a luxury in this crowded city and a lovely place to sip a sweet lime soda.

ESCAPE THE CITY

RETREAT to the Rajbari Bawali, a heritage hotel two hours’ drive away.

From here, stroll into the village with its romantical­ly tumble- down temples. Rooms from £79 B&B, therajbari.com

GETTING THERE

EMIRATES ( emirates. com, 0344 800 2777) flies from Gatwick to kolkata via Dubai from £456 return.

 ??  ?? Magnificen­t monument: The Victoria Memorial in Kolkata and (inset) a street vendor offers a cup of aromatic chai
Magnificen­t monument: The Victoria Memorial in Kolkata and (inset) a street vendor offers a cup of aromatic chai

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