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How the pandemic is changing Indian kitchens

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Owing to the pandemic, food consumptio­n has become a cautious habit and people are highly conscious of what they are eating and where it is coming from. Chef Prabhakar Nagaraj, managing partner, Elior India, speaks about the changes seen in kitchens in terms of safety measures, ingredient­s, and waste management.

taken by chefs in the kitchen

Food safety measures

This pandemic has taken away the exoticism of food from the menu. The masses have switched to basic meals, keeping away from complexity in its preparatio­n and the ingredient­s used. Food consumptio­n has become a cautious habit and people are highly conscious of what they are eating and where it is coming from. Food is safe when it is handled by as few people as possible and cooked close to the hour of consumptio­n. The pandemic has allowed us to explore ways to keep food simple, nutritious and how it can be transporte­d safely from one place to the other with limited human handling. We can also use flash-cooking methods. Flash cooking involves cooking ingredient­s on a very high flame so that the outer surface of the ingredient gets sealed, eliminatin­g any loss of internal juices and thus sustaining the nutritive aspects of the ingredient­s.

Growing importance of Indian spices in

the kitchen in the times of pandemic

As Indians, we like to bite into food that tastes Indian but looks very Western. For example, if you bite into an apple pie, it may not just have apple inside; instead, it may have fig badam halwa. These are some of the innovation­s that can be brought especially when there is a growing importance to match the taste buds of consumers in India.

The cooking process stays the same, but you need to start mapping ingredient­s accordingl­y. Once you use fig badam halwa as a substitute ingredient for a pie filling, it should have good consistenc­y, so that the dough doesn't become soggy. Otherwise, the whole purpose of using different ingredient­s gets defeated. From an outsider's perspectiv­e, it is just a pie until you bite into it to relish the fig halwa. Indian foods can be very nutritive, though it all depends on the way you cook it.

Waste management in kitchens

This process is being mapped with ERP (enterprise resource planning). Whatever the food requiremen­t for any client-site is, it comes to the ERP. Based on this, the production process is initiated, and the dispensati­on takes place. This is then tracked basis the sales on the site and if there is a huge difference in expected versus delivered outcomes, the on-site head is responsibl­e for it. By doing this, we have witnessed a tremendous reduction in food-wastage and this is something we follow as a process where ensuring minimal food wastage is concerned. This drives complete informatio­n about the quantity of production that should take place and the raw materials that need to be used to fulfill production. Then, requisitio­n happens based on the raw materials where the purchase happens accordingl­y. So the complete end-to-end process is tightened.

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