The Zimbabwe Independent

‘Ghee’: The purest food on Earth?

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INDIAN food author Kalyan Karmakar making up for lost time.

Today, he enjoys the subtle touch of ghee in many of his favourite Bengali dishes, adding it to steamed rice with fried kaatla fish (Indian carp) for ghee bhaat, and swirling it into phyaana bhaat, a one-pot rice dish cooked with its own starch, mashed potato and a boiled egg. Even his khichuri (also spelled khichdi), a comforting rice and lentil porridge Karmakar associates with rainy days, is incomplete without the ubiquitous fat.

But it wasn’t always like this.

“I belong to the set of people who grew up under the impression that ghee is unhealthy and (I am) now making up for it,” he said, “It’s (essentiall­y) the purest food on Earth.”

For millennia, ghee has been a venerated staple of the subcontine­ntal diet, but it fell out of favour a few decades ago when saturated fats were largely considered to be unhealthy. But more recently, as the thinking around saturated fats is shifting globally, Indians are finding their own way back to this ingredient that’s so integral to their cuisine.

For Karmakar, a renewed interest in ghee is emblematic of a return-to-basics movement in India, which was years in the making, but fast-tracked during the pandemic, when “people started being more mindful about their food”, he explained. This movement is also part of an overall trend towards “slow food”. In keeping with the movement’s philosophy, ghee can be produced locally (even at home) and has inextricab­le cultural ties.

Making ghee is a labour of love for Nitin Ahir, co-founder of GirOrganic, a dairy farm and ghee producer in the city of Surat in the west Indian state of Gujarat. Instead of using imported cow breeds like Jersey, Holstein and Friesian like mass producers do, he gets his milk from his herd of Gir cows, an Indian-born breed native to the Gir hills and forests of the Kathiawar Peninsula. He allows his cows to graze openly on grass and makes sure that calves have their rightful first share of their mothers’ milk before milking.

His A2 ghee, a type of ghee that is considered nutritiona­lly superior, is made via the “bilona method” in which a small motoropera­ted machine moves clockwise and is anti-clockwise mimicking the traditiona­l motion of a handheld wooden churner, a process that he admits “isn’t the most cost-effective and resists large scale production”. Neverthele­ss, he estimates he has witnessed a 25-30% increase in demand for his ghee since the pandemic began.

At a basic level, ghee is a type of clarified butter believed to have originated in India as a way to preserve butter from going rancid in the hot climate. Churned cream or butter is simmered slowly until the moisture evaporates and any browned milk solids are removed, resulting in a sumptuousl­y rich, fragrant and nutty fat.

For many Indians, however, ghee is historical­ly something more sacred than just a cooking fat.

“Ghee is the final and purest form of milk – the last extract,” said author and food historian Pritha Sen. “It was considered the purest offering to the gods and the medium by which prayers were carried to the heavens.”

Its history dates back millennia.

“Paeans to ghee are found in the Rig Veda, a collection of ancient hymns and prayers dating back nearly 4 000 years,” explained Colleen Taylor Sen, a Chicago-based food historian and author of Feasts and Fasts: A History of Food in India. “According to legend, Prajapati, lord of the creatures, rubbed his hands together to create the first ghee, which he poured into flames to create his children.”

Ghee is also deeply woven into the fabric of Indian culture. Traditiona­lly, Hindus pour ghee into fire at marriages, funerals and other ceremonies as it is believed to be auspicious. In Ayurveda, a traditiona­l Indian system of medicine, ghee is considered a virtual panacea. And its wholesome qualities have been embraced by generation­s of mothers and grandmothe­rs.

While experts still advise against a highfat diet, some have begun to mellow their stance on the overall risks of saturated fat. And thanks partly to the high fat keto diet craze, ghee’s popularity has soared in countries like the United States.

“The whole fat conversati­on from the 1980s onwards was out to make saturated fats (the villain) — fortunatel­y, we understand the fat and cholestero­l space better now,” said celebrity chef Ranveer Brar, an author, restaurate­ur and MasterChef India judge

However, the West’s newfound interest in ghee may be somewhat misguided. For one thing, much is made of ghee’s high smoke point, which passionate advocates extoll for its ability to withstand higher temperatur­es than butter. But according to Brar, the objective of cooking with ghee “isn’t to get to smoking temperatur­e in the first place; (it’s) just to a point of extracting the flavours”.

Furthermor­e, in India, ghee is not consumed in copious amounts for a quick-fix or to help stick to lower carb macros (due to the fat’s satiating effect). Instead, the traditiona­l approach to ghee is one of moderation, harmony and grace. Here, the pale yellow, crumbly fat isn’t just blitzed into coffee; it stars as a final touch to dishes, moving slowly as small dollops of it are transforme­d by heat into a molten gold liquid, settling into every mouthful.

So how is ghee best used? Brar recommends using ghee with lentils or in dishes with pronounced lactic notes, such as yoghurt-based curries, like korma.

Ultimately, understand­ing ghee means understand­ing a collective Indian identity, an approach to food that is cohesive, holistic and balanced — and one where ghee isn’t a piecemeal part or overpoweri­ng presence. And when ghee is understood for its true essence, good things are sure to follow. — BBC Online.

 ?? ?? Ghee is an ingredient that's integral to Indian cuisine.
Ghee is an ingredient that's integral to Indian cuisine.

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