Proper Mulligatawny Soup:It has been a long time
When I was a
young man of 17, just starting out in my working life in the big city, I
discovered The Taj Mahal in Streatham, south London. At this Indian restaurant,
just off Streatham High Road, was an experience that 4½ decades later I would
still hanker after. Mulligatawny Soup – a bowl of green, wonderful liquid with
a slice of lemon and a few grains of rice floating near the bottom of the ample
bowl. I loved Mulligatawny Soup produced by this delightful kitchen.
In 1972 I
left London for sunnier climes… well, Lancashire. It was actually dark, dismal
and it rained a lot and despite its quite high Asian population their
restaurants were a pretty poor show. And as time went by and things improved
considerably (not the weather I may add) I could never, never ever find a Mulligatawny
Soup that didn’t consist of something resembling a bowl of curry with some rice
throw in as an afterthought. Mulligatawny is GREEN! Mind you, no sleight on
Lancashire as I have never experienced The Taj Mahal’s Mulligatawny Soup
anywhere, and I mean anywhere other than in Streatham.
Around 2005 I
found myself in Streatham. It didn’t take long before I strolled along the High
Road and there on Leigham Court Road was The bloody Taj Mahal – just as I
remembered it! But surely after 33 years they couldn’t still be serving up the
same soup, no not possible but just maybe, maybe. My heart raced and that
usually only happens when I am watching Chelsea play or a pretty woman smiles
at me.
I didn’t
recognise the interior nor the menu which reflected dishes served up in 90% of
the UK’s curry houses.
Downhearted I
reluctantly ordered Mulligatawny Soup and Chicken Dupiaza…
It was early
evening, I couldn’t stand the anticipation and decided to eat at 6pm. And
whilst nibbling a poppadum or two I engaged the waiter who turned out to be the
manager. I told him I frequented the establishment in the late sixties and
early seventies and I asked who the owner was today and he told me that he was, having
bought the business from the original owner, Mr Khan. He further explained that
it opened in 1961 – one of the first in south London and after selling up Mr Khan
returned to India having purchased a tea plantation with his profits.
The soup
arrived – a bowl of curry with a slice of lemon. It was disappointing, the
chicken with pillau rice was OK.
The owner did
ask me how the soup fared, he could tell by my dejected reaction and I think he
felt a little sorry for me.
Anyway, if
you don’t mind fast forwarding to 2013 I’ll continue.
One evening
in July I found Rick Stein’s India on BBC’s iPlayer. I like Rick, India and Mulligatawny
Soup of course so I watched it knowing that the TV series is to sell a book. I
have them all (I know, I know)… and blimey, in one of the episode he visits The
Madras Club and they cook Mulligatawny Soup and it is GREEN!
Now, I have
bought cookery books on the strength that one of the recipes is my much longed
for but never forgotten soup. And since 1995 I have scoured the internet but to
no avail. I have never found a recipe that produces GREEN Mulligatawny. I even badgered
my Indian friend, Amit who works and lives in Pune – his wife was bound to
know?
Books, the
internet and Amit’s wife drew a blank but thanks to Rick things have changed.
So this
evening instead of sitting on my roof terrace enjoying the sunshine and a glass
of something chilled in heat of 40°C
I tried to recreate, the real, proper and pukka Mulligatawny Soup – the GREEN
version.
It wasn’t
such a bad attempt and over the months I am going to tweak it until it becomes
Streatham’s finest, Andaluz style.
Hi. I have just discovered this blog... my,my,my... real Mulligatawny Soup. I've had it from a tin but it was brown yuk. Thanks so much for this... I am going to try it.
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