Saturday, September 29, 2007

Coffee Blues


Wake up. Brush my teeth. Go to the kitchen. Keep a half-mug of milk in the microwave. Put one teaspoon Nescafe instant coffee and some sugar in it. Inhale it and start sipping it. This is how my daily routine begins.

I somehow cannot kickstart a day without coffee. Surprisingly, it was not like this. I used to drink milk or Horlicks or Complan earlier when I was young and not allowed to drink coffee. Or at the best, what was described as 'haalu kaafi' (very milky coffee).

Go to any restaurant in the US and as soon as you order coffee, they ask "Black?"! Which senseless fool can drink black coffee? Of course I feel like shouting "NO! Brown!" the way R. K. Narayan shouted at a waiter in a New York cafeteria. But people here wouldn't understand and I give it up as a lost cause.

Every single day while I am drinking coffee, I remember the taste of coffee back home. The coffee in the outside world is a far cry from what we make in South India. I must say that I don't know how coffee tastes outside Karnataka but it must be somewhat the same. Now what is it about us that makes us crave for the same kind of coffee that we are used to bak at home? I can distinctly tell the coffee from New Shanti Sagar and Kadambam and Pavithra and Vidyarthi Bhavan hotels in Bangalore. The difference in the bitterness, the strengths of the decoction, the colour and not to mention the kind of tumbler that comes with it makes each a savouring occasion.

These are the days when the 'youth' 'hang out' in Cafes sipping Mochas and Lattes and soaking in the ambience of the place. Yeah, Right! If you pay Rs. 100 or thereabouts for a cup of that drink they dare call coffee, you might as well enjoy the ambience since you are not getting your money's worth in the coffee! This is the coffee culture from the West that is now seen in every corner in Bangalore.


Perfect coffee is prepared in a coffee filter which contains space for the coffee powder between the two cups. As hot water percolates through the powder from the top, the strong decoction is formed in the bottom cup. The dripping rate defines the strength of the decoction. Add a little hot and sweetened milk to some decoction from a height and you have a frothing cup of 'filter coffee'. Three years ago, if coffee was not like the this, I would probably have said, "Can I have tea instead?" like Manohar Malgonkar. But it looks like these things are here to stay. It's a strange world we live in. We don't get what we want and we cannot like what we get!

6 comments:

Praveen Krishnan said...

maga, what has happened to you? Why no consistent writing these days? By the way, I had already read the RKN link before :-)

Very very true, what you say about the Cafe Coffee Day!!! God alone knows how these days, people enjoy such places!!!!

Unknown said...

Yes guru... Sort of lost the mood to write.. I have a whole lot of 'bloggable' topics.. Let me see if I can put them up sometime....

Anyway, cant agree more about the coffee.

kopidunia said...

Black coffee...yuk! No, you're right, it has to be with milk, lots of milk. Nescafe has some very nice 3-in-1 mixes...simply the best! Cheers from another coffee and milk addict. www.kopidunia.com

Ashwini Ramakrishna said...

Yaa....Neevu HeLodu Sari........KaNri....E B'lore janakke Correct coffee concept gottilla ankothini.....
Aaha namma ammanu coffee madthare kaNri...En sakkattagi irutte...kaNri.........

I Like ur way of writing

Kishan said...

Hey prataapa,
Hengidhyo....

Nija helbku andhre....namm benglur filter coffeee ellu sigalla...

Chitra said...

My Coffee strainer is exactly like yours! yup anyday better than cafe coffee days'