Pongal is a festival, and it’s also Tamil Nadu's authentic, ancient recipe. In fact, for millions of Tamilians across the globe, Pongal – the dish – is a daily driver. It is also what oils the wheels of Kollywood – the Tamil film industry!
Now, even if you've lived under a rock for 3,000 years, you'd still know, that Pongal is a kind of thick gruel made of rice and lentils. Yup, it's not unlike the khichdi.
It's like a remake that looks like Pongal and uses the same ingredients, but isn't quite up there in taste. That's why it's a much bigger hit as a breakfast in Tamil Nadu than khichdi ever was in North India.
And my choice of metaphors are cinematic for good reason. It brings us to our first stop; Kodambakkam, the birthplace of Tamil cinema, and home to AVM studios.
Typically, a movie set is like a mini factory. It takes a hundred or more workers to get everything ready for that first shot of the day. And the one thing that fuels them all, is inevitably, the Pongal.
One plate of slightly runny pongal with sambar, coconut chutney and onion-tomato-red chilly chutney will give you the strength to stand still in the Chennai summer for five hours, until lunchtime.
The history of Pongal is the history of the Tamil people. Archaeologically, it all began in 10,000 BC when parts of the world were still in the Stone Age. Escaping mammoths, the people of the Indus Valley civilization began farming rice in the step fields near Kashmir.
But even before that, they ate wild rice. Five thousand years later, in south India, some genius of a cook ‘accidentally’ boiled rice and Moong dal together, to create the Pongal. This was such a hit that much later, around 200 BC, the ‘Indravizhya’ festival celebrated at Poombuhar came to be called ‘Pongal’.
Despite most civilisations across the world being familiar with rice, lentils and the process of boiling, no one, anywhere else on the planet thought of the simple five-step Pongal recipe, except the Tamils!
In the Greek recipe, rice, lentils and beans were boiled together and finally doused in red wine. Today, the Greeks have done away with rice and use red wine vinegar. It’s called Faki Soupa in Greece. Sounds like a rapper’s pseudonym, doesn’t it?
And here are its other names: Khichdi (north India), Bissi Bhelle Bhaath (Karnataka and rest of south India), Mujadarrah (Lebanese), Kung Pao (Chinese), Koshari (Egyptian).
The name Sakkara Pongal is misleading because 'sakkara' means sugar. Traditionally though, we use jaggery.
Th Pongal begins its circuitous travel around the gut, causing a mild numbing of the senses. Much like its trajectory in our systems, the dish has meandered across country, and even the world.
As Indian food and medicine’s cultural influence spread through Greece, Rome, the Far East and European countries, it took along with it the Pongal, which today holds more aliases and visas than James Bond.
And yet, despite the similarities, there’s still nothing quite like it.
(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)