No Eating Standing!A Story by Chinmay ChakravartyKolkata or Calcutta is still considered the City of Joy! However, you'd need to adjust to its joys...to enjoy!Kolkata (Calcutta of
yore) is still called the city of joy, in my view, for one basic reason: things
are very cheap here considering the fact that it is one of the four metro
cities of India, apart, of course, from its treasure house of classic and
progressive literature, three Nobel laureates, its enriched culture and
heritage. To retain our emphasis, it offers the cheapest options in almost all
fields of life: for example, metro train fare is still pegged at minimum five
rupees which you’d find nowhere else across the globe; other public transport
fares are also the lowest in comparison with other Indian cities, it is a
different matter altogether if the comfort quotient here is probably pushed
into oblivion; auto-rickshaws are mostly shared for which you need only a
few coins in your pocket, and the app cabs are also forced to abide by low
fares due to which the aggregators indulge often in orgies of mad surge prices,
picking any occasion or the time; if you are a voracious reader you can find
all of types of books at throw-away prices with a novelty of book-vendors
enticing you to shop books; and of course, the culinary delights at
mouth-watering prices. Basically, it seems
that the enlightened people of the city are averse to paying high prices for
the basic amenities which they consider their rights, and for that life-support
system they are ever ready to sacrifice all thoughts about comfort or luxury.
The governments or the authorities, therefore, think thrice before deciding to
increase any public utility charges, and there ensues the politics of pricing,
if we can say that. This is public knowledge that the metro railway fares in
the city could recently be increased only after decades of indecision:
interestingly, some of the people who think too much about the indignity of
being pushed or crushed on a daily basis had been crying hoarse for years
urging the authorities to please increase the fares. Anyway, here we intend to
deal only with the eating part, that is eating outside, to be specific. Most of the public
eating places here consist of road-side joints, mobile vendors and make-shift
claustrophobic interiors claiming to be restaurants. When you look at metros
like Mumbai you find restaurants of all grades offering a range of prices for
various categories of customers at almost every street or lane or stations. You
realize the crux of it the moment you compare the cost of eating outside: here
in Kolkata road-side joints you get even tastier and steaming-hot items at
one-third of the price you pay in a Mumbai restaurant. Locals here, of course,
caution you: the kind of oil that the eateries use is of the lowest quality and
the kind of meat they cook is of a very suspicious nature which can make you
sick, if you gorge on the incredibly-low-priced dishes of all kinds; but as far
as they themselves are concerned they say they have got immune to it through
decades of gastronomic economy and so, nothing happens to them. Whatever be the
way of life here, you’re bound to get angry, irritated and disconsolate at
times, because it doesn’t suit you all the time. That day I had an
errand to accomplish in the afternoon session, and after a gruelling three-hour
engagement I finally freed myself. As I pondered whether to head straightaway
to the metro train station or to try fulfil an uncontrollable desire building
up inside my noble soul, I finally voted for the latter which was very simple
and humane: I just wanted to sit at a nice eating place and have a steaming cup
of tea with perhaps a snack. And then the ordeal! I walked up and down,
across, and around all the streets or lanes in the congested locality, searching
for a restaurant where I can sit in comfort. An hour elapsed, my legs aching in
protest; and I could find not a single place where I could sit to drink-n-eat.
All the while the roadside joints, the stalls displaying all kinds of food and
vendors carrying five-buck teas and cakes beckoned me, invited me or even
mocked at me. But no, I’ll not eat standing, I need to sit and eat like a human
being who really needs to sit down on various other occasions, I decided
firmly. My decision was to no avail as the city dogmatically refused to yield
me a place, and finally I had to trudge up a distance again to the metro
station to take a train home…joyless. On another day, to
make matters worse, I had my wife with me. We went to visit a museum, and my
wife having taken extreme pain to inculcate the ideals and meanings inherent in
all the architects on display our sojourn got expanded to several hours of
moving around and standing with the pangs of hunger suddenly starting to
torment us. When, finally, we hit the narrow and high-traffic street outside we
were ravenously hungry and desperate to sit down, again at a nice restaurant,
and have a meal. Someone advised us to take a stroll toward the nearest metro
station by means of which we would definitely find a hotel…he was sure one good
hotel existed. It turned out to be
an endless stroll; and again, only the vendors or tea-makers accosted us. My
wife starting to curse, and we nearly out of patience, finally, we did find
that good hotel. My discerning eyes, however, could find
nothing ‘good’ about the much-hyped place: the lone hotelier or the manager or
the cook was crouching behind a glass-paned wooden box displaying a few cooked
items, and there were only a few metal stools looking up to an elongated desk
across the side wall, supposedly the sit-and-eat positions. I took a courageous
step inside, and asked the person as to where be the menu or the items
available at that late-lunch hour. The hotelier or the manager or the cook,
chewing a paan (betel nut-leaf mix) in delicious abandon,
looked annoyed, and asked me to read the board displayed outside. In fact, I
noticed the longish board fixed quite high up outside while entering the place.
Unfortunately, reading the board would involve craning the neck to such an
acute upward angle that there was the risk of falling backwards and that was
even more dangerous as the traffic roared just by the side of the tapered stone
pavement. I decided to give up; my wife having already taken the decision to
walkout on hygienic consideration…the paan-chewing visage of the
hotelier or the manager or the cook presenting a rather dirty picture for her. However, we were
still firm on our stand, we won’t stand and eat. Finally, again, we had no
option but to trudge up to the metro station to take a train home…joyless. © 2021 Chinmay ChakravartyFeatured Review
Reviews
|
Advertise Here
Want to advertise here? Get started for as little as $5
Compartment 114
Compartment 114 Stats
72 Views
1 Review Added on December 29, 2021 Last Updated on December 29, 2021 Tags: India, Kolkata, Calcutta, City of Joy, Eating Out, Cuisine, Foods, Roadside Joints AuthorChinmay ChakravartyMumbai, Western , IndiaAboutHailing from a writers’ family in Assam, Chinmay Chakravarty has been writing since his school days. A post-graduate from the Delhi School of Economics, he started his career as a freelance jour.. more..Writing
|