Pandal Food

This is Calcutta, during the pujas. Of course thousands of people have shown up to worship the goddess. All right, not worship the goddess, worship each other, and food ...

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This is Calcutta, during the pujas. Of course thousands of people have shown up to worship the goddess. All right, not worship the goddess, worship each other, and food ...

There are about four hundred people in and around the pandal at midnight -- just a trickle, then. I think we got around five thousand in the early evening. Busy night. No surprise there. This is Calcutta, during the pujas. Of course thousands of people have shown up to worship the goddess. All right, not worship the goddess, worship each other, and food, and the fact that they made it through another year.

It's been a horrible year, which means people make more of an effort to celebrate -- they're all out tonight, in their kurtas and their saris. A few hours ago, they were all dancing and twirling with the crazy drummers, and getting high off the smoke and general frenzy in the air. It takes very little for people to cast off the whole city sophisticate thing and become the tribe that the pujas remind them they are.

Every year the faces change a little, and the clothes change a little more, but it's always the same people at the pandal. The cursory visit to the actual idols, token worship, the ten-minute awkward stand near the auditorium where some local hero wails lustily to the sound of …  well, Bollywood now, but it used to be Tagore songs. Then, the real pujas begin -- they eat like starving demons and recover on a chair in the park. And the food is usually greasy and horrible, but they don't care -- they wake up next morning ready to do it again. That's the beauty of pandal food.

I love crowds. I've been at pandals, some years, where it's just a family affair, and there are maybe fifty people around. These are all very high-class, old-school, Bengali zamindar family affairs. Boring. This year, I'm doing a pandal in Salt Lake, which used to be a swamp, and then it was a quiet suburb, and now it's a technology hub and almost a part of the city centre. Calcutta changes every year, even though the people who leave it and come only to visit complain that it doesn't change at all. New things come and go like mushrooms, living an...

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