Preserving Ancestral Recipes: In Conversation with Author Sudha Menon

Having recently released her cook book Recipes for Life, Sudha Menon talks about her passion and inspiration to preserve what is closest to her heart.

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Having recently released her cook book Recipes for Life, Sudha Menon talks about her passion and inspiration to preserve what is closest to her heart.

Across the world, the one thing that possesses the ability to bring people together regardless of all differences is good food. The cuisine of a place and culture stands for so much more than just sustenance and nourishment, though those are its two primary purposes. Food carries our relationships, our identities, our memories and longings—all ensconced within an unspoken language experienced through fragrance and flavour.

Author Sudha Menon’s latest book Recipes for Life captures the myriad sentiments and sensations accompanying food, by documenting family recipes from the lives of various renowned personalities. The book attempts to celebrate and pay tribute to family legacies stitched together through food, and in the process inspire its readers to document their family legacies too.

Author, columnist, writing coach and model, Menon dons many hats with aplomb, and has authored six non-fiction books, whose themes range from inspirational stories of the disabled, letters from eminent personalities to their daughters, survival advice to career women and the chronicles of her life as a feisty woman at fifty.

 

How did you come up with the idea for this book?

Sometime in 2016 my mother-in-law, a wonderful cook who pampered her family with great food for over 60 years, passed away from the ravages of dementia. The summer after she passed away, I missed her familiar telephone call: “Your share of pickles and garam masala is waiting for you,” she would say. “Come and pick it up.” Aai was the purveyor of all the goodies for the family, stuff that she would prepare with passion, and distribute with love to the extended family. When she was gone, an entire legacy of family recipes left with her because no one had written them down. Aai learnt the recipes from her mother and mother-in-law but we had never bothered to learn it from her simply because we took ...

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