Sensations can be one of the things we most take for
granted. Yet there are many of us who romanticise that first gush of cool air
in November in Bombay or the first drop of the most awaited rain in the hot
months of July or it could be the smell of Cuticura powder that reminds you of
your childhood. The point is, we are barely aware of these sensations unless
they strike us in unexpected ways.
For me, there is one particular sensation that instantly
makes me feel comfortable. It comes everyday when I reach home in the evening
and smell the food that is being cooked for dinner. It is that beautiful smell
of ginger, cumin and garlic crackling in oil with many other spices. For those
of us who have stayed away from home and Indian food for some time at least, we
know how comforting that smell could be. And despite walking home to this smell
everyday I still appreciate it. That smell is heaven. That smell is home.
It so happened that a few months ago on an early autumn day
I was at a friend’s for dinner. That night the temperature fell unexpectedly
low and my friend lent me her jacket so that I wouldn’t feel cold while walking
back home. The very next morning I brought it to the department so that I do
not forget to give it back to her. But forgetful that I am, the jacket remained
in the department room for a good two weeks before I could return it. Upon
returning it, the first thing my friend did was to smell it. I could not
believe my eyes! I did not know whether to be offended or appear calm. At that
point, all I managed to do was tell her (with a smile on my face) that I do not
smell. I did not know what to make out of that incident for a long time because
she was my friend and offending me would have been the last thing on her mind.
But unresolved questions have their way of getting resolved and understood in
due time and for me that time came when I spent the Valentine’s Day Weekend (as
we called it) in Plzen- the European City of Culture 2015.
You see, the people in my friend circle are those who have
lived in at least 4 different cities in the last ten years and have interacted
with people of many nationalities. And more often than not, they would talk
about the strange ways of Indians and in particular, about the way they smell.
This topic was brought up and discussed extensively at the dinner table on one
of the nights in Plzen. Their common experience of Indians was that we always
smelled of Indian food. My friend explained the jacket incident mentioned
earlier saying she expected it to smell the same. At this point I remembered that some other friends had long ago told me that Indians smell of food and it dawned on me that this statement was not meant as an offence but just an observation. I know this because some of these people are crazy about Indian food.
So the primary culprit is the Indian spices and techniques we use in cooking our food. As one of them explained, some compounds of garlic, onions and a few other things pass through the stomach linings and are absorbed directly into the bloodstream causing body odour. They demonstrated this by telling how the bachelor Indians started smelling different once they got married and brought along their wives who cooked Indian food for them. They asked me if I could notice the change in the way they smelled. Obviously I couldn’t!
So the primary culprit is the Indian spices and techniques we use in cooking our food. As one of them explained, some compounds of garlic, onions and a few other things pass through the stomach linings and are absorbed directly into the bloodstream causing body odour. They demonstrated this by telling how the bachelor Indians started smelling different once they got married and brought along their wives who cooked Indian food for them. They asked me if I could notice the change in the way they smelled. Obviously I couldn’t!
If you guys do not believe me check this out. Till that
weekend in Plzen I did not know that a common stereotype about Indians is that
we smell bad. Going through the different links that Google provided me on the subject only
reassured me that-
- Indeed Indians smell bad and the older they get, the worse they smell. Especially men.
- The food is the main culprit. Too bad for Britain where Chicken Tikka Masala has officially been declared the national food
- That people attribute the bad smell to lack of hygiene culture in India. Indians apparently do not bathe!
- And Americans can be really idiotic! Not to mention extremely racist.
Well, it might be a stereotype for all we know. Or maybe we
really are smelly and need a European/ American to make us aware of that fact.
So where do we go from here? My solution is to liberally use my Victoria’s
Secret perfume, to afford which I had to sell my kidney last summer. Once this
bottle is over, maybe I will ask my friend who is an expert at making cosmetics
with home supplies and natural ingredients to teach me how to make perfume so
that I do not have to sell any other body part.
So while we figure out what else to do about our foul smell let
me talk about this completely unrelated and hilarious issue that my Iranian
friend and I cannot stop obsessing over. One of the first things I realized
when I moved to a cold country is that the weather here makes your eyes water
and nose run. So you always have to carry tissue with you so that you can clean
your nose at regular intervals. In the beginning when I was still getting used
to this I noticed that somehow I had managed to slightly irritate my friend
with whom I was taking a walk. Soon enough he told me the reason. You know, how
in India and many other Asian countries we softly sniff when our nose runs a
little even after draining it out completely? Well, in these parts, sniffing is
offensive. Especially if women do it, it is considered uncultured and
unladylike. So I asked him what to do
when I do not have enough juice in my nostrils to blow it out. He said that
there is always enough juice if you blow it out properly and then demonstrated
that by blowing into his handkerchief loud enough for me to get shocked for a
second and for my eardrums to go numb for a while. That lesson did not remain
for long in my mind until last November when a series of illnesses made me have
a runny nose till the beginning of January. In one of the department meetings
on Monday I sniffed quite loudly (obviously like it was the most natural thing
to do) and everyone just paused and looked at me. I wondered what was
happening. And then my supervisor laughed and said “It’s okay Tess, we all do
things in India that can be perceived strange”. It was only then that it dawned
on me that the meeting had been disrupted because of my sniffing. I shared this
episode with my Iranian friend who I generally go to for discussing the strange
ways of the Europeans and he never disappoints me and gives me the semi-Asian
assurance that I seek. That day at the dinner table he complained of people
generally blowing their noses loudly at the dining table while the rest were
eating and we both agreed that it’s seen as a bad practice to do it in front
of people if they are eating in both our countries. Funnily, right at that moment, a friend at the table blew his nose hard enough for the whole restaurant to hear. And no, nobody
blinked. Because that was a normal thing to do. Because many other people at
other tables were doing the same. But, oh my, try sniffing softly and then try to
ignore the stares!
As the Iranian said, when it comes to nasal etiquettes,
Europeans are like elephants who blow their trumpets anytime and anywhere.
Oh, and we are smelly. Now please excuse me while I go and
have some khichdi with garlic pickle.
Until next time.
9 comments:
Tess...this is one of the most hilarious post I have read in such a long time. Your keen observation for details mingled with your kind of humour makes us ponder at the ludicrousness of things, while laugh at the same time. Need I say your title for the post is nothing short of amusing. I loved this!
Tess...this is one of the most hilarious post I have read in such a long time. Your keen observation for details mingled with your kind of humour makes us ponder at the ludicrousness of things, while laugh at the same time. Need I say your title for the post is nothing short of amusing. I loved this!
Hey Curry Muncher,
What are you blabbering about? Yes, many Indians smell.
If you cook all those spices in a closed place, all those spicey gases (yellow powder + oil) seeps into clothes in the closet. I had this punjabi guy as a cube mate, yes, he used to smell curry. As an Indian, I smelled it.
However, I don't smell "that curry smell" back in my village. Yes, curry smell is the least offensive smell in India; in fact, is is not seen as negative.
Yes, Europeans/Americans smell curry (not so much through burps or through body cavities), but by the clothes, which keeps that curry smell. They see it as a negative smell; in India, it is either neutral or positive. Yes, in this sense, it is a dispute of tastes.
It is even hard to get rid of curry smell in American homes. Sometimes, many new home buyers complain of the homes bought from Indians.
You know, chinese have bad breath. EVen Indians feel the bad breath of many chinese.
http://middlekingdomlife.com/relationships/chinese-girls-with-bad-breath-t540.html
Yes, the "curry smell" is something I've noticed ever since I moved out of India. And as someone else mentioned, I think the smell lingers around us more because of clothes that soak up the odors and not because of any bodily reactions. In India, we never notice it because most houses are well-ventilated with windows left open all the time, which is not the case in cold weather countries.
As much as I love cooking and eating Malayali/Indian food, I don't want to smell it/smell of it, all the time. Don and I work around it by keeping all the doors to bedrooms etc tightly closed while cooking. Even the bathroom door is shut because after a refreshing bath, I don’t want to dry myself with a towel that smells of last night’s sambar :/ Despite all this, our apartment still smells of food for hours after I’ve switched off the stove, because our kitchen doesn’t have a door and our apartment is almost fully carpeted. The carpet in the living and dining area just soaks it all up.
This Mallu vine sums it up: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XzilBultUxo :D :D
In summary, you don’t have to liberally apply your VS perfume. Just put away your coat and ‘going-out clothes’ as soon as you get home :)
Hair is something else that soaks up the curry smell. Haven't figured out a way to avoid this, other than washing my hair every day. Maybe I'll wear a shower cap while cooking instead :P
Cheryl,
This is how to remove curry smell:
http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview/id/554369.html
You know the cause of curry smell? It is Hinduism, which helped spread the bad smell. There is a relaitonship between false religions and bad smell!!
Anonymous, you are hilarious. I assume you've never cooked bacon/steak/any meat. Going by your theory, there must be a relationship between all religions and "bad smells".
Cheryl:
I aint kidding. You know that many curry ingredients like turmeric is used in Hinduism to worship idols. That's how Satan and his minions (gods of Hindus) taught these heathens to worship them. Next they want to worship food too (annam parabrahma swaroopam); thats how Devil led these hindu heathens.
Even in the middle ages, Celtic Christians called European pagans as smelly. Search in books.google.com for "smelly pagans".
Once we eradicate false religions, we can remove that curry stench.
Ameen!!
I don't know why I hadn't read this post yet! Love the way you observe people, things and cultures. And of course, your hilarious take on the ways of the world.
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