Guava Raita


There are certain things that schools in India guarantee — a good education, lifelong friendships and a peruwala outside every school gate. For those of you who didn’t go to school in India, a peruwala is a guava vendor and there’s one situated outside each school gate with a black Atlas bicycle and flat cane basket tied to the “carrier” over the rear wheel. The basket lined with grass is quartered with rope to separate the guavas by size and price. In my days, 75 paise (roughly 15¢ in 1988) would fetch you the biggest guava on the cart. It was harmless and inexpensive treat that made recess just that much sweeter. Cut into 4 quarters, each guava would then be filled with chili and salt — the thought of which freaks my firang wife out to this day. The guavawalla is a phenomenon I couldn’t quite understand. Why are there only peruwalas outside school? There’s never an apple cart or even an orange cart. Either way, memories of my post-lunch guava with friends are something I cherish to this day.

Ingredients
20 Monaco biscuits (or salty crackers)
2 ripe Guavas chopped
1 tsp finely chopped Coriander
1 cup Yogurt
4 tsp ground Peanuts
1/2 tsp Sugar
Salt to taste
1 tbsp Olive Oil
1/4 tsp Mustard seeds
1/2 tsp Cumin seeds

Method
Beat yogurt in a bowl till it is a thick liquid
Mix coriander, peanuts, sugar and salt into the yogurt
Gently add the chopped guava into the bowl
Heat oil in a small pot
When the oil is hot add mustard and cumin seeds
When the seeds start to splatter reduce heat and pour the tempered mixture over the guavas
Mix well
Lay out the crackers and place a little dollop of the raita on each cracker

Comments

Manasi said…
Hmm, you do bring up an interesting point. My snack of choice was the Chanya Manya Bora. So many for so 50 paise, and the seeds could be reused as tiny missiles!
MR said…
oh perus!!!
nice one never get them here
but peru and raita that is
interesting.
Sheetal Kiran said…
Ahh peru, salt and chilli ... I refuse to have peru any other way! ahh peru raita .. sounds very interesting!
SB said…
lovely recipe and pics :)
Anonymous said…
The peruwalas would also hang out near college gates ! And how about those black chaakus they would use to slice the fruit ? I bet they were never washed.. but loved those perus anyway..
Joanna said…
Your dear wife has not tried guava, oranges, apples and other fruits dipped in a mix of sugar, salt and chilis? This mixture on fruit is the snack of the Gods. I never get the mix quite like a Sikh friend of mine in Thailand, who offers this to visitors along with the best chai tea. This is the issue with being a farang (firang)--you never quite get the spices just right.
Anonymous said…
"My friends" used to shop lift from a poor peruwala, how heartless was that!
Anonymous said…
now peru is Rs.6 for one. Rs. 36 per kg....still much cheaper I guess.
Anonymous said…
I am reading this article second time today, you have to be more careful with content leakers. If I will fount it again I will send you a link

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