Mahmood Akbar is passionate about food. It is both his profession and obsession. From an early age, he watched his mother cook in the warmth of their Rawalpindi kitchen. And he was fascinated by the magical process, whereby seemingly mundane ingredients were turned into a variety of different, delicious dishes. It appeared to him to be nothing less than art.
Akbar may be a foodie, but he is no amateur. He studied hotel and restaurant management at the University of New Haven in Connecticut, United States. He now runs a chain of successful concept restaurants under the Salt’n Pepper umbrella, including a new Salt’n Pepper restaurant in Leicester Square, London. Another one of his feats is his latest cookbook, named after his restaurant, in which he provides exact recipes for spice mixes like garam masala and chaat masala — recipes that he has fine-tuned over the years.
The menu at the London restaurant is based on the menus at the restaurant’s branches in Pakistan. All the same recipes are used and none have been altered to suit foreign palates. The only addition is chicken tikka masala, a peculiar British favourite that is not as popular in the subcontinent. He explains how everything is made from scratch at his restaurants and how he abhors the fact that many restaurants, particularly those abroad, use packet mixes or bottled sauces for many dishes.
Akbar is adamant about describing his restaurant as solely Pakistani, even though most restaurants in England are referred to as ‘Indian and Pakistani’ in order to draw in more customers.
“Pakistani cuisine has a unique identity that is quite separate from Indian cuisine,” Akbar says. “While we have a shared heritage, Indian cuisine, as a whole, uses a far wider range of herbs and spices including hing, curry patta and a host of others. Pakistani recipes mainly use four main spices: mirch, dhaniya, zeera and haldi. With these four basics, we can make dishes as varied as nihari and karahi chicken.”
Just like Greek, Spanish and Italian cuisines were once lumped together as ‘Mediterranean’, almost all desi food abroad is termed ‘Indian’.
Akbar laments the fact that Pakistani food has little or no identity of its own overseas. He explains that his intention behind writing the cookbook was not self-promotion or publicity for his restaurant chain, but to encourage people to explore what Pakistani food has to offer.
“Many would call me a fool for sharing the exact recipes used in my restaurants when other establishments closely guard their recipes. However, I have never shied away from sharing my recipes. I want more people to experiment with our cuisine,” says Akbar.
The book itself is gorgeous. Akbar is a keen photographer and has done most of the photography himself. An area where many local cookbooks fail, the food in the Salt’n Pepper cookbook glistens appetisingly. It is beautifully presented. Akbar’s recipes not only make sense, but they also work; the two I tried turned out to be delicious.
His hara bhara chicken masala was a treat. His biryani is very different from my mother’s biryani, but as we are originally from Mumbai, ours is more Indian-style biryani anyway. It comprises recipes of traditional Pakistani favourites, such as nihari, beef pasanday, karahi gosht and shahi tukray. It’s full of recipes I’m itching to try, including harissa, kunna and amrood ka halwa. For the first time ever, I may try to cook nihari without resorting to a pre-mixed masala packet.
The recipes have all been tested personally by Akbar, as reducing commercial recipes to domestic proportions is no easy task. The book includes recipes from all over Pakistan. Heritage recipes are one of Akbar’s passions and he has been known to sit for three days with famous dhabay-wallahs to learn the tricks of one dish or another. He then experiments with these techniques, incorporating the good into his food and discarding the bad. He speaks evocatively of such dishes, like flat chicken that is cooked with a stone on top of it.
It is fascinating to hear him talk about the history and provenance of various recipes and I wish these had been included in the book. While the recipes are great, cookbooks abroad often include a little background about and a little personal explanation for each recipe, which would have been a wonderful addition to Akbar’s cookbook.
In fact, one of Akbar’s dreams is to collect and document heritage recipes from all over Pakistan. Hopefully, when Akbar shares those recipes, he will also share the captivating history behind each one.
Meanwhile, this cookbook serves as a comprehensive guide to the best of Pakistani cuisine. With its exquisite photography and well-tested recipes, it’s a must-read for any serious cook.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 9th, 2014.
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