The dawns of my childhood were
redolent of filtered black coffee. We were woken up before the birds started
singing in the lush green village landscape outside home. The sun would split
the darkness of the eastern sky with its splinter of white radiance much after we
children had our filtered coffee with a small lump of jaggery. Take a bite of
the jaggery and then a sip of the coffee.
Coffee was a ritual in our home back
then. Perhaps our parents believed it would jolt our neurons awake and help us
absorb our lessons before we set out on the 4-kilometre walk to school after
all the morning rituals at home.
After high school, when I left home
for further studies at a distant place, the ritual of the morning coffee stopped.
It resumed a whole decade later when I completed my graduation and took up a
teaching job in Shillong. But I had lost my taste for filtered coffee by then; tea
took its place. Plain tea without milk – what is known as red tea in most parts
of India.
Coffee returned to my life another
decade later when I married because Maggie is fond of coffee – not filtered,
however, the instant variety of it. Nescafe was followed by Bru because the
blend of chicory in the latter added a peculiar earthy flavour to the coffee. Instant
coffee is too bitter if it’s black. So Maggie whitens our coffee with Everyday dairy
whitener. Nowadays we are discovering the various flavours of Tata coffee,
especially Classic, Premium, and Gold.
We never have it in the morning,
however. The morning sip is always plain red tea with a dash of lemon. Coffee
is reserved for the evening brew.
Coffee, like life, changes its
flavour with time. Maybe because there aren’t many good memories that linger in
my life from childhood, I have never missed black coffee in my adulthood.
Maybe, this is how life is: rituals evolve, flavours shift, likes change.
Back then, in my childhood, we
produced our own coffee powder. Yes, we had quite many coffee bushes around our
ancestral home. A few of them still remain and my brother looks after them. He
sells the dried beans. Maybe, he too doesn’t want his childhood flavours to
linger.
Yesterday, I started reading
Arundhati Roy’s book on her mother, Mother Mary Comes to Me. I ordered the
copy quite reluctantly because I knew her childhood wasn’t a happy one either.
She and I were born in the same period, she being just a year and a half younger
than me. Most children who grew up in that period in Kerala wouldn’t have had
happy childhoods. That’s my understanding.
After much hesitation, I ordered “Mother
Mary’s” biography by her daughter. Merely because Arundhati Roy is
irresistible. I am in the initial pages of the book now and the deep agony in
the lines, the agony of a little girl who grew up in Kerala of the 1960s,
reminds me of my bitter mornings sweetened by lumps of jaggery.
Right in the first chapter, Arundhati
Roy informs us how she left her mother soon after school, at the age of 16. “I
left my mother not because I didn’t love her, but in order to be able to
continue to love her. Staying would have made that impossible.”
I left my home and all its clockwork rituals after school, at the age of 15. Black filtered coffee was one of the rituals. Was mother another? I won’t tell. Certain things are hard to tell. So, I shall continue to have my red tea and experience all the turbulent emotions that “Mother Mary” is going to create in me in the days to come. As daughter Roy says in the book, we need our tormentors too.
PS. This post wasn’t
intended at all. Blogchatter’s blog hop prompt for
this week provoked it in spite of myself.
I have memory of asking for Verumkappi, in the special steel glass. I had a dislike for milk. And I took up to milked coffee only rather late. And I had a great detest for the cream floating on the milk. And I am a coffe- lover. Waiting for your take on Mother Mary by Roy.
ReplyDeleteMilk is detrimental to human health except mother's milk in infancy. That's true about most species. People feed cow milk to cats which actually harms cats. My cats won't ever drink cow milk because they get proper food- fish.
DeleteI'm enjoying the lacerations of Mother Mary. It's piercing...
What a heartfelt post. You have had quite a journey and what a long way you have come. The idea of having coffee bushes right outside your house seems quaintly foreign to me since I was born and brought up in the middle of a bustling old city. Looking forward to your review of Roy's memoir.
ReplyDeleteI'm black in the same village, as if completing a circle. In physics, the circular motion has no displacement. A futile motion!
DeleteWell, life is really absurd.
I'll definitely review Roy's own Mary. I think this is the best book AR has written.
Hari Om
ReplyDeleteSuch prompts often reveal the poignant... And such books, perhaps, catharsis.
Unfortunately, coffee is one of those consumables that my body rejects. Even the strong smell of it brewing can induce severe nausea. The physical reaction is exactly like to any drug... Which caffeine is. When I take tea, it is with the mere shake of a leaf at the pot! YAM xx
This catharsis is going to be explosive for me, I feel. This was why I hesitated to buy the book. AR can be fatal!
DeleteFunny how various morning rituals evolve.
ReplyDeleteOurs were born of certain necessities.
DeleteCoffee & Bourbon biscuits
ReplyDeleteSo this was way back in 2009, when I was in 5th std. It was a typical chilling winter of Delhi, which evoked romantic nostalgia, where everything used to be covered with blanket of fog. Maggie ma'am had conducted some sort of class test & I was asked to carry all the notebooks to her quarter in teacher's colony as a punishment because I was found cheating, so fair enough:)
That day I was suffering from common cold along with sore throat which inturn had changed the tonal quality of my voice. When I reached her quarter she rebuked me again for my misbehaviour in class & as I was about to leave she offered me a cup of Nescafe coffee thinking that it would bring some kind of relief to my throat pain. The coffee was complimented with two things, Bourbon biscuits & 10 min. lecture on importance of conversing in english. As soon as she was done with it I asked, " Ma'am, can I get two more biscuits?"
I had a hearty laugh reading this. I read it again. And again. Each time with delight.
DeleteMaggie 'Ma'am' gave me too some such lectures back then 😊
Dear, you really missed Maggie ma'am's cakes, let alone coffee with Bourbon biscuits. We, some of her colleagues used to enjoy that.
DeleteSKM
Sawan staffroom was redolent of Nescafe during the break!
DeleteNot sure of the reason why. Adding sugar to coffee makes it bitter.
ReplyDeleteThe best way to enjoy coffee is the way you prefer it, so adding sugar is entirely a matter of personal taste.
DeleteI love my coffee, filtered preferably and it takes me to my comfort zone in an instant.
ReplyDeleteFor black coffee, nothing is better than filtered.
DeleteA beautiful reverie and an ode on coffee! Sir, you always treat the simplest of pleasures as heavenly bliss in your writings! Loved the read and also inspired once again to treat similar simple subjects in my writings!
ReplyDeleteDawn
Maybe old age makes us mellow. Thank you for this great compliment. I had seen your comment above, responding to a past pupil of ours though I wish he mentioned his name too. He writes so well.
DeleteShall I look forward to your writings?