Kamarkat!
Lights,
on. Catamarans, roll. Action, unfold!
The Kamarkat is a sticky sweet, that
is, it is a sweet and it is sticky.
It is a great sweet because it contains
grated coconut. The coconut is a great nut, grated or not. But you need it grated. Got it? Great.
To make this sweet you also need about a
quarter kilo of Jaggery which is a kind of a half-way sugar.
Then, you need Ghee which is a kind of
melted and clarified butter which takes you half way to heaven and leaves you
stranded there. Though why it is called “clarified”, I don’t know. It has never
clarified anything for me. A generous helping of it tends to cloud
the mind and slow down time. But you need it. Dollops of it. Well, not dollops actually,
maybe a tablespoonful.
So, you have the three participants in this
sticky sweet happy family drama: Coconut, grated. Ghee, dollops. Jaggery,
good.
Place a kadai on a stove. A kadai
is a kind of wok readily available in any wok shop. But take care not to drop
it on your toes, or you won’t be able to walk. So, place a kadai on the stove. Or place the stove under the kadai. Whichever is easier. Light the stove or it won’t work. Pour some water, about two handfuls, into the kadai.
Heat the water till it is hot. Keep heating it. Suddenly and without prior
warning, drop the jaggery into it. The surprised jaggery will not
know what to do. Don’t let it escape. Stir well so that it can’t climb back out
of the kadai. It will slowly start to dissolve and melt. Let it. Give it
a free hand to melt. But don’t keep your hands free. Keep stirring. Like Johnny
Stirrer. Keep stirring. Till the watery jaggery solution starts to become
sticky. “Sticky” as in adhering-type sticky, yes, and not “sticky” as in thin
and long, no.
Now throw the grated coconut into the sticky
mix. All of it. Start stirring. The coconut is a great nut and it won’t run. It can't run. But why take the chance? Keep stirring.
Keep stirring till all three ingredients,
i.e., waconut, coterie and jaggater, are confused and don’t know which one is
which.
Have a quiet laugh at your stirring deed.
Rest your arms. On your hips. Count from ten to one. Or from one to ten.
Whichever is easier. Did? Done.
The ghee has been watching all this
throwback action drama and is waiting to be thrown into the mix. Hah! Fool it
by applying it on your palms instead. Dig out the sticky mix one tablespoonful
at a time. Roll it between your palms to make little balls out of it. Repeat.
Repeat. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.
That’s it. The Kamarkats are ready.
Pop one into your mouth and work it like chewing gum. Happy? Can’t talk now?
Can’t open your jaws? My Anglo-Indian friends in school called this sweet
“stickjaw”. Now you know why.
Store the Kamarkats in a glass bottle.
Take one at a time, three times a day, for happiness.
Cut. Pack up. Kamarkats in bottle.
Lights off. Catamarans unroll. Action fold.
~ Sib Bahut Dur
***
KAMARKAT
What you need
Coconut - 2
Jaggery - 250 gm
Ghee - 3 tsp
Cooking instructions
Grate
the coconuts and keep aside.
Place
a kadai on the stove and add 200 ml of water.
Now
add jaggery to it and allow it to dissolve/melt.
Stir
continuously till it acquires a thick string consistency.
Now
add the grated coconut and keep stirring until the mixture turns semi-solid.
After
a few minutes apply a little ghee on your palms and make small balls from the
mixture.
The
kamarkat is ready to eat.
© Shiva
Kumar 2015