Swedish Chicken Meatballs Recipe,
alias Homemade Ikea recipe!
Swedish Chicken Meatballs Recipe,
alias Homemade Ikea recipe!
Café Sundarban - My favourite place to get Bengali Biryani in Paris
However, it would annoy me slightly when they would say "Il est beau...comme tout!" ("He is beautiful...like they all are!")
Ohh! Why couldn't they just stop at "He is beautiful?!" The effect seemed a bit spoilt for me to be reminded that my baby wasn't sweeter, cuter, smarter or more adorable than any other baby. "Your Baby is The Most Beautiful Baby in the Whole Wide World" is what I wanted to hear!
But why did the adamant French attitude of seeing all babies equally take me so by surprise? Didn't it tell me 'How shallow are my thoughts to compare kids?'
Before having my own child, I rarely interacted with children, I would even run away from them. When faced with a child, I was uncomfortable, I had no idea what to speak to them about. Baby-talk was boring for me. My friends were all just like me, no one knew how to talk normally to a kid, they would either simper loudly or run away. Adults too would coo and baby-talk with kids who were much older than 10 years! A major confusion on how to show affection for kids. I saw only awkwardness around me and subconsciously, this is what I learnt too. A child of a celebrity star is openly and loudly favorited in India. And what happens to a lesser child?
Welcome and bienvenue to my very first blog! How could I not let it be about something sweet and enticing? :)
My very first discovery of Bengali sweets (in 2021) was at the Bengali shop 'Adda Ghar' (terrific name choice! It means 'House of Discussion'). They had the familiar delicious Bengali sweets. A Bengali friend confirmed to me that their sweets were really as good as the ones you get back home in Kolkata. By the way, I must add that Adda Ghar sells homemade ghee (and not commercial ghee), something that sets it apart from the other Bengali sweet shops (or maybe by the time you read this blog, the other shops would have picked up on the trend!)
An additional interesting feature is that the seating space within Adda Ghar is more than the other shops I have listed below. Once, about 20-25 Bengalis (including me) had met here for a really fun adda moment. Though space was tough, we had a grand time and the owner too had been very nice and accommodating to all of us!
Until a few years ago, there was no exclusive Bengali sweet shop, only generic Indian sweet shops that were owned and managed by South-Indians where you could find a mix of North Indian and South Indian specialties. But with the massive arrival of Bangladeshis lately (I think since the Covid times), slowly Paris is seeing many Bengali sweet shops springing out in many corners. Currently, there are a few of them concentrated near the Gare du Nord neighborhood of Paris, where you can even find upto 3 sweet shops, all of them located just next to each other! (all are within walking distance from Adda Ghar) Talk about stiff competition!
These are fait-maison patishapta, but if you were to go to the popular big Indian supermarket VT Cash and Carry (11, Rue Cail, 75010 Paris), you would find the frozen versions sitting there. These ones look divine!
« J’ai déviné que vous êtes indienne, j’ai vu comment vous bougez la tête ! », (« I knew you were Indian, I saw how you were shaking your he...