Introduction
Indian cooking as it is known today, whether Persian or Moghul derivation can trace its origins to the northern part of India. It spread from there, often carried by travellers who reached the great plains through the legendary Khyber Pass, and evolved according to the local food resources.
Books on Indian cooking abound. This book differs in that, although the origins of the recipes could still be traced to Northern India, the recipes changed with the immigration of the Ismailis to the shores of Africa in years past, when the Arabic influence was paramount. This added a new dimension to their culinary evolution. More recent travel and immigration to Canada, where plenty of meat and fresh vegetables are available and where an emphasis on the nutritional value of food is a watchword, has led to further changes in cooking style, so that a dish prepared from A Spicy Touch is the mirror of the culinary history of a people.
You could eat these foods in restaurants, but if you cook them at home you have the added benefits of learning an art and introducing an exciting new fare to your guests. It may even become the conversational piece of the party. Traditional dishes in an ever-changing pattern of evolution, in keeping with the tempo and taste of the times, are both nostalgic and refreshing.
Talk of curry and Indian spices may conjure up an image of a flame-spewing dragon. This myth has no validity in modern cooking. The culprit in the pungency of the fare is the amount of hot pepper used. If more than necessary is added, it will naturally create a fire. The Indian cooking in this book is light and delightful and should not need a cooling system for an over-heated engine.
The recipes in this book have found flavour in many Ismaili and other homes and are presented here so that you may share the traditions and developments of a time-honoured Asian cuisine.