Secret Kashmiri Wazwan delicacies that a traveler must eat when visiting Kashmir

What can you say about a meal eaten against a backdrop of snow-capped mountains and lush green meadows? The simplest of food would taste like ambrosia when the back-ground is this picturesque. And when the food itself is of the most delectable kind, how can a meal in Kashmir not be special?

Cullinary experiences are one of the major motivations for travel to Kashmir. Kashmir holiday packages organized by Swan Tours ensure a close encounter with Kashmiri cuisine. The cuisine of Kashmir is so extensive that it can inspire a thick volume. And that’s not surprising, for the influences are as rich as they are varied. It is said that when Timur invaded India towards the end of the 14th century, he came with a retinue of skilled artisans. Among them were his cooks, who while passing through Kashmir, left behind a legacy of recipes that originated in central Asia. Succeeding Mughal emperors beginning with Akbar would make many contributions to the cuisine. Apart from the Mughal sway, other influences — from Hindu and Buddhist to Sikh — enriched the cauldron. The cuisine also has traces of the Persian and the Afghan in it, to say nothing of the British. And out of these myriad streams, a distinct Kashmiri cuisine has emerged. The state of Jammu & Kashmir has different kinds of cuisine to offer — Ladakh has it own characteristic food which can be sampled while on Leh Ladakh Tours, while the Dogra cuisine of the Jammu region is vastly different from that of the Valley. In Kashmir, food can be roughly divided into two kinds – Kashmiri Muslim and Kashmiri Pandit. There are many similarities and a few differences between the two cuisines. The dishes – from many of the meat dishes to vegetarian delights such as nadru (lotus stem), chaman (cottage cheese) and haakh (local greens) – are common, but the use or absence of a few ingredients marks the difference.

Kashmiri Wazwan Dish

Traditionally, Hindu Pandits do not use onion and garlic in their food. They use hing (asafoetida) instead to temper their food. There was a time when the Muslims used more fat and ghee to cook their food, while the Hindus preferred to use mustard oil. But those lines have blurred over the years.

Kashmir’s meat dishes are legendary. Take the ghushtaba and the rista – in which the meat is pounded with salt and cardamom using a wooden mallet till it is almost white and smooth. The ghushtaba goes into a yoghurt-based gravy flavoured with fennel and dried ginger powder, while the rista gravy is red – coloured and flavoured with dried coxcomb and Kashmiri red chillies. Then, of course, there is the rogan josh (meat cooked with Kashmiri red chilli) and yakhni (thickened with curd and flavoured with spices). And how can one forget the various kinds of karma — marchwagan (chilli) dhaniwal (coriander) kishmish (raisen) korma and so on?

What’s not very well known outside Kashmir is the fact that the region has a very rich heritage of vegetarian dishes too. Whenever you say Kashmiri food, you think of rich meaty food such as tabak-maaz (grilled lamb ribs) or aab gosht (meat cooked in semi evaporated milk). But actually, no meal is complete without a variety of vegetarian dishes.

Among these much-loved dishes is haakh — a green leafy vegetable, Kashmiri spinach, usually eaten steamed or boiled. Equally popular is the palak chaman, cottage cheese with spinach, or nadir yakhni, lotus stems cooked in yoghurt curry.

Kashmiri Wazwan pic

Then there are dishes such as gongi, or turnip cooked with black cumin seeds, cardamoms, cinnamon and dried coxcomb, manjehaakh, gaathgobicooked with leaves, and a tangy curry of sour apples cooked with tamarind and ginger powder. Waangan, or brinjal, is another vegetable cooked in many ways.

One of the most delicious – and expensive – mushrooms, the morel, comes from Kashmir. The kan gucchi is a delicacy, and often cooked with yoghurt in Kashmiri homes for special occasions.

Speaking of special occasions, you cannot talk about Kashmiri food and not mention the wazwan, a feast of dishes. Waza is the word for cooks, and wan is a shop – literally, wazwan means a cook’s shop. But in fact, it’s a multicourse feast that, once eaten, cannot be forgotten. Seven dishes must be served in a wazwan, and these are tabakhmaaz, rogan josh, daniwal korma, aabgosht, marchwangan korma, rista and ghushtaba.

A royal wazwan can include 36 courses – all carefully prepared by the master chef, or the vastwaza. Guests sit in groups, huddled around a huge metal plate called trami, from which they eat in a spirit of harmony.

Kashmiri Rogan Josh

What makes Kashmir food special is not just the taste but the delicate fragrances of some of the ingredients that are commonly used in the region. Because of its altitude and weather, almond and walnut trees are common, and the nutsare liberally used in cooking. Its peculiar red chilli – bright red but not very hot – adds colour and aroma to food, as do dried plums. Saffron, which grows in the Valley, is added to food -and many dishes call for fennel (stump, dry coxcomb (mawal) and dried ginger powder (saunth).

Information about Kashmiri Bread

Kashmir has a wide variety of breads, many of which are had for breakfast. Bakeries open early enough for residents to pick up their loaves and buns. The most ubiquitous Kashmiri bread is the baquerkhani: small, circular and available everywhere – from the relatively grand Ahdoo’s bakery in the heart of Srinagar, to small bakeries in the city’s bylanes. The baquerkhani is baked in tandoors and has a crisp, almost biscuit-like texture. Made of flour and usually decorated with a liberal sprinkling of sesame seeds, it is made in the mornings and afternoons, in time for breakfast and tea. Smaller and even more biscuit-like than the baquerkhani is the salty ‘kulchat. Crisp and quite like a rusk, it’s best had dunked in hot tea. Then there is the telvaru, a bun sprinkled with roasted sesame seeds, which also goes well with Kashmiri tea. The Kashmiri naan, meanwhile, is eaten with main meals, and is a lavish affair, thanks to the generous layer of dry fruits that coats (or fills) the regular naan. Tsot – the Kashmiri word for breads – and tsochvoru are small round breads, the crust topped with poppy and sesame seeds, while the lavasa is a piece of flat bread often baked with nuts.

A Kashmir meal ends with some delicious phirni or zafranipulao. A rich and sumptuous repast also needs a bit of kainva tea – green tea flavoured with nuts and saffron – to help you digest the many dishes that a meal usually consists of. Once you have eaten and had your kahwa, you know that paradise is not just about conic beauty – it could be gastronomic too.

For more information on Best of Kashmir Tour contact Swan Tours, one of the leading travel agents in India.

Information about Famous Tourist Destinations in Jammu and Kashmir

Kashmir
Kashmir

Information about Famous Tourist Destinations in Jammu and Kashmir

Arranged in the northern piece of India, Jammu and Kashmir is the substance of everything that is Indian-its way of life, history, custom, individuals, and common quality. The state has a long history incorporating around 4,000 years and there are numerous ancient locales, which give sign of human settlement in this area in those circumstances. The state was incorporated as a piece of India in 1948, when the then leader of Jammu and Kashmir consented to join the Indian league and the state was given an uncommon status under article 370 of the Indian constitution. Also Visit – Kashmir Paradise Tour

Kashmir is well known for its regular magnificence and has frequently been alluded to as the ‘Switzerland of the East’. The heart of the zone is the ripe Vale of Kashmir (known as The Valley), which lies between the Himalayas and the Pir Panjal mountain go. Here the atmosphere is gentle and the dirt very much watered. The Indus River courses through Kashmir. The stream Jhelum courses through the Vale of Kashmir. The mountains have much valuable woods.

Famous Tourist Places in Jammu & Kashmir

Srinagar
Srinagar

Srinagar

The Dal and Nagin lakes upgrade its beautiful setting, while the changing play of the seasons and the salubrious atmosphere guarantees that the city is similarly alluring to guests around the year.

The present city of Srinagar was established by Pravarasena-II, and Hiuen Tsang, who went by Kashmir in 631 AD, discovered it at an indistinguishable site from it is today. Laltaditya Muktapida was the most distinguished leader of Kashmir in the Hindu time frame, which finished in 1339 AD. Lord Zain-ul-Abidin (1420-70 AD), prominently known as ‘Budshah’, was an awesome benefactor of Sanskrit.

Akbar caught Kashmir valley for the Mughals, who blessed Srinagar with lovely mosques and greenhouses. The Sikhs ousted the last Muslim ruler in the reign of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1819. In 1846 the Dogras secured the sway of Kashmir from the British under the Treaty of Amrjtsar, and in 1947. Also Visit – Best of Kashmir Tour

Gulmarg
Gulmarg

Gulmarg

Gulmarg’s amazing excellence, prime area and nearness to Srinagar normally make it one of the chief slope resorts in the nation. Initially called “Gaurimarg” by shepherds, its present name was given in the sixteenth century by Sultan Yusuf Shah, who was propelled by seeing its verdant slants decorated with wild blossoms. Gulmarg was a most loved frequent of Emperor Jehangir who once gathered 21 distinct assortments of blossoms from here. Today Gulmarg is not only a mountain resort of excellent excellence it likewise has the most noteworthy green fairway on the planet, at a height of 2,650 m, and is the nation’s chief ski resort in the winter.

The adventure to Gulmarg is a large portion of the charm of coming to there- – streets flanked by inflexible roads of poplar offers over to level regions of rice fields mixed with pleasant towns. Contingent upon the season, nature’s hues could be the translucent green of spring, summer’s rich emerald, or harvest time’s brilliant shades, when red chillies trim windows of town homes. After Tangmarg, the move to Gulmarg starts through fir-shrouded slopes. At a certain point, referred to just as View Point, explorers by and large stop their vehicles for a couple of minutes and watch out a scene of snow-secured mountains, practically inside touching separation.

Drass
Drass

Drass

Drass (3,230 m), 60 kms west of Kargil making progress toward Srinagar, is a little township in the focal point of a valley of a similar name. Privately called Hembabs (“snow arrives”), it is prestigious as the second coldest occupied place on the planet due to the strongly chilly winters and overwhelming snowfall. Also Visit – Srinagar Gulmarg Pahalgam Tour

Winter temperatures are known to plunge to 40oCelsius underneath zero. Amid the four months of spring and summer, be that as it may, the valley turns exceptionally pleasant as the delicately encompassing slopes transform into green fields sprinkled with an assortment of wild blossoms. Of late, Drass has turned out to be well known everywhere throughout the world because of the broad TV scope it gotten amid the 3-month long clash at the Line of Control (LoC) between India and Pakistan. Its physical points of interest likeMushkoo Valley, Tiger Hill, Tolo-ling, and so forth., have progressed toward becoming some portion of India’s present day national epic.

Drass valley begins from the base of the Zoji-la go crosswise over which the 434 km Srinagar-Leh street passes. Generally, this street takes after the notable exchange course, otherwise called the ‘Bargain Road’. The most sensational piece of the street is the rising up the Zojila pass (3505 m), the essential entryway to Ladakh. It is an incredible component through which dealers and voyagers crossed the Himalayas, the world’s most prominent mountain run, as it lay on the course to Ladakh, Tibet, Central Asia and China. It has assumed basic parts in the section of exchange and social impacts amongst Kashmir and Ladakh and on to Tibet and Central Asia as the centuries progressed. It likewise denotes the extreme move between two differentiating situations, those of Kashmir Valley and the Ladakh level, inside the traverse of a hour’s drive. Also Visit – Kashmir Summer Package

When the last turn of the street at ‘India Gate’ close to the highest point of the pass is crossed, the rich backwoods of Kashmir all of a sudden vanish and the sensational depressingness of Ladakh with the regularly changing shades of its darker and ochre mountains abruptly hit the eye.

The number of inhabitants in Drass includes for the most part of Dards, who are descendents of Dard workers from the Gilgit valley and other Dard regions from down the Indus. They speak Shina, which dissimilar to the Tibetan-started tongues talked somewhere else in Ladakh, has a place with the Indo-European semantic family. Polo the genealogical game of the Dards, is played with specific energy and intensity in Drass. A tough people persevering with backbone the brutality of the world’s second coldest place, the general population of Drass can well be depicted as the watchmen of Ladakh’s entryway.

For a considerable length of time they are known to have arranged the impressive Zoji-la pass, notwithstanding amid the late harvest time or early spring when the entire part remains snow-headed, for transporting over merchants’ stock and to help stranded explorers to navigate it. By temperance of their authority over the pass they had set up an imposing business model on the conveying exchange amid the primes of the Central Asian exchange. They are likewise known to have kept the mail running amongst Kashmir and Ladakh over the Zoji-la, paying little heed to the season and the atmosphere. Also Visit – Vaishno Devi Srinagar Tour

Pahalgam
Pahalgam

Pahalgam

Arranged at the juncture of the streams streaming FromSheshnag Lake and the Lidder River, Pahalgam was at one time an unassuming shepherd’s town with stunning perspectives. Presently it is Kashmir’s chief resort, cool notwithstanding amid the tallness of summer when the most extreme temperature does not surpass 250C.

The Village of migrant is pristine by the attacks of advance. This is a curious little town settled on the banks of stream Lidder. This place is a fisherman’s joy and even a novice can get a rainbow trout from the hurrying streams. The extensive dark colored bear is a characteristic occupant of the thick Pine and Cedar woods.

Pahalgam has a green at 2400 meters over the ocean level. Outdoors gear, horses and skiing hardware is promptly accessible. Kolahoi is a prominent destinantion by means of Aru a beguiling glade. Pahalgam is base camp for the travelers of Amarnath.

Around Pahalgam are many spots of intrigue, and on the grounds that the resort is set between genuinely soak slopes, it merits enlisting a horse instead of strolling. Horse tolls are posted at unmistakable areas.

The most excellent of these is the tremendous, undulating glade ofBaisaran, encompassed by thickly lush backwoods of pine.Hajan, while in transit to Chandanwari, is a charming spot for an excursion. Filmgoers will remember it in a split second as it has been the area of a few motion picture scenes.  Also Visit – Vaishno Devi Helicopter Booking

Pahalgam has inside it no less than eight small towns, one of which is Mamal. There is a Shiva sanctuary here, for the most part thought to be Kashmir’s most established existing sanctuary, dating to the fifth century.

Pahalgam is additionally connected with the yearly Amarnath Yatra. Chandanwari (2,895 m), 16 kms from Pahalgam, is the beginning stage of the yatra that happens each year in the month ofSawan (July to August). The street from Pahalgam to Chandanwari is on genuinely level landscape and can be embraced via auto. From Chandanwari onwards the track turns out to be substantially more extreme, and is available by walking or by horse. Around 11 kms from Chandanwari is the mountain pool of Sheshnag (3,574 m), after which, 13 kms away is the last stop, Panchtarni. The Amarnath give in is 6 kms far from there. Amid the time of Sawan, an ice stalagmite frames a characteristic shivling in the Amarnath give in, which waxes and disappears with the moon.

Sonmarg
Sonmarg

Sonmarg

Sonmarg the Golden Meadow is at a height of 2740 meters and is portal to Ladakh.It has splendid backwoods of sycamore and high blooms, silver birch, fir and pine; Sonmarg is a position of captivating excellence. Three lakes vizKishensar, Vishensar and Gangabal can be seen from Nichnai Pass. 20 Kms east of Sonmarg is Zoji-La Pass at 3540 mtrs which leads into Ladakh Plateau.  Also Visit – Vaishnodevi Patnitop Package

Sonmarg is the base of a noteworthy trek that goes along a few mountain lakes –Vishansar, Kishansar, Gadsar, Satsar and Gangabal. Sonmarg is additionally the take off station for the drive to Ladakh over the Zojila, a noteworthy go in the Great Himalayan Range, through which the Srinagar-Leh Road passes.

Sonmarg is arranged at a separation of 84 kms from Srinagar, on the Srinagar-Ladakh Road. J&K SRTC works consistent transports and additionally touring transports amid the season. The course goes through the pleasant town of Ganderbal (21 kms), Kangan (40 kms) and Gund of the Sindh Valley, before achieving the resort. Fabulous perspectives of the Harmukh go rule the skyline up and down the course. Also Visit – Kashmir Honeymoon Tours Packages

Patnitop
Patnitop

Patnitop

112 kilometers from Jammu this popular slope resort is roosted on a wonderful level, at a height of 2024 meters crosswise over which the Jammu-Srinagar Highway passes. Wrapped by thickly lush woodlands, Patnitop offers wonderful excursion spots, tranquil strolls and amazing perspectives of the mountainscape of the Chenab bowl. In winter, the resort is by and large secured with a thick mantle of snow hence giving chances to different snow diversions including skiing. It is the best created traveler spot of Jammu and is second to none in its normal appeal, atmosphere, pine timberlands and rich green cover. The inhabitance of the cottages and Dak Banglow is full in summer months.

There is goal-oriented arrangement of Patnitop Development Authority to create Patnitop, Kud, Sud-Mahadev, Mantalai circuit. The costruction work of Mall Road at Kud is likewise proposed to be taken up. Trekking course from Kud to Patnitop-Sanasar has as of now been finished the entire vacationer circuit covers Jammu-Katra-VaishnoDeviji, Kud-Sanasar, Patnitop-Gourikund, Sudmahadev, Mantali, developing upto Latti-Dhuna.

Kashmir Travel
Kashmir Travel

For more information about famous tourist destinations in Jammu and Kashmir and Kashmir tour packages contact Swan Tours one of the leading travel agents in India.