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 Excursions in Jammu and Kashmir

Kashmir
Kashmir

Information about Excursions in Jammu and Kashmir

The bait of lavish scenes, the thrill of having seen Leh – the high-height abandon, and the sacred of Vaishno Devi – if there is a paradise on earth; it is here, in Jammu and Kashmir. A heaven attempting to recover its legitimate place on the tourism outline the billows of militancy gradually scatter. Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh are the three sections that together shape the express, every so unmistakable from the other. Give us a chance to start with the capital city of Srinagar…

Srinagar

Srinagar is a one of a kind city, known for its lakes – the Dal, Nagin and Anchar; for its astonishing patio nurseries – Shalimar and Nishat; for the Shankaracharya sanctuary and for its mosques all flooded with the heavenly quality of nature that was nearly as though held for Srinagar alone. The waterway Jhelum likewise courses through a piece of the city. Also Visit – Srinagar Gulmarg Pahalgam Tour

City Lights

The water of the incredibly clear, with endless darshans Dal Lake house vessels moored along the banks. The eminent for the 300 or more columns supporting the rooftop, each made of a solitary deodar tree trunk. The close to Dal Lake has a sanctuary on top, worked by Emperor Ashoka’s child around 200 BC. The in Lal Mandi, has displays including represented tiles from Harwan. Open from 10:30am to 4:30pm. Shut on Mondays, and amid Friday Admission free.

The all-wooden is molded like a 3D square with a pyramidal rooftop ascending to a tower. Non-Muslims are not permitted inside. Hamdan Mosque Pather Masjid was worked by Empress Noorjahan in 1623 while the Tomb of Zain-ul-Abidin is on the east bank, between the Zaina Kadal and Ali Kadal spans.

Women Market Srinagar
Women Market Srinagar

Gourmet’s Delights

The unbelievable supper here called ‘Wazwan’, contains for the most part of non-veggie lover fortes. Round it off with green, spiced tea, Qehwa, served from shining samovars. Famous eateries incorporate Tao Café, Alka Salka, Adhoo’s, Mughal Darbar, all on Residency Road. Avenue Road has different restaurants like Lhasa and Sultan Bakery.

Shopper’s Paradise

Kashmir is a handiwork partner’s enjoyment. Get rugs, shawls, papier mache merchandise painted by master skilled workers, wicker bin, cricket bats, walnut wood antiques and so on. Nourishment items incorporate saffron, walnuts, almonds, shah zira, Kashmiri chillies and nectar. Silks and woolen weaved shawls can be purchased from the bazaars of Srinagar which are spotted with craftsmanship stores and shops.

Srinagar
Srinagar

Must Do

Remain in the Houseboats! These coasting homes on the Dal Lake and Nagin Lake, are gracefully pleasant, and accompanied all current conveniences. The Dal, Srinagar’s biggest lake, has a large number of them in long columns, some confronting the Boulevard while others are arranged separately or in gatherings of a few. The houseboats here require going to and from them.

Pahalgam: 95 kilometers from Srinagar, the ‘valley of shepherds’ is at a tallness of 2130 meters. In transit are intriguing spots like Pampore, Avantipur, Anantnag, Achabal, Kokarnag, Mattan and Martland.

Sonmarg: 87 km away, these ‘glade of gold’ components blanketed mountains against a cerulean sky. Sonmarg is the beginning stage of a noteworthy trek passing a few mountain lakes – Vishansar, Kishansar, Gadsar, Satsar and Gangabal. Convenience is accessible in JKTDC lodges.

Gulmarg: 52 km away, the ‘glade of blossoms’ has snow-topped mountains measuring the knoll. Its characteristic Golf Course is one of the most noteworthy on the planet and generally grand. Winter skiing is a piece of the winter celebration (December to January). The place of worship of Baba Reshi, a spiritualist holy person can be gone by in transit once more from Gulmarg. Also Visit – Vaishno Devi Helicopter Booking

Jammu: The waterway Tawi moves through its foothills and the Trikuta ranges give beautiful scenery to this previous summer capital of J&K! Incompletely on the grounds that it is the most critical railhead in the state and somewhat in light of the fact that it is the base for the blessed outing to Vaishno Devi, this support of Dogra culture and home to numerous sacrosanct, old altars, business capital of the state.

Namgyal Tsemo Gompa Monastery
Namgyal Tsemo Gompa Monastery

Facts at a Glance Access

Via Air: Both IA and Jet Airways fly every day from Delhi by means of Jammu, while IA likewise works non-stop flights from Delhi and Leh. Extra flights are squeezed into administration amid the pinnacle vacationer season.

Airplane terminal: 15 km encourage ahead, out and about spreading out of the city, lies the Srinagar Airport Snowbound in winter, the air terminal as a rule stays open from April to October. Taxi is the most helpful approach to achieve the city.

By Rail: Since Srinagar is too far out for Indian Railways, Jammu (300 km) is the closest railhead served by many express prepares.

By Road: Jammu and Kashmir State Road Transport Corporation (JKSRTC) administrations interface Srinagar with Gulmarg (48 km), Sonmarg (88 km), Pahalgam (96 km), Kargil (204 km), Jammu (290 km), Leh (434 km), Chandigarh (630 km) and Delhi (876 km). In the event that you want to drive yourself, be cautious on the avalanche inclined Jammu-Srinagar Highway. There are numerous eateries and agreeable guesthouses en route for a night end.

Dal Lake
Dal Lake

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