The words of the 18th century French epicure Jean Anthelme Brillat-Savarin hold true even today in more ways than we can imagine. From our psychology to history, from how we perceive ourselves to our class, caste and preferred identities, food has a great capacity to unravel all of these. Take a look at a man's plate and you know exactly who he is and who he hopes to be. Amidst all this, of course, also lies the physicality of it all. Food is the basis of life; what we eat makes up our physical, emotional and social selves.
Ayurveda, the ancient "science" of medicine and food, is the basis of much of Indian cuisines. As an early body of knowledge, it was not the first one to recognise that food plays a big part in our well being. Like other theories of ancient and medieval medicine in Europe and the Arabic world, it divided all matter according to a theory of humours and postulated that disease was just an imbalance in these humours. The humours could be balanced by following a correct diet.
However, Ayurveda, which is not just one work but a unified philosophy of various theories and postulations handed down orally from ancient times, is significant in the fact that it is quite a comprehensive system, relevant even today. It may not be categorised as science in the modern world but it certainly is an "alternative" system of living-more holistic than much of what we practice. Many of the Ayurvedic principles of eating and cooking are already well entrenched in the Indian kitchens, even if we don't quite know these. Most of these are practical and rational and worth following-consciously.
Chef Manjit Gill, corporate chef, ITC Hotels, has been following the Ayurvedic way of cooking and eating even in his personal routine. One of the leading spokespersons of this way of life - and eating, Gill explains a few of the principles that we can incorporate easily in our own approach to food. So, here's demystifying the Ayurvedic Indian diet:
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