Saturday, 26 June 2021

KYF- Know Your Food

I hope you all are doing fine and have taken your 1st or 2nd dose of vaccination. Last week was quite hectic and I did not get the time and inspiration to write the blog. But ek kahawat hai na "Jab Jaago Tabhi Savera"


I am a big foodie and this blog is all about food. I think most of you would be familiar with these dishes but do you know about its origin and history? I think you don't. So let me walk you through the 'History' of some of the most unique food items in India.


1. Pani Poori


It is known by different names Pani Poori, puchka, gol gappe etc. It's one of the most famous street food in India and I bet each one of you has tasted it atleast once in your lifetime. But let me tell you something which you don't know. The origin of 'Gol Gappe' can be traced back to the Magadha region (erstwhile Mauryan Empire) when the puritans existed. Some traces of this dish can be found in Mughal texts also. One thing is sure that this dish rules the street food of India.




2. Kathi Roll


A Bengali street food which was started by Nizams of Bengal & Awadh, as handy, quick to serve for office goers had spread like wildfire throughout India. The word Kati or Kathi was added to the Bengali after the demand for rolls rose. As steel "seekh" were costly, Nizams thought of an alternative and used instead "Kathi" as seekh and thus came the name Kathi Kabab. As the popularity of Kathi Kabab spread so did the number of outlets offering it and its taste gets easily blended with regional taste.




3. Chicken Jahangiri


The Mughal Empire ruled for over 200 years. It hugely influenced the art, culture, architecture and food of the subcontinent. Mughliya cuisine is a confluence of Persian, Samarkandi, Uzbekistan and adjoining regions of Timurid Empire, Turko-Afghan food and lastly different Indian cooking techniques like those of the Rajputs, Eastern India, Punjab, Kashmir cuisine. This dish was started as a breakfast meal in Emperor Jahangir time and was widely famous among his courtiers and Harem, hence every bit of this dish manifests India in its true self- of accepting and creating a beautiful mix.




4. Pav Bhaji


"Pav"- a Portuguese word for bread and "bhaji"- a Marathi word for vegetables. The story of pav bhaji is synonymous with the rise of the Indian textile industry during the British Era. This dish was made up of the leftover vegetables cooked together and served along with 'pav' as lunch to the Bombay textile workers. It soon became a symbolic dish representing the 'chawls' and life revolving around it. But later was adopted by regular restaurants and today it's among the most preferred found item in the local restaurants and street food vendors.  






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Ciao! 


 

Friday, 11 June 2021

Story of a Double Agent

 

So today's blog is about an interesting guy who acted as a double agent and faked his death for 36 years.

                                    (Image source:- Google pictures)


In World War II, a Spanish spy named Joan Pujol Garcia approached the Allies to work for them. When they refused, he approached the Nazis, and they accepted him (giving him the codename Arabel). Once he earned credentials working as a Nazi spy, he approached the Allies again, this time getting a job as a double agent (codenamed Garbo).

This is where it gets unbelievable. He fed the Germans a combination of misinformation, true but useless information, and high-value information that always got to the Germans just a little too late. He even created a network of 27 fictitious agents while not a single one of these sub-agents existed. They were completely imaginary, but regardless, he submitted expense reports for them and had the Nazis giving him money to pay their salaries. At one point, when he had to explain why some high-value information got to the Germans late, he told them that one of his spies had died. He actually got the Germans to pay the imaginary spy's imaginary wife a very real pension for her loss.

Not only did his false information get the Nazis to waste millions of mark, but he was also instrumental in convincing the Nazis that the attacks on D-Day were just a diversion, and the real attack was yet to come, keeping vital German resources away from the front lines. The man got the highest honor of service from both the Allies and Axis in World War II, pulling off the greatest double agent move ever. He is the only person to ever get an Iron Cross from the Germans (which required Hitler's personal authorization, since he wasn't a soldier) and an MBE from King George VI.

Ciao!



Source :- Reddit , History.com


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