Stop Calling All South Asian Food “Curry”

Author Naben Ruthnum explains how cuisine—and literature—get oversimplified.

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For many, the word “curry” conjures up the image of an Indian takeout restaurant. But in his book, Curry: Eating, Reading, and Race, Canadian author Naben Ruthnum asks that we challenge our perceptions of the dish.

According to Ruthnum, a guest on the latest episode of the Mother Jones food politics podcast Bite, “curry” tends to refer to South Asian dishes in general, flattening an entire network of communities to a single region.

So Ruthnam, also a cultural critic, has named a genre of literature after this perception of desi cuisine: The “currybook,” he explains, is often memoiresque in style, and repeats nostalgic tropes of a distant homeland, a disconnect between Western culture and South Asian culture, and a generational divide. Ruthnum says currybooks are what publishers typically want and expect, but to South Asian writers, they can sometimes feel cliché and limiting.

The story of how “curry” became shorthand for all of South Asian cuisine is more complicated: It includes trade, travel, cultural melding, colonialism, and displacement. “I think the actual story of curry is an authentic one,” says Naben. “But it tends not to be the authentic story that people are looking for.”

Authentic to Ruthnum’s own history is his mother’s Madras Prawn Curry, shared below. In this recipe, Ruthnum finds no mystical, distant connection to an imagined “motherland,” but does find some Christmas memories and flexible, away-from-home adaptations. 

 
Ingredients:
 
12 – 16 large prawns
2 Tbsp Chopped Coriander
2 tsp tamarind
1 tsp methi (fenugreek)
4 – 8 curry leaves
1 cup water or coconut water
4 chilis
1.5 tsp salt (to taste)
 

Method:

In a large pan heat some olive oil, sauté the prawns with a sprinkling of turmeric.

Do not overcook the prawns.

Remove and put aside.

Throw away the liquid.

Heat up some more oil, add the puréed onion; stir till soften and lightly browned.

Make a pit in the middle add the curry powder mix (tamarind, curry leaves, methi, ginger, and garlic in some warm water). Add a little bit of olive oil on top and let cook on low heat.  Allow the curry to cook thoroughly with the lid on, but checking often. Add a little water or coconut water to prevent sticking, then mix the onion with the curry. Now is the time to choose the thickness of your sauce. This should be a fairly thick one. Add the chopped up tomatoes.

Let simmer for a few minutes.

Add the prawns.

Simmer some more.

Add your chopped up coriander and serve with rice or rotis.

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Mother Jones was founded to do things differently in the aftermath of a political crisis: Watergate. We stand for justice and democracy. We reject false equivalence. We go after, and go deep on, stories others don’t. And we’re a nonprofit newsroom because we knew corporations and billionaires would never fund the journalism we do. Our reporting makes a difference in policies and people’s lives changed.

And we need your support like never before to vigorously fight back against the existential threats American democracy and journalism face. We’re running behind our online fundraising targets and urgently need all hands on deck right now. We can’t afford to come up short—we have no cushion; we leave it all on the field.

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