Feeding nostalgia
THE British Raj has been a long time dying. One vestige — the restaurant Veeraswamy — established 100 years ago in London’s Regent Street, is threatened with closure.
Before 1947, visiting Indian aristocracy patronised it. it catered also for ‘India-returns’ — a sentimental breed of white Britishers who wished to recall imperial aromas. The restaurant claims the abstemious Mahatma Gandhi as a client. That is implausible. In 1931, when Gandhi travelled to London to attend the Round Table Conference, he took two goats with him to provide him fresh milk. It is unlikely his goat would have been carried to Veeraswamy’s first floor restaurant. (It was such dietary obsessions that caused Gandhi’s acolyte Sarojini Naidu to complain: “It costs a lot of money to keep this man in poverty.”)
Pre-1947, Veeraswamy’s menu offered “Madras chicken curry and khurgosh ka salan (rabbit curry)”. Many have forgotten that war-time Britain survived on rabbit meat until, in the 1950s, the myxomatosis epidemic destroyed rabbits as a source of protein.
By 1952, as migration from the subcontinent to the UK increased, the menu adapted to a more discerning demand. It advertised: chicken korma, chicken vindaloo, tikka kabab,........
