Cooking

I’m in the process of my weekly cooking. I’m making onion and potato sambar which should last me for about four meals – one tonight, and for three meals during the course of this week. I have been on and off the phone to my mother, as she has been giving out expert instructions from the other end of the other side (yes, this is a fighter sambar that i’m making). It’s almost done, and I’m waiting for the pressure cooker to cool down. There is a small  5 minute process to be done after that happens, and I’m good for the week.

I can’t help but think that our normal process of meal preparation (talking of india in general here) is plain inefficient. Cooking happens at least once a day, in each and every household. You have women balancing jobs, kids and at the same time tryign to find time to cook. Every day. Some people hire professional cooks, who again come once or twice a day in order to cook, and get paid a decent amount (I’m told the going rate for a Brahmin cook (yes, this market is segmented by caste) in Bangalore is Rs. 4000 a month). But then again, you need to be around when the cook arrives, occasionally supervise the cooking, and the quality of food churned out by most of these small-quantity cooks is not much higher than abysmal.

There is tremendous opportunity for economies of scale when it comes to cooking. For example, it takes exactly the same amount of effort to make 1 kilo of rice as it does to make 10 kilos of rice. It is a similar case with sambar, and rasam, and with most curries (even north indian curies) – apart from the effort involved in cutting vegetables which varies linearly with the amount of stuff to be cooked. Yet we choose to do it every day, in every house hold, sometimes up to three times a day. There is something wrong right?

There are two ways in which demand can be aggregated in order to exploit economies of scale – across days and across households. Indians in general prefer fresh food. Even after the introduction of the refrigerator a few decades back, a number of families didn’t buy one because they thought that would encourage consumption of stale food (I don’t have any such fundaes so I cook once a week). There are a number of people who insist that each meal be cooked fresh – I remember that my late father used to insist that at least rice be cooked just prior to each meal (he was ok with not-so fresh sambar, etc.).

Caste fundaes mean that eating out hasn’t traditionally been popular in India. Even nowadays, when you have a lot of people living alone, or with friends, there are very few people who eat out every meal. One look at the timings of the traditional eateries in Bangalore (MTR, Brahmin’s coffee bar, the various SLVs, Vidyarthi Bhavan) tells you a story – they are primarily breakfast and tea restaurants. MTR has recently (12 yrs back) introduced lunch nad dinner but had always been a breakfast and tea place. Most of these places would open from 7 to 11 in the morning and again from 3 to 8 in the evening.

Then there are more religious fundaes which encourage the cooking of each meal fresh – if you observe traditional people with sacred threads eat, you might observe that they do one small pooja with the rice and ghee before starting off. Would anyone want to do that with stale food? Again – similar religious fundaes have traditionally stopped people from eating out. Which is why we have the prevailing model of each meal being prepared in each household.

The problem with most restaurants in India is that they don’t serve home food. After all, they have never been the staple (i.e. every meal) source of food for people, so they have always tried to differentiate themselves from home food. The only restaurants that serve stuff that is made in a similar manner as in households are the small “messes” that operate in areas with a large concentration of single people living without family.

Going forward, I wonder if there is a market for restaurants which make food that is similar to what is made in households (of course it differs by genre, but within a genre it will be made similar to the way stuff is made in households), and which are not too expensive. They might operate on take-away or delivery model (i know that right now there are lots of tiffin-carrier providers, but they need to scale up significantly). They can exploit the economies of scale (both in  terms of cost as well as effort) and provide home-like food for people who would otherwise want to keep a cook.

A good place to start this model would be areas with large concentratioon of single people, or double-income couples – something like Gurgaon. Would there be a market for someone who would provide hygienically made and tasty home-style north indian thalis at around Rs. 30 per plate? Economies of scale mean that this food is likely to be produced at a very cheap cost to the restaurant which will enable it to be priced cheap. The price point will also mean that people will eat there rather than hiring a cook to cook at home. Of course, there needs to be reasonable variety at every meal – which again means that hte restaurant should be reasonably big.

The problem with this model is it might not be feasible as a very small business. It needs to start off in a big way, serving some 1000 people every session – this is the only way enough economies of scale can be harnessed to make things cheap and also provide variety.

Assuming a couple of these start in Gurgaon and are successful, and the model spreads around the country. There is a good chance that a large section of the population will get out of the make every meal every day at every household model.

11 thoughts on “Cooking”

  1. The problems with bulk cooking are
    – You get bored of eating the same thing
    – Reheating any dish many times reduces the flavor of it coz u r sick of it and it really does taste less good
    – Eating fresh is always much more appealing
    – if you r a food lover, eating the same thing 4 times is gross blasphemy

    Whn i was in India, I wouldn’t eat the same dish twice but now I do but only twice..
    It takes abt 30 mins to make a meal, simple ones.. we always have 30 minutes to spare.. besides, it’s a good stress buster..

    FSK
    http://forkspoonnknife.blogspot.com

    1. you don’t reheat many times. each times you take only what is required and reheat that much.

      sometimes convenience can trump love for food in general.

      30 minutes is ok, on friday i took 2 hours

    1. oh yeah i’d forgotten about that. it’s a very good model. again you need more of those – getting into those bylanes of JP Nagar and standing in line can cause so much NED that you might as well cook at home!

  2. I agree that food prepared once will serve your requirements for a week or so. But still wondering if the theory of cooking a whole load of rice, assuming the preparation effort required is more or less the same, will work. Ppl like you and me who have had the great opportunity to treat ourselves to great Mess food will not mind. But yeah, the satisfaction of having fresh food while compared to something cooked 2-3 days back is quite different. And yeah… I hope CTR, SLV, Vidyarthi Bhavan rather stay in Bengaluru rather than take away the few remaining specialties here

    1. oh before IIMB mess i ate for four years at IIT Madras mess. and I must say that IIMB mess was heaven!

      rice is ok – it’s easy to cook each time so you can make it fresh. it’s the sambhar types that’s the issue

  3. I know some folks who’ve started something like this in South Bangalore.

    I’m not sure if it’s the same as the Nammura Hotel mentioned above, it might just be.

  4. Maybe devasthaanas should start food catering businesses – lunch from Raghavendra Swami Matha and dinner from Raagigudda. Hygiene is going to be a problem, but given that the food is prepared in a temple, most people will feel upbeat about it. Perhaps the temples could say “All cooks in our kitchen observe madi”

    BTW, there’s an Iyengar store near my house that has take-aways. You get palya, huLi, saaru, paaysa, anna, uppinkaayi – all sep-separately!

    1. now that you’ve brought it up -madi is originally supposed to be a cleanliness funda. and it’s anything but clean! in the name of madi anything goes. maybe they should rename it muddy!

      oh ok where is this iyengar s tore? i know one north karnataka store near my bangalore house (in kathriguppe) which similarly sells jolad rotti, engai, etc.

Leave a Reply to skimpyCancel reply