Sunday 22 August 2010

Gurgaon, India



I see this place as a land of bright evocative colour and spices. India is a treat for the senses and my experience there left me wanting more. Asia in itself is amazingly complex and different with its cuisines even within the countries themselves, and particular dishes and staples are specific to the different areas. In the South of India rice is mostly used whereas in the North of India bread is mostly used due to wheat being prominently grown in these parts.

India was, though I thought not possible, the hottest climate I had ever played in. It was the type of heat that makes you feel physically sick without doing anything. Running around was bad enough but stopping felt even worse, the heat would just burn, I was shivering from the heat. The heat was the toughest opponent out there and unfortunately I had had a cold the week before and I was still pretty clogged up which wasn’t helping my cause. Australia’s hot but India is in a whole new category. Ordinarily when it’s this scorching you’re hoping for a light wind to temporarily cool you down, not here, the wind was hot. But a few days in, you learn to cope. India in itself is a whole different experience. We were playing in Gurgaon, a rural town outside of Delhi. We were staying in Delhi and we took just under an hour car ride out to the courts each day. Driving in India was an experience in itself. We were given a driver who looked no older than sixteen years old. Without a whole lot of confidence in him he drove us out to the courts during peak hour traffic in Delhi. Because of the congestion it was apparently a common knowledge that during heavy traffic, one would have to drive on the wrong side of the road, into and mostly around (hopefully) opposing traffic. Now this was bad enough, putting complete trust in the horn that substituted use of mirrors, indicators and in some instances brakes. In actual fact, our car didn’t have side mirrors, so it could squeeze in between cars. This drive provoked quite a lot of tension for my mother, and the few days of rain that caused flooding in the street didn’t help our little road trips, if we got stuck I made it very clear I wasn’t getting out to push. I’ll tell you this though, every day we saw something new. From a man trying to get a monkey off his roof to men on their front porches smoking from a hookah. Cows roaming the highways and cars with no inclination to move them on, just driving around them, women with pre-marriage cloaks covering their faces balancing pots on their heads, not allowed to show their faces in public as unmarried women, donkeys pulling carts of grass onto the next town, women and children in the streets dancing to music. India was alive and we were fortunate to see these things that we wouldn’t have been able to see had we not been travelling to the country towns outside Delhi.



The tennis courts themselves were a rundown academy of sorts with a pool that no one would dare jump into, a dark murky green that either had never been cleaned or hadn’t been cleaned in a very long time. There was accommodation at the courts but only some of the rooms had air conditioners. The other rooms had fans that would only blow around hot air. Now the highlight for me during this trip to India was the food that was put on for the players to eat for breakfast lunch and dinner. The Breakfast I would eat if I had a match and needed something extra before I went to play, the lunch we ate everyday and the dinner we had back at our hotel in Delhi. The Lunch put on at the club was a buffet with six or seven different curries to choose from (I tried to pile on as many curries as would fit on the plate), there was yogurt to have with the curries, rice and fresh bread (chapatti) being made during lunch, so you could always be sure of a hot fresh one, or four. There were a lot of vegetarian curries (potatoes, beans and lentils). The black eyed bean curry was my favourite. There was always meat as well, mostly chicken, but never beef because cows in India are sacred. There was always a beautiful cheese curry as well that was in a triangular form with a red curry sauce which was my mum’s favourite. These curries were great for the first week, there was a great turnover as there were a lot of people eating and the food wasn’t hanging around. By halfway through the second week, people were leaving to go home and the food was being recycled to be used for the next day. It was at this point we cut our losses and stuck to two minute noodles just in case, but I haven’t tasted Indian food as good as this since I was in India. Some of the Indian girls at the tournament said that the cooking at the club was like home style cooking which they said was very good, so we were really lucky to get this type of food. The buffet lunch at the courts cost $2.50 per person.



India’s a great place which enlightens and opens your eyes. I saw the impoverished tents and tarpaulins set up amongst the litter, I saw shepherds all dressed in white except the turbans which were a burst of red. Other shepherds behind keeping sixty or so bulls and cows inline who ruled the road, some with necklaces around their horns, and extraordinarily, a shepherd at the back of the line with a new born calf around his neck, unable to walk by itself. India is something you never forget, though at times confronting, India is unique and such a special place. I cannot wait to go back, hopefully with my whole family and I would love to visit the small towns and regions, if just for the food!




Bangkok, Thailand

Thailand is one of the best countries in the world to visit, whether it's for food, travelling on a budget or just basking in the great weather. Flying from Sydney to London can be a long flight and there is a stop off in either Bangkok or Singapore. I try and engineer my flight so I go through Bangkok because I always visit a particular restaurant which serves an amazing chicken green curry followed by sticky rice and mango. I love to eat a home cooked meal in Sydney before I go so that I can last till I have my curry in Bangkok, it is very important to have a plan! (Obviously I have far too much time on my hands).

Now this trip to Thailand was not just a stop over, I played there in 2007, although it was a while a go I have it firmly imprinted in my memory! It was so humid and sticky there. Thailand for food holds a very special place in my heart. My softest spot I would have to say is the sticky rice with fresh mango. I also find it hard to say no to a good curry. The spicier the better. I have to admit one of the best things about Thailand is the price of everything, especially the food. Near the tennis courts for the second tournament, there was a whole string of outdoor restaurants serving all different types of Thai food. My favourite was the restaurant that served pad thai for a little over 1 Australian dollar. Walking to and from the courts was always a highly anticipated journey, whether we stopped on the first corner for a milkshake or smoothie, or we picked out a thai dessert or snack from the carts parked on the foot path, or made our way into one of the small restaurants overlooking the street. Thailand for me is such a friendly place with warm hard-working people. A place I believe everybody should visit if they have a love for food.

You can find good food everywhere in Thailand, that’s why its so great, but the best curry I have ever had was in the Bangkok markets, a small area with a couple of stalls and tables around it with a huge pot of curry and another pot of rice, hot and ready to eat. We were walking through the markets and we had eaten breakfast not long before, but I could smell the curry. I followed the smell, like a moth to a flame, which took a good five minutes weaving in and out of little shops and stalls. But the effort was well worth it. It was a green chicken curry with cherry eggplants, thai eggplants, thai basil and chili. For those who range from dabbling in the kitchen to full blown chefs here is the closest thing I’ve got to the curry I ate at the Bangkok markets. It only takes about 30 minutes to cook and it is great for serving a lot of people, you can just double or triple the mixture.

So please try it and enjoy and I hope you love this dish as much as I do.

Recipe Thai green curry

Ingredients

400 grams chicken breast (a little less then 1lb.)

3 tbsp green of a good thai curry paste

2 1/2 cups coconut milk or coconut cream with some water which will give it more texture

5 small fresh Thai eggplants, quartered

2 handfuls of cherry eggplants or what you think will be well balanced

2-3 fresh red spur chilies, sliced diagonally

2 kaffir lime leaves, torn

1/4 cup sweet basil leaf

1 1/2 tbsp fish sauce

1 1/2 tsp palm sugar

1 tbsp cooking oil (not olive oil, but corn, safflower or peanut oil)

Sweet basil leaves and red chili slices for garnish

Preparation

1. Slice the chicken into thin pieces, about about 1/3" (3 cm) thick.

2. Saute the green curry paste in oil over medium heat until fragrant, reduce the heat, gradually add 1 1/2 cups of the coconut milk or coconut cream and water, a little at a time, stir until a film of green oil surfaces.

3. Add the chicken and kaffir lime leaves, continue cooking for 3 minutes until fragrant and the chicken is cooked through. Transfer to a pot, place over medium heat and cook until boiling. Add the remaining coconut milk, season with palm sugar and fish sauce. When the mixture returns to the boil add both types of eggplants. Cook until the eggplants are done, sprinkle sweet basil leaves and red chilies over, then turn off the heat.

4. Arrange on a serving dish and garnish with sweet basil leaves and red chillies before serving.

I have changed the recipe slightly but the original recipe can be found at http://www.templeofthai.com/recipes/thai_green_curry.php

If you can find the cherry eggplants, they are a great addition to the curry and really enhance the dish.

Darmstadt, Germany

Have you ever starved yourself during the day so you can justify a pig-out in the evening and to much disappointment only moments into your much awaited meal you find that you are full, all too soon? Now luckily for my sake I learnt this little fact quite early on in life and when it comes to food I am rarely disappointed by my own doings, however how the food tastes and how it is cooked is out of my control unless of course I’ve cooked it, and then I can only blame myself. Being able to eat regularly and to have an appetite most of the day is one of the best things about being a tennis player. There’s nothing better (though there are many things that are just as good) than being hungry and eating a great meal. Now I was recently in Germany and the best food is always the fresh local food. I was lucky enough to be staying with our really good family friends the Ganssmann’s and you can’t get much better than home-cooked, especially when you are constantly on the road eating out with a smaller budget. German food for me is amongst the best. All types of sausage, schnitzel (although it’s from Austria it’s still readily available in Germany and just as good), spetzler, German handmade pasta which is basically a dough hand made into squiggly shaped pasta, which comes from the Stuttgart area of Germany. It can be served plain with a bit of parmesan or with fresh herbs and sausage, pretty much anything can be put through it just like regular pasta.

It’s the Mediterranean vegetables oven baked with olive oil, sprinkled with rosemary with a hint of garlic. Europe has a different way of doing things when it comes to food, it just seems civilized, not rushed. One of my little pleasures in Deutschland is the pretzels whether they are for breakfast, accompanied with lunch or dinner or a snack anytime during the day. I was there in the summer month of July, a very hot summer, over 30 degrees celsius everyday and on the last day it had called down about 10 degrees, ironically as we were leaving. I don’t mind the heat but even this weather was a little excessive.

Winter food is different altogether and the food can be quite different from the summer. My favourite treat which the little vendor in Darmstadt serves is called kartoffelpuffer, its fried potato that’s served with apple sauce, not bad on a freezing cold day in a warm coat.

I can’t wait to go back to eat my favorites, I could eat schnitzel everyday!