Monday, October 5, 2020

Home Chefs Of Mumbai – Part 18 – Manaswee Sahoo

Vegetarians go through lot of torture when they go travelling abroad, unless they are carrying their own tiffin of home-cooked food, or vegetarian soup packets that can be boiled in an electric kettle in the hotel room. Although much has changed over the years and you do find exotic salads or stir fries, but the safest vegetarian meal you may get is french fries or a block of cheese.  You learn to explain your dilemma in multiple languages, stressing the fact that you need food that contains no fish, no egg, no bacon, no meat, no chicken, just vegetables cooked in pure seed/vegetable oils. You explain that vegetables colonise your taste buds and are careful not to attract attention of meat eaters.

Luckily, if you are travelling in India, you have no such complications, there is vast variety of vegetarian cuisine available all over India, even in the remote places. Lentils, vegetables, milk products, innovation is plenty and cooking methods differ from region to region, the masalas, the sauces, the stew, you don’t have to question the chef. Only in India, you can safely enjoy pure veg diet.

Manaswee Sahoo makes some interesting vegetarian bakes, such that you will not miss non-veg at all


Manaswee Sahoo loves baking tea cakes and brownies along with breads. 

Her most loved baked dish would be New York style Baked Cheesecake with Mixed Berry Compote. She prefers her bakes to be moderately sweet. She is also planning to develop a Healthy treats menu which would use alternate flours, no refined sugar etc. All her baked treats do not contain any preservatives or artificial ingredients. She  feels it’s important to use best quality ingredients to ensure the end product is of good quality. 

Until 2019, she was working as a Management Consultant in Financial services sector. She always found baking as a way to reduce her stress, even though throughout her childhood she has been a foodie and was always fond of experimenting with new cuisine. She was never a person to help her mother in the kitchen. She learnt to cook only after she had to live in a shared apartment during her MBA days since she didn’t have a cook at home. After starting her corporate career, she used to bake for her family, friends and colleagues on any of the festive occasion following recipes from baking books and food blogs. Post her wedding, she moved to Mumbai and ever since she has been experimenting more in the kitchen cooking and baking. 


She started her blog “Meraki Delights” in July 2018 to share her kitchen experiences with the world. In 2019, she got an opportunity to turn her dream into reality by enrolling into Diploma in Baking and Pastry and life has taken a complete turn post completion of the course. She got a chance to work with her Mentors at SEP until the pandemic set it’s foot in the country. 


She has recently started taking orders from her home bakery “Meraki Delights Patisserie”. 


She has good knowledge about different cuisines from having travelled widely.

My father was a banker and had a transferable job. As I result I had the opportunity of exploring food of different states. During our stay at different places  we interacted with people of different cultural backgrounds and got to share their traditional food items. This is how I got to eat food from Garhwali cuisine, Bengali Cuisine, Rajasthani cuisine apart from Odia food (I belong Odisha). I really feel my food style is immensely inspired by my exposure to different cuisines found in India. Maybe, for this reason everyone in my family and friends prefer me ordering food for everyone when we are dining out.

She still craves for Ghevar, that her father used to get specially for her.

Even though now I am a pastry chef, I don’t have much of a sweet tooth. I eat sweets very rarely and selectively. I have stayed on northern part of India most of my childhood. I clearly remember during the Shravan month, my father used to buy  Ghevar only for me as it’s availability is restricted to that month only during our stay in Rishikesh, Dehradun and New Delhi. Even though ghevar is plentily available in Rajasthan, but other states it’s not found easily. It’s the only thing which I haven’t eaten in the past 3 years ever since I moved to Mumbai after my wedding.”

She is happy to share her recipe of Quick Mushroom Broccoli Filo Pie



1. Thaw the frozen 12 Spring roll Sheets for at least 20-30minutes. 

2. Once they are at room temperature, separate the sheets from one another and keep them covered with a damp kitchen towel. 

3. In a pan, add 2 tbsp butter and let it heat. 

4. Ensure that the butter doesn’t burn.  

5. Add 1tbsp minced garlic and sauté till the raw smell goes away. 

6. Add 200gms finely chopped Mushroom and 200gms Broccoli and sauté in high heat. 

7. Season it with Salt and 1tsp Black Pepper.  

8. Once the veggies are cooked, add the f1tsp all purpose flour and sauté well. 

9. Add 2tbsp milk and stir continuously to form smooth sauce without any lumps. 

10. Add the 1tsp mixed herbs, 1tsp tandoori mayonnaise (optional) and 2tbps of processed cheese. 

11. Mix until the cheese melts. 

12. Take off the heat and let the mushroom and broccoli filling cool down to room temperature. 

13. While the filling is cooling, pre heat the oven at 180 degrees Celsius.  

14. Cut the Springroll sheet into 4 squares equally. 

15. Grease the muffin tray or moulds lightly with oil or melted butter.  

16. For the pie, arrange the cut Spring roll Sheets one on the top of other diagonally  up till 4 layers by brushing the top side with little oil. 

17. This implies each pie will have 4 layers of small Spring roll sheets placed diagonally. 

18. Add this layered Spring roll Sheets in each of the muffin mould. 

19. Add 1 tbsp of mushroom and broccoli filling and top it with some grated cheese. 

20. Bake the Creamy Mushroom & Broccoli Filo Pie at 180 degrees Celsius for 12-15 mins until it crisps and the cheese melts. 

21. Once baked, serve it with your favourite dips or sauce. 

22. You may eat it alone as well.


She is  currently doing her research and recipe trials for diet foods

Contact her on Instagram

Or on her watsapp  9540362224.  

She also has a virtual storefront on ChefBuddy app which is clickable link wherein anyone can order themselves online. 



Thursday, October 1, 2020

Home Chefs Of Mumbai- Part 17- Rashmi Ahuja

Back in 70s and before that, most of the people hardly ever went out to a restaurant unless there was an occasion to celebrate. They enjoyed home-cooked food and were happy eating traditional food cooked by their elders at home. They did enjoy food at their friend’s house, (who belonged to another community), but they hardly ever played with ingredients in their own kitchen. Food lovers would pluck out a recipe from magazines and try out a leaf or two, but it was not a regular thing to do. Recipes were passed down within the family members, many of them remained undocumented and were considered as signature cuisine of that community. They never used any measurements, everything was ‘andaaz sey’, pinch of this and a fist of that. They did not taste the food while cooking (because it was first offered to Gods) but could understand the taste by its fragrance. A stew with no salt had different aroma, with less spices, meant it was bland. It was all about experience, they knew the taste of every ingredient and understood the resulting taste. Vegetarian people could cook the tastiest non-vegetarian food because of their experiences of knowing the techniques of cooking.

It was unimaginable for anyone to eat raw beef or raw fish. And then, there came the sophistication at the top end of the food market. Things like Sushi, Rissotto, Cappucino tingled the taste buds. Travelling became easier, people got exposed to strange foods. They shopped for rare ingredients and brought back home. Interest grew, cook-books flooded the market and traditional cooking took a back seat. The new version of food was available, most of them junk version of the real food. 

Indians became adventurous.

But there are still some families,  who have clung to their own traditional cuisine and are discovering the value of home-cooked food, and have realised that our family ate  food that was not only nutritious but also had a scientific reasons for healthy living.

There are some families where three generation of joint family still live in harmony, and all enjoy the food cooked by elders specially like at Rashmi Ahuja’s home.


Rashmi Ahuja was always a home-maker till she entered food reality show at ‘Sanjeev Kapoor ke Kitchen Khiladi’ on Sony TV and was announced as ‘Chef Rashmi Ahuja’ and then she got second chance in life as a participant of ‘India’s Digital Chef’ where she was the finalist. That was the day, at the age of 58 years, she got  her wings to fly. Rashmi believes that cooking is about creating something delicious for someone else. She nourishes the dream of writing a book some day.

Rashmi Ahuja specialises in Vegetarian Sindhi Cuisine and also in Indo-Chinese cuisine. She works only on pre-orders and the rates are fixed according to the availability of the ingredients. A set menu is fixed for Sundays that includes snacks, main course and dessert. Her service spans across western suburbs from Lokhanwalla (Andheri West) to Bandra.


She fondly remembers the taste of Aloo Paratha she had many years ago on her way to Vashnudevi Mata Temple.

I don't know whether it was the cold season or was it the  taste of that particular Dhaba- that the crispness of Paratha still lingers -and mind you, it was not on a Tava, the half done paratha are roasted in kadai with Amul Butter then flipped on both side till light brown and is served hot with curds, little sugar is added in, it is accompanied by Papad and Achar. That taste I can never bring  it at my home and I still crave for it.

She also talks about her MIL (now no more) who would prepare ‘Malai Ki Sabji’

We all used to collect Malai (the cream) from the surface of the milk and make ghee (which we do it no more, because we now use Tetra milk packets). Some times my MIL would make  Malai Ki Sabji instead of preparing ghee. She would take one spoonful of oil.  In a thick bottom pan, sauté 2 or 3 chopped onion for few minutes, add chopped green chilies, chopped ginger, two chopped tomato, salt, turmeric powder, coriander powder, red Chilli powder and lots of coriander leaves. She would then add one big bowl of Malai, keep the kadai on tava, cover it for 5 mins and the delicious ‘Malai Ki Sabji’ was ready to eat with hot hot Sindhi Phulkas.”

She is happy to share her signature dishes Smokey Veg Galouti Kababs


1. In a heavy bottom pan, add 1tbsp of oil or butter. 

2. Add 1tsp Shahi Jeera and 1tbsp ginger, crushed green chilies. 

3. Add 50gms French beans, 50gms carrots, 50gms peas, 50gms capsicum, 50gms cabbage, 50gms Cauliflower. 

4. Add salt, 1tsp red chillies, 1tsp Garam masala, 1/2tsp jeera powder. 

5. Mix well. 

6. Cook till vegetables are tender. 

7. Add 100gms boiled and mashed potatoes. 

8. Add 4/5 tbsp roasted besan,  2tbsp crushed Kasuri Methi and 1tbsp Coriander leaves. 

9. Remove it in a big bowl. 

10. Make a well in the center. 

11. Keep a smaller bowl in the center.  

12. Put hot charcoal and pour oil. 

13. Cover the bigger bowl, so that smoke is trapped inside. 

14. Keep it for 10 minutes. 

15. Remove the smaller bowl of charcoal. 

16. Mix it well. 

17. Shape into round Tikkis. Shallow fry.


Rashmi Ahuja hopes to train youth who can succeed to follow cooking as a career.

You can follow her You Tube channel at RashmiAhuja

Follow her on Facebook

Follow her Instagram handle at rashmikitchenkhazana.rkk

She cooks on request (pre-order only)




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