Of Onions and Other Necessary Theatrics
Where ginger announces intent and curry leaves arrive like applause

Dry spices are patient.
They wait in bronze tins and glass jars with the quiet confidence of things that know their moment will come.
Fresh things possess no such composure.
A pyaz (onion), once cut, has opinions. Fresh hara dhania (coriander) wilts if neglected. Hari mirch (green chilies) can turn mutinous without warning. Adrak (ginger) perfumes your hands long after the knife has been washed. Lehsun(garlic), as previously established, has absolutely no interest in subtlety.
And kari patta (curry leaves)? In the kitchens that claim them, they do not enter a dish. They make an entrance.
If the masala dabba suggested a certain orderliness, the living pantry complicates matters beautifully.
Because no sooner do you begin confidently listing “essential” Indian ingredients than someone from another region raises an eyebrow, folds their arms, and informs you, politely or otherwise, that their grandmother would absolutely never.
And they would not necessarily be wrong.
To speak of an Indian culinary “base” is to enter gloriously contested territory.
Some kitchens begin with onion and tamatar (tomato) as reliably as sunrise.
Others would consider that a rather suspicious assumption.
Some insist on rai or sarson (mustard seeds) and curry leaves announcing themselves before anything else.
Others begin more quietly, with ginger, hing (asafoetida), perhaps jeera (cumin) warming in fat.
Garlic, in some traditions, is beloved.
In others, decidedly unwelcome.
Fresh nariyal (coconut) may be indispensable in one household and entirely absent in another.
This is the particular joy, and occasional chaos, of speaking about Indian food.
The subcontinent does not so much offer a single culinary language as an exuberant parliament of dialects.
And so, rather than pretending to offer the Indian way, let me instead invite you into one family of eager theatrics, while fully acknowledging that aunties from six other regions may already be preparing thoughtful objections.
No ingredient in Indian cooking has performed more unpaid emotional labour than the onion.
This is not true everywhere, certainly. There are kitchens across the subcontinent that would raise entirely legitimate objections and, as previously established, their grandmothers would likely have supporting testimony.
But in many households, the onion is the unsung stagehand who somehow also ends up carrying the lead.
It softens arguments, builds gravies, absorbs spice, carries sweetness, and disappears so others may shine.
Frankly, if onions invoiced by the hour, much of the subcontinent might still be making installment payments.
And yet onion is never merely onion.
This is where the uninitiated can wander into quiet catastrophe.
Because no two onions are alike, despite what supermarket signage may confidently suggest.
A robust red onion behaves differently from a softer white one.
A small pink shallot enters with entirely different intentions.
Some bring sweetness quickly.
Some hold their structure with surprising stubbornness.
Some melt obligingly into gravies.
Others insist on being noticed.
Choose carelessly, and behold the quiet destruction of a dish that might otherwise have sung.
A hurried pale sweat is one thing.
A patient golden softening another.
Deeply browned onions belong to entirely different emotional weather.
Thin slices become birista (crisp fried onions), all crisp vanity and perfume, crowning biryanis and celebratory rice dishes with unapologetic flourish.
Ground into paste, onion relinquishes all structure, dissolving itself into body and depth.
This, I think, is where outsiders often misunderstand Indian cooking.
The ingredient list tells you almost nothing.
Technique is biography.
An onion chopped fine behaves differently from one sliced into crescents.
One pounded into paste enters a dish as conspiracy.
One slowly browned enters like memory.
One quickly softened simply gets on with the work.
And then comes garlic.
Or perhaps, depending on whose kitchen you entered and how brave you are feeling, garlic may have already arrived.
This is the sort of sequencing question capable of inspiring highly specific loyalties.
Some cooks swear by letting garlic declare itself briefly in hot fat before onion joins the proceedings.
Others insist onion must establish the foundation before garlic enters with its familiar lack of restraint.
Both camps, naturally, consider themselves sensible.
This is one of Indian cooking’s quieter amusements.
Because while recipes may record ingredients, they often fail to capture allegiance.
Garlic, however it arrives, remains gloriously incapable of whispering.
It perfumes fingers, cutting boards, conversations, perhaps entire domestic atmospheres.
Even in moderation, it refuses background roles.
And here too, humility is required.
Because some Indian traditions welcome garlic warmly.
Others would prefer you leave it at the door entirely.
Which brings us, quite naturally, to ginger, garlic’s curious accomplice and occasional corrective.
Where garlic expands outward, ginger sharpens.
Where garlic lingers, ginger lifts.
Where garlic announces appetite, ginger often announces intent.
Together, they are one of Indian cooking’s great alliances.
Separately, each carries personality.
Together, they begin plotting.
Ginger can be pounded coarse and rustic.
Grated into urgency.
Julienned into elegant flourish.
Folded into chai when the weather has behaved offensively.
Or worked into ginger-garlic paste, that quietly heroic refrigerator resident upon which many weekday dinners have rested.
While garlic prefers dramatic declaration, ginger brings precision.
It brightens where garlic deepens.
Cuts through richness.
Lends warmth without heaviness.
Smells faintly of both comfort and practical grandmotherly approval.
And then, of course, comes the tamatar.
Or not.
Because mentioning tomatoes in the context of Indian cooking is another excellent way to invite thoughtful disagreement.
There are kitchens where tomatoes arrive as reliably as sunrise.
Others would like it noted that their ancestors managed perfectly well without them, thank you very much.
Both positions contain merit.
But where tomato does enter, it rarely behaves as the starring ingénue outsiders imagine.
In many Indian kitchens, tomato is not there to be admired.
It is there to negotiate acidity, sweetness, moisture, body, and a certain kind of diplomatic intervention.
And, like onions, tomatoes are not interchangeable simply because they are all technically red and capable of causing laundry-related regret.
A firm Roma behaves differently from a ripe heirloom collapsing under its own emotional fragility.
A winter tomato of questionable conviction is not the same creature as one warmed properly by actual sunlight.
Some surrender quickly.
Some cling stubbornly to texture.
Some bring acidity without sweetness.
Others collapse into near jammy generosity.
And if you have ever followed a recipe faithfully, used the wrong tomato, and wondered why your dish tasted vaguely disappointed, there is your answer.
Tomato, when used carelessly, can flatten.
When used wisely, it mediates.
It coaxes browned onion forward, softens aggressive spice, invites turmeric into cohesion, and makes peace where needed.
Or, occasionally, when overenthusiastically deployed, commandeers the entire conversation like an especially earnest dinner guest.
Unlike certain Western traditions where tomato is allowed glorious solo careers, Indian cooking often asks it to collaborate.
A puree behaves differently from chopped.
Fresh differently from cooked.
A slow reduction tells one story.
A hurried toss into hot oil quite another.
Some dishes want tomato as whisper.
Others require a proper monologue.
And then there are the cooks who add a pinch of sugar to hurriedly correct a tomato’s personality rather than admit they chose badly. I say this with affection.
And then there are hari mirch.
Not their dried cousins, carefully ground into the dry pantry’s disciplined ranks.
Fresh green chilies belong firmly to the living theatre.
They are temperament made edible.
Some are grassy and bright, all sharp enthusiasm and very little menace.
Others strike first and leave discussion for later.
Some perfume more than they punish.
Others arrive with the sort of confidence usually associated with people who have never once doubted themselves.
And here too, technique alters personality.
A whole green chili dropped into hot oil behaves one way, lending aroma and suggestion.
Slit lengthwise, it becomes more forthcoming.
Finely chopped, it abandons diplomacy altogether.
Pounded into a paste, it enters active negotiations with your dignity.
And then, of course, there is the universal optimism of the unsuspecting diner who says, “Oh, I’ll just pick it out.”
Bless them!
As though heat were a decorative garnish rather than something that has already entered into legally binding agreements with the rest of the dish.
Not all fire in Indian cooking is meant to overwhelm.
This is an important distinction.
Heat can sharpen.
Wake.
Brighten.
Interrupt complacency.
It can also, admittedly, occasionally humble the overconfident.
But done properly, chili is rarely there merely to prove a point.
It is there to animate.
To remind the palate that dinner is not a passive affair.
And somewhere amid onions softening, garlic declaring, ginger sharpening, and tomatoes negotiating, the dish begins to resemble less an assembly of ingredients and more a roomful of highly opinionated relatives.
Which, if I am being honest, feels culturally accurate.
Because in the households that claim them, kari patta do not arrive as garnish. They arrive as proclamation.
The first crackle in hot fat is unmistakable.
Sharp. Fragrant. Alive.
It is less an ingredient entering a dish than an announcement that something has officially begun.
If you have grown up with that sound, it is extraordinarily difficult to mistake for anything else.
And if you have ever lived far from the kitchens that taught you this language, you may know the peculiar heartbreak of encountering curry leaves that smell faintly of administrative paperwork.
This, sadly, is not the same thing.
Fresh curry leaves possess an entirely different temperament.
Citrusy.
Peppery.
Green in the most alive sense of the word.
They perfume oil almost instantly, lending an aromatic brightness that feels impossible to counterfeit.
Not every Indian kitchen begins this way. Not every region claims this ritual.
Which is precisely the point.
Indian cooking is not diminished by this plurality. It is glorified by it.
The subcontinent’s culinary wisdom has never required uniformity to achieve coherence.
If curry leaves are proclamation in some households, hara dhania is often benediction.
Though even that may be contested if enough aunties are gathered in one room.
Fresh coriander possesses a peculiar generosity.
It brightens.
Lifts.
Softens.
Forgives.
Added too early, it surrenders itself rather tragically.
Added at the right moment, it feels like the dish remembering to smile.
And then there is nariyal.
Not everywhere. Not always.
But where it belongs, it belongs with extraordinary certainty.
To reduce coconut merely to ingredient would feel almost offensively incomplete.
In many parts of the subcontinent, coconut is not simply food.
It is an offering.
A Blessing.
A Ritual.
An Inheritance.
A presence that belongs as much to prayer rooms and ceremonial thresholds as to kitchens.
Kalpavriksha. The wish-fulfilling tree. The tree of abundance.
Even the language surrounding it resists smallness. And perhaps rightly so. Because few ingredients offer themselves so completely.
Water.
Milk.
Cream.
Fresh flesh.
Dried flesh.
Oil.
Chutney.
Sweet.
Savoury.
Temple offering.
Everyday sustenance.
Few ingredients arrive with such versatility while somehow retaining dignity.
And in the kitchens where fresh coconut is kin rather than guest, its role is transformative.
Freshly grated, it lends tenderness and body.
Ground into pastes, it softens assertive spice into something rounder, more persuasive.
Folded into chutneys, it becomes freshness itself.
Worked into stews and curries, it lends quiet richness without the heavier declarations of dairy.
Even its texture speaks differently depending on treatment: fine, coarse, toasted, ground smooth, left with bite.
And yes, there is a particular kind of sorrow in attempting to explain properly fresh coconut to someone whose experience begins and ends with desiccated supermarket sachets of existential despair.
But honesty requires saying this plainly.
Not every Indian kitchen reaches for coconut with such instinct.
Its culinary loyalties are beautifully geographical.
And that, too, is part of the larger story.
Indian food does not ask sameness in exchange for coherence. It asks understanding.
And then, at last, the ceremony.
The dry pantry and the living pantry have not arrived here casually. They have, by now, been introduced through respectable channels. Biodatas have likely been exchanged. The families have made discreet enquiries. At least one aunt has expressed reservations, but the matter appears to be progressing. The question of compatibility can no longer be avoided. Because until now, we have merely been meeting the guests.
The dry pantry, patient and composed in its bronze chambers.
The living pantry, moody, fragrant, gloriously unwilling to wait.
But ingredients alone do not make dinner.
Presence is not partnership.
This is where Indian cooking begins asking a more interesting question.
Not who has arrived, but who belongs together.
Because a jeera seed warming alone in fat is merely memory.
An onion softening by itself is only possibility.
Garlic may declare.
Ginger may sharpen.
Tomato may negotiate.
Green chili may threaten diplomatic relations.
Fresh coriander may arrive with forgiveness.
Coconut, where it belongs, may offer tenderness and grace.
But none of them, alone, are the meal.
And then something extraordinary happens.
Rai or sarson leap into hot fat, first quiet, then suddenly alive, crackling open with sharp, nutty insistence, releasing that unmistakable peppery perfume that tells the kitchen there will be no further dawdling.
Jeera blooms into nutty warmth.
Hing performs that strange, miraculous alchemy where something initially alarming becomes entirely essential.
Onions surrender.
Garlic declares itself.
Ginger cuts through the richness with bright precision.
Tomatoes soften into consensus.
Green chilies make their feelings unmistakably known.
And somewhere between heat, fragrance, and instinct, the kitchen ceases to feel like a room full of ingredients and begins to resemble an orchestra tuning itself toward intention.
This is the part recipes so often fail to teach.
Not ingredients.
Not even sequence.
But relationship.
Because Indian cooking, at its best, is less about assembling things than understanding how personalities coexist.
Who tempers whom.
Who softens whom.
Who sharpens whom.
Who must enter early.
Who would be disastrous if introduced too soon.
Who deserves the final word.
And perhaps this is why Indian cooking can feel both deeply intuitive and maddeningly elusive to those trying to reduce it to neat formulae.
You can list ingredients with perfect accuracy and still entirely miss the point.
Because what is being built is not a checklist.
It is chemistry.
Memory.
Negotiation.
Inheritance.
And yes, occasionally, mild domestic chaos.
Perhaps this is why I watch differently now.
Because somewhere nearby, there is often a smaller pair of observant eyes.
A child listening before understanding.
Learning, as I once did, that kitchens speak long before anyone explains their language.
That mustard seeds mean attention.
That garlic means something is underway.
That some ingredients must wait their turn.
That timing is a form of respect.
One day, perhaps, she will not remember exactly when these lessons began.
Only that they did.
That somewhere between the crackle of hot fat, the perfume of ginger on her fingers, and the quiet choreography of ordinary dinners, something wordless took root.
Because inheritance rarely arrives as formal instruction.
More often, it enters disguised as repetition.
As proximity.
As appetite.
As the simple act of standing near enough to absorb the music.
And perhaps that is what Indian cooking has always understood.
That recipes preserve dishes.
But presence preserves instinct.
And once you understand that, a more consequential question begins to present itself.
Even the most spirited ingredients cannot simply fling themselves together and hope for greatness.
Someone must make the introductions.
Someone must receive the spice first.
Someone must carry fragrance, temper temperament, and quietly decide whether a dish whispers, sings, or announces itself from three rooms away.
If ingredients are the personalities, who, then, conducts the introductions?
Who decides who blooms, who softens, who waits?
The faithful generals of the Indian kitchen, I suspect, deserve their own proper audience.
But that, I think, belongs to another conversation.


Very thoughtful process
Of your posts this far, this piece strikes me as the most humorous. Just to name a few places: your lengthy disclaimer. The descriptions of sad curry leaves & bagged grocery shop shredded coconut. It truly is a wonder, especially since you threw profound pearls (such as "presence is not partnership") into the mix as well. In my opinion, it's got everything. This post is a delicious stew!