➺ What’s on the table at your Diwali feast? Is there an absolute must-have dish and who makes this best?
It’s proper ‘pakka khana’ – the kind of feast where there’s no cutting corners, no thawing anything from the freezer, and definitely no cooking on the tawa. Everything’s made fresh and festive. There are puris and kachoris puffed to perfection, bowls of raita, mattar paneer, aloo gobhi, dahi vada, chole and fragrant pulao. And of course, there’s always Mumma’s famous kheer and an unapologetic spread of laddus and mithai in every shape and shade of sweetness.
The mattar paneer is the absolute must-have, it’s my Naani’s recipe and my mum makes it the best. My dad loves it so much that back in the day, Mum would carry boxes of it from Lucknow to Bombay if he couldn’t make the trip himself. It’s that kind of dish – full of comfort and pure nostalgia.
➺ What are your earliest memories of celebrating Diwali? Do you remember the feeling of lighting sparklers and diyas as a child?
When I was younger, Diwali meant journeying up north to Lucknow to visit my grandparents, and hiding under the bed with our family dog, Candy, every time the crackers went off. I was always a little scared of the firecrackers, so I’d cling to Mumma’s dupatta for safety. And I’d get dressed in my childhood gold sparkly kurta or a lehenga – the one day of the year I’d really go all out in Indian wear. But I loved decorating the house with rangoli, flexing my artistic muscles and lighting the diyas with her. The twinkle of all those lights felt as magical then as it does now.
These days, it’s about flying home each year to dive straight back into the best bits of Indian festivity – kicking off Diwali taash season with my dad’s birthday, gathering around food, laughter and plenty of love.