Showing posts with label Urban Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urban Life. Show all posts

Monday, January 11, 2010

BUNNY CHOWS - street food - South African Style


BUNNY _CHOW : A South African original - makes a great street food - for those of you who dont know it - or want a way to remember it when you cant get it see the recipe in this article 
"Street food – it’s such a great concept. Something cheap and readily available, sold on the streets in a portable format, and eaten by the average local. ThinkLeberkaese rolls in Austria; grilled corn on the cob in Morocco;falafel or shawarmathroughout the Middle East; frites with mayonnaise in Belgium; poutine in Canada; tacos in Mexico; chilli dogs andcorn dogs in the USA; and arepas in Venezuela.
In South Africa, we have the usual collection of generic international street food like hamburgers, fried chicken, or fish and chips, but here and there you will find some truly South African food being sold on the streets, like Durban’s home-grown favourite:bunny chows.
There is some discussion as to the origin of this steet food which broadly consists of curry ladled into a scooped-out loaf of bread. One theory is that it originated at a restaurant in Durban’s Grey Street when, in the early 1900s, caddies from the Royal Durban Golf Club were unable to get enough time off over lunch to dash to predominantly Indian Grey Street to pick up a curry for lunch. The caddies would ask their friends to bring back curries for them and because there were no polystyrene containers back then, the shopkeepers sent the curry in holowed out loaves of bread. There was also no disposable cutlery, so the bread was useful as a tool to dip into the curry and use instead of a fork. This theory might also explain the rather unusual name: the shopkeepers on Grey Street were called banias (an Indian caste of merchants), and “bunny” could be a corruption of this. Another similar theory is that bunny chows originated as a means for the (mostly Indian) labourers to take lunch onto the sugar cane plantations of Kwa-Zulu Natal in the days before disposable containers."  Get the  full recipe:Bunny chows – street food, South Africa style


















THE URBAN TRACE - Some thoughts on New Cape Quarter Mall - Somerset Road Cape Town
If the traces of the past are retained while constructing the future around them by being lived in by some of those building them, then both are enhanced.
If we copy the past in the present  then both result in  a hollowed out and empty future and both degraded.
The traces of the past are "spoors" (tracks) leading to the future, i.e. the future is constructed on the foundation /ground of the past in the present and and lived in the future.
The more authentic and centered then life is richer and more complex the present will be and the richer and more life-giving the future will become.