Saturday, August 21, 2010

90-day itch

We complete 90-days in our Mumbai apartment today. While we are still "breaking-in" and before one becomes a full-fledged turncoat, I cant help reminisce about some of the stuff we really miss about Delhi.

Late night drives have been the first casualty. First attempt was the Mount Mary- Bandstand-Carter Road circuit. I lost count but I think we had a near-miss with 4 pavement dwellers and about half a dozen night birds who in their craving for ice-cream, kulfi and the like seemed to mindlessly cross roads with little or no regard for oncoming traffic. The following week we embarked on the "real deal" i.e. Haji-Ali-Marine Drive etc. 4th gear was a luxury as one had to indulge in peak hour concentration since traffic was near bumper to bumper (at 1 a.m.if you please). Give me the Safdarjang Road-Krishna Menon Marg-Akbar Road-Rajpath combination any day. The luxury of a leisurely drive amidst the pretty boulevards with colonial bungalows lining the wide roads (and scores of stately monuments thrown in) is unmatched.

The search for good quality, non 5-star Indian Food has proved endless and horribly futile. It was best summed up by the experience of a friend who asked for Indian options in South Mumbai and ended up in the same restaurant for the 5th sraight time since it was the only option given to him by everyone he checked with each time! I am also struggling with the logic of landing up in fine-dining places in shorts but more on that another day. There has been a positive fallout on the health front though. Like a true East Indian, sunday lunches were always meant to be rice and mutton curry. I now seldom consume red-meat given the bony, lifeless meat on sale in most shops here. Again we did the round of recommended shops all across town before deciding that mutton consumption shall be restricted to Delhi trips (where one is spoilt with succulent meat with a wide option of cuts). Curiously, shops in Mumbai find fame not basis quality of goods/service/ambience but on the parameter of most famous customer. So one is typically directed to "Katrina Kaif's florist" or " Saif Ali Khan's mechanic".

A reluctant mall-goer like Yours Truly was successfully persuaded to drive to one of the fancier malls in town a few weeks ago. My spirited dash to the mall was literally stopped in its tracks with a delayed realisation that I had actually missed a mile-long queue of cars waiting to enter! I was certain my "DL" number plate prompted a slew of curses centring around the Capital as I insisted on nonchalantly jumping the queue. But the saga of queues had only just begun and its unlikely I am returning in a hurry. A subsequent weekend trip to Delhi made the Vasant Kunj malls (that I once scorned) feel like the ultimate in luxury.

There are scores of similarities too. If you thought only delhi-ites could call "Kamla Nagar" as "K-Nags", Mumbaikars are not be left behind. Hence, "South Bombay" is "So-Bo", in fact to the point of being cliched now. And while I reside in an apartment complex that is far from being upscale, I own the smallest car in the parking lot. So much for dilli-wallas being the "big-car showoffs".

5 comments:

Richa Rai said...

I would forward this to all mumbaikars who feel that no place on this earth is as modest as their Mumbai!!
'so bo', is funny... never knew abt this!!

Richa

AmritaF said...

Nostalgic reading this well written piece.
Having done the reverse as a kid - moving to Delhi after initial years in Mumbai - remember how long it took to get over that city.
And through the growing years - it stayed the cooler one - the many weekends to Bombay to party, what with the night life missing in action in the Capital
Now its ofcourse a no brainer where one wants to be - on all counts-even the habitual once in a couple of months visit for dinner to Zodiac Grill is long forgotten.
Will be interesting to see if its just a lil bit of Delhi snobbery or has Mumbai really lost what Bombay was known for.

cheers

Pinaki said...

Mahesh didnt know you write so well. Another addition to your varied skill set!

SM said...

Interesting read though not much of it is new news. But wait and watch, Mumbai they say grows on you( especially if you have no option).

Cheers!

Anonymous said...

Maybe you are missing Delhi becuase you are yet to see the uniqueness Mumbai has to offer. Your next door Juhu Chaupati may be a little too crowded for you but the pau bhaji and other delicacies would more then make up for it. A walk on the beach late into the night will make you wish life always stays in lower then the 4th gear, a stroll on marine drive at 3am will show how alive and pretty the city is and a victoria ride will surely make you relax, enjoy and reflect on times that have gone by.