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Goa's Tastebuds - Odette Mascarenhas 
http://www.odettemascarenhas.com/2012_06_01_archive.html

Video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VF9Byim0fZM&feature=plcp




A collection of articles on Restaurants in Goa & Food delights, experienced by 
the 
daughter-in-law   of Masci, India’s first Executive Chef who has a restaurant 
named 
after him at the  Taj Exotica-Goa.




The Goan Culinary Club - Goa.
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My mother-in-law was a fabulous cook, where my father in law was concerned, 
Masci needs no 
mention –   he was and still is world renowned. The previous generation seems 
to have got their 
cooking right and today in Goa try as we might the modern generation cannot 
replicate that taste. 
So how does one preserve and promote the ‘authenticity’ of Goan cuisine for 
generations to come? 
How does one create a participative platform for those serving Goan cuisine to 
sit together and 
discuss the ‘need’ to standardise recipes to get     the ‘true’ taste of Goa? 
The Goa Chapter of the 
Goan Culinary Club is born.  



Enter Mr Rene Baretto and wife Maria who conceptualised the Global Goan Club in 
2000. 
This year  their vision was to initiate the Culinary aspect in Goa.  And from 
this interaction
 with Odette and Joe Mascarenhas as co-founders, and members, 
Sylvester D’Souza, Sheela 
Bar  and Restaurant, Michael Mascarenhas, Flying Dolphin, Peter Fernandes, O 
Coqueiro, 
Edia Cotta, Chef Alila Diva, Master  Chef Rego of the Taj, Executive Chef Sunil 
Kumar of 
Mariotts  Resorts and Spa, Sunil Mathai of  Resort Rio and Executive Chef 
Prasad Paul of 
Cidade  de Goa, the movement took off. Several other  like-minded Goans like 
food 
historians and authors Maria Lourdes Costa Bravo and Fatima Gracias,  Ms 
Parvish 
Kamat to mention a few,  are also a part of the club


Does the fault only lie in Goan homes where Goan cuisine competes with 
Continental, 
Thai, Chinese   and more popular Indian cuisine to win favour with the younger 
generation.
 Is the   fault with public  eating   places – shacks, restaurants and hotels. 
Could ‘home 
cooked recipes bring out the much needed ‘ethos’ of Goan culture that 
professional 
establishments would find hard to emulate?



So “What is authentic Goan food?” I ask myself, ‘Do even we Goans have an 
idea?” 
Each individual household based on the food he/she has been brought up on 
believes 
that ‘mother knows best’ and yet   when it comes to sharing of recipes there is 
a resistance 
to expose ‘secret’ ingredients which they believe works its own magic. And 
hence 
‘authenticity’ of the cuisine is lost in the shuttle cock version of the   
concept of Hindu
 Goan, Christian Goan, North Goan and South Goan.




 I believe that in some restaurants and star hotels in Goa there is a modified 
version of 
Goan preparation- more suitable to the foreign or the non-Goan palate. Do other 
countries 
modify their preparations  when  you visit them? Would a steak and kidney pie 
be spiced
 to suit the Indian  palate? Or a risotto  made to resemble a khitchdi when one 
visits Italy?



Moreover young Goan chef’s training in the industry do not want to specialise 
in Goan 
cuisine. Why?  There is no scope for ‘growth’ in their careers when they focus 
on Goan 
cuisine. Most  of  the star hotels  have Italian, Mediterranean, Chinese, Grrek 
and even 
Arabic cuisine featurd on their menu…so the  ‘new’ generation would rather want 
to 
learn to cook these preparations  to enhance their  career prospects.


With all this pent up emotions, when Rene and Maria Baretto,  co-founders of 
the Global 
Goan Club, a club that links Goan Associations  all over the world and keeps 
Goan all 
over updated about what is happening with the community, approached us 
to preserve 
and 
promote Goan cuisine, it was a meeting of minds on the same wavelength.


The aim of this club is to educate people in what is authentic Goan cuisine 
while promoting 
the same worldwide.


I believe it is important to revive the pride we have in our food, But first w 
have decided to 
convince professionals in the food industry to standardise the taste of Goan 
food. After all 
they are our ambassadors  of cuisine to the visiting world.


For starters the club has standardised the reichado masala, Xacutti , and the 
famous prawn 
curry. Caldin  and Cafreal are on the list next.


At the club gatherings, chefs from various hotels and restaurants interact with 
‘foodie’  
locals who bring in the flavour of the month for ‘blind’ tasting. The process 
is impartial
 before finally zeroing on what they and the panel think is the most authentic 
taste, It is a 
great platform because I am informed that five star chefs are now taking the 
initiative to 
go to homes of       local ladies to learn the entire process of cooking Goan 
dishes right 
from the choosing of the ingredients, to making of the masala, to the final 
preparation.


To preserve the cuisine to carry on to the next generation, which is programmed 
to follow 
logical measures, then standardising measures is a must. So winning ‘curries’ 
will be 
showcased and documented for posterity.


The club also hopes to create a data base to obtain ‘local’ authentic produce 
for the 
preparation of the  dishes. Strictly by invitation only (people who have 
authentic 
preparations could  contact the co founders),  the club’s aims and objectives 
evolve 
around the ethos of the  culture of Goa.


Although many regional cuisines the world over are closely guarded to maintain 
authenticity and  proprietary rights, the ‘global’ cuisines are standardised to 
create 
a platform of learning.  Right now  many authentic recipes prepared at home are 
closely guarded, their recipes  seldom divulged key  secret ingredients or 
methods 
lost in the  years to come. But for the  sake of Goa and Goan cuisine  a few  
like-minded 
individuals  have got together to share  their expertise and take time  out to 
take ‘authentic’  
Goan  cuisine and give its rightful  place in the world.


Face Book Forum ::             GOAN CULINARY CLUB - GOA  
https://www.facebook.com/groups/394128890597761/?fref=ts

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