Not A Very Fishy Fare: A Peek Into
ABP Ananda’s Ilish Fish Festival
On Saturday (8th August), the street next to the E.E.D.F grounds in Jodhpur Park was choker blocked.Cars let off passengers in the middle of the street. The resultant traffic jam led to incessant honking from irritated car and rickshaw drivers. Pedestrians brazenly walked through the chaos and onto the adjacent footpath. There, the semblance of a queue at a makeshift ticket counter jostled with the throng pouring in and out of two narrow gates. Welcome to "Ilishiash" - the Ilish Fish Festival, organized by the ABP Ananda news channel. After buying two tickets for Rs. 20, each, my friend and I wrestled our way in. Thankfully, the sprawling Taltala Math offered enough space for the crowd to thin out. Rows of yellow huts lined the three sides of the venue. Visitors strolled along a wooden walkway covered in green felt, browsing through the various stalls. The air was heavy with flavours of fresh Ilish and that familiar mustard sauce. Almost on cue a volunteer offered us a free packet of Pincon mustard oil, directing our attention to the first stall. On display were all the spices and oils one needs to cook this famed fish.
Line of stalls at "Ilishiash" |
However, we stalled our exploration a while to check out the inauguration ceremony that began on a makeshift stage in the middle of the field. ABP Ananda's executive editor, Suman Dey, opened the festival with a few wisecracks about the Bengalis' passion for this fish. Welcoming everyone at the "delishiush" (read delicious) "Ilishiash" (Ilish festival), Suman singed off with a quip: "A longer speech would be as annoying as an Ilish bone stuck in the throat". A bunch of yellow and blue balloons were released into the air and we set off on our stall hopping.
Quite a few renowned restaurants
had set up shop. We spotted 6, Ballygunj
Place, Fish Fish, Sholoana Bangaliana and Khawab, among others. One stall was
particularly eye-catching. It was called Bhooter
Raja Dilo Bar. A pot-bellied fellow with giant ears, jagged teeth and black
paint all over his body, posed as "Bhooter Raja". However, Satyajit
Ray's iconic king of ghosts would have been ashamed of the meagre fare offered
by his duplicate. Ilish Bhapa, Ilish er
Paturi and a few other familiar recipes were all that the ghostly king
could manage.
Raw Ilish @ Rs.1000- Rs.2000/kg |
Baked ilish in a bowl of rice |
Ilish er Biriyani |
Ilish er cutlet - ready to be fried (Top row) |
In fact, many stalls at this fish festival offered more of chicken and mutton dishes than ilish. And the meat dishes were friendly to the pocket as well. There were several renowned sweet shops too. So if one was disappointed with the fish, one could stick to familiar fare.
In a way Suman De was right in his inaugural
speech. For the Bengalis there is no greater breaking news than that the season’s
first catch of Ilish has docked at the Hoogly port. “Ilishiash” did not turn out to be that much of a fishy affair. But it definitely celebrated Bengalis’ passion for
a lazy afternoon of food and entertainment in any form.
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