Internationally speaking, potatoes have been around us for over 8000 years, which means they are bound to be thrown into the fire every once in a while. While extolling the virtues of baked potatoes (https://historianandrew.medium.com/the-fascinating-history-of-the-baked-potato-c7092b550da5), history enthusiast Andrew Martin writes — “The simplicity of the tuber roasting in the embers of a fire or the back of an oven was incredibly rudimentary and likely to have been around far longer than we might imagine.” Clearly, we have been doing this for a while now. But going by the number of tips one can find on the internet to get the perfect potato roast (including a research study on cutting them at 30-degree angles), we still continue to be intrigued by the process.
That said, I can’t remember the last time I made sambhar, rasam and potatoes for my guests. With changing dietary and food preferences, roasted potatoes appear in my kitchen only when the heart, not the stomach, yearns for it. Or when I am trying to infuse familiarity into my new surroundings — as is the case today.
The potatoes in the pan are slowly turning a shade and seem to be blushing under the influence of the red chilli powder. I toss the bits around and spread them out on the pan. Mulling over the tuber’s superpowers has brought forth some very “potatoisque” life moments. The benchmark for roasted potatoes goes way back to my school days. About once a week, a classmate’s lunchbox would come filled with tomato rice and an equally red potato roast. We gathered around his bench as we tried to get a spoonful of this yummy combination.
When a group of relatives visited us a few years ago, my mother made the classic small onion sambhar and potato roast combination for lunch. These were people I had hardly met before, but as the potatoes began to fill the plates, stories began to fill the room. The table reverberated with laughter and the joy of shared nostalgia. The unfamiliarity that had initially enveloped the room completely disappeared by the end of the meal. As did the potatoes.