Train
travel is often interesting – one can enjoy the scenic surrounding, chat with the co-travellers, 0r enjoy
solitude…… .. and at Railway stations – you can hear vendors shouting to sell
their products – the cacophony of ‘coffee – tea’, ‘bonda-tea’ vada, masala
vada, cool drink, timepass [groundnut] … besides various fruits including
banana, apple, orange, guava – and in Andhra, one could hear ‘poothri’ – what ?
– more Q on having seen that for the first time – what is that ? and how to eat
that – with cover or how would peel that off ??
Atreyapuram[ఆత్రేయపురము
] is a village and a Mandal in East Godavari district of Andhra Pradesh and this ‘poothri’ is a famous
product. It actually is –
“Pootharekulu" made of rice starch."Atreyapuram is located 25 km from
Rajahmundry City and 90 km distance from district hq of Kakinada. Atreyapuram's pin code is
533235. The main ingredients of this
delicacy are : rice starch / black gram, powdered sugar or jaggery and good
quantity of ghee.
With its ghee and
sugar, Diabetics can only read this post, not eat and enjoy Poothareku. 'Pootha' is
coating and 'Reku' (plural Rekulu) is sheet in Telugu. PoothaRekulu are also
known as ‘Paper sweets’ as they give the appearance of folded paper. It is a
wafer-like sweet created in Atreyapuram, it is labor intensive, made
from a particular rice batter called jayabiyyam (biyyam means rice), powdered
sugar and ghee. There are variants of
sugary one and other using jaggery (clarified butter). The delicacy would have wrappers from riceflour,ghee, coating them
with sugar/jaggery and folding them.
An article in July
2005 in the Hindu had detailed that Pootarekulu making is an art and every
household of Athreyapuram has mastered it. It has become a cottage industry and
has been flourishing here for almost three generations. In 1994, the women of the village formed self
help groups and took orders for the sweet.
Today’s the Hindu
has another article - Tucked in lush green fields on Godavari canal bund, the
village became famous for its ‘Putarekulu’ sweet which is exported to various
Indian cities and other countries.Boards erected in front of every house with
the script ‘NethiPutarekulu’ ammabadunu’ (Ghee Putarekulu are sold here) and
grandmothers, daughter-in-laws and grand daughters diligently preparing the
delicacies are seen at every house.“Many sweet stalls are surviving by selling
‘Putarekulu’. We sell each roll at a low cost and the stall owners are selling
them at higher prices. Still ‘Putarekulu’ sell like hot cakes,” say the
traditional sweet makers.
Thousands of women
are taking ‘putarekulu’ and rolling the sweets, and men in families are helping
to get raw material for preparing the savouries. Sweet stalls in Rajahmundry,
Amalapuram, Razole, Bhimavaram, Kakinada, Yanam, Visakhapatnam, Eluru,
Vijayawada, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Pune and other cities are the major buyers of
the special sweets, said a woman VelpuruMavullamma.“Putarekulu are being served
along with meals during marriage functions, birthdays, marriage days,
SatyanarayanaVratams, all festivals, political meetings, retirement functions
and many other celebrations. No function is being held without ‘Putarekulu’
sweet,” says Yatam Kanaka Durga, of Atreyapuram village.
Photo credit : The Hindu
“Our village is a
hub for ethnic foods and we want to provide all traditional foods in
Atreyapuram. Along with ‘putarekulu’, we are selling mango jelly, ‘bobbatlu’,
‘purnamburelu’, ‘ariselu’, pickles, curry leaves powder (Karivepakupodi), Red
gram powder (Kandipodi) and other varieties,” Ms. Kanaka Durga told The
Hindu.“There are a few varieties of ‘putarekulu’. The sweet variety can be made
with sugar and ghee, jaggery and ghee, sugar and jaggery mixed, sugar, jaggery
and dry fruits and also with milk cake. The price of one roll ranges from Rs. 6
to Rs. 30 while it costs around Rs. 40 to Rs. 50 in a sweet stalls and
restaurants,” Ms Kanaka Durga said.
‘Putarekulu’ made
with ghee and jaggery can be stored up to one month. If made with dry fruits,
the rolls can be stored for 10 days. However, the sweets can be preserved for
more days by storing in fridges.Other varieties like mango jelly, pickles and
ethnic foods are available throughout the year in the village at reasonable
prices, the women said.
However, Geographical
Indication status continues to elude ‘Pootharekulu’ of Athreyapuram, East
Godavari, as the authorities have failed to initiate steps to register the
sweet with the Chennai-based Geographical Indication Registry to get exclusive
patent on the sweet.
Next
time, you are in Andhra – do try out this delicacy …… there is another Kakinada
special ‘khaja’ [Kottaiah Kajah] on which I have drafted one quite sometime back and am yet to post ...... .
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
2nd
Sept. 2015.