Category Archives: Arts, Culture & Entertainment

Now access Kannada Encyclopedia through Wikipedia

Mysore Varsity sets a Benchmark

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Mysore :

The University of Mysore has uploaded six volumes of its Kannada Encyclopedia to the web which can now be accessed by the general public through Wikipedia. The remaining eight volumes will be uploaded gradually.

The uploading to the web was launched by Vice-Chancellor Prof. K.S. Rangappa at a function organised at Kuvempu Institute of Kannada Studies (KIKS) in Manasagangotri here yesterday.

Speaking on the occasion, Prof. Rangappa advised the students to make best use of internet for gaining knowledge.

U.B. Pavanaja, Programme Officer, Centre for Internet and Society said that the varsity had set a benchmark by uploading the encyclopedia which would be a boon for Kannada medium students. KIKS Director Prof. R. Ramakrishna, Wikipedia Convenor Tejas Jain, University Project Director Prof. S. Ravi and others were present.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 16th, 2014

Age slows down the body but not the mind …

It has been rightly said by someone that “Age slows down the body, but not the mind.” The same is the case with Usha Ashwath Narayan, who is residing in JP Nagar, for the past 24 years and spent nearly 50 years in preparing gifts given during marriages which we also call as “Maduve Bhagana” in Kannada. Usha indulged herself and started experimenting in various arts. She soon became an expert in making dolls and show-pieces using coconuts, carving dried coconuts, preparing sugar dolls, haththi haara, gejje vastra and wax items. She is now one of the most sought after person in Mysore to get “Maduve Bhagana” ready!

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by Phalgunn Maharishi

Born in 1950 in Nanjangud, Usha spent her early childhood in Kolkata and Madras where her father worked as a Liaison Officer for a private company. She soon shifted to Mysore in 1958 and completed her Bachelors in Music from Gangotri Fine Arts College in the city in 1973. She also completed her Rashtra Bhasha Hindi exam in 1969 and got married to Ashwath Narayan, a KEB Senior Assistant, in 1975. The couple has two children; a son and a daughter, both software engineers in Bangalore. Usha is also a MA degree holder in Hindi Language from Mysore University through correspondence.

By profession, Usha was a teacher who managed primary school students and also taught Kannada and Hindi for high school students in various schools like St. Anne’s, Vidhyashankara and St. Marina’s till 1990 after which she was forced to quit the teaching line due to her health conditions. “I was always interested in creativity from my childhood. May be the genes have passed down to me from my grandmother I guess. I always saw her (grandmother) making models of chariots and bullock carts using coconut sticks,” said Usha while speaking about her inspiration behind the art. She also added, “I also love teaching. I handled everything single-handedly be it teaching, coconut carving, marriage gifts, drawing, painting and above all my children and my husband too.”

Usha is a unique person who has so far tried a number of creative arts and gained success in each one of them. When it comes to music, she is a vibrant veena player and a tremendous vocalist. When it’s drawing and painting, she is well-versed in glass painting, fabric painting, oil painting and a lot more. She has also won hundreds of prizes for her paintings and rangoli designs. When you have a marriage in your family and you are in need of a person who can prepare all the traditional gifts and show-pieces for your relatives, Usha is the person you can bet upon.

Usha said, “I started working for marriages in my family and friends circle in the beginning when I was just 10 years. As days passed the word started spreading and today I work for marriages happening in Bangalore, Mumbai and also abroad.” She also commented, “I never knew I would come all the way working alone without any help from any person. But nowadays, as I am growing old, my children help me a little during their free time; not in the process of making, but in the process of online selling through Facebook.”

Usha has recently started making terracotta jewelleries which originated during Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro civilisation. It is the oldest form of jewelleries known to mankind, but had lost its value amidst gold and silver jewelleries. “Recently my daughter had been to South Africa where she found the vast usage of terracotta jewelleries which the Mysoreans had no clue about before. She was the one who forced me to learn the art in Bangalore at Kavaani where I obtained a certificate in terracotta jewellery-making in 2013,” said Usha about her new talent and business. She later added, “The designs of my terracotta jewelleries are not available in the stores and the usual designs found in stores are not available with me. The trend is catching up recently in the city. People are buying the down-to-earth latest fashion jewelleries. They are seeking for a tremendous change from the usual gold and silver jewelleries.”

“I first make models using clay according to the designs and then dry them after which they are baked and painted. I use hacksaw blades, nose pliers, cutters and also waste pens and broken scales and water bottle caps to prepare the designs,” explained Usha while speaking about the procedure she follows to prepare terracotta jewelleries. She also added, “It takes nearly 15 days for me to complete a necklace set.”

Usha is by far the only person in Mysore who prepares such terracotta jewelleries. She has also been an avid social worker in her young age. She has been responsible for bringing street lights and frequent buses to JP Nagar by holding strikes near some routes of JP Nagar years ago. She really is an example of a lady whose body is aging with time but not the mind.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> Feature Articles  / July 15th, 2014

Marking Time

Grey clouds hover over Russell Square. They growl menacingly and then spit out fat raindrops. I take cover at the newspaper stall next to Luna Sweets.
 A group of men sit on wooden benches outside a chai shop, sipping hot tea.Theycomplain that Shivajinagar is definitely dirtier and more crowded than before. Prasad, the news stall owner tells me that it affects business.”It was not like this in earlier times”recollects a grey haired Syed Anwar.
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“The Shivajinagar Bus Terminus used to be a football field called the ChotaMaidan in the late 40’s. At the corner of the Square opposite St.Mary’s Basilica was a petrol bunk and in the middle was a large public toilet and well.” They begin to swap stories and I am included in the reminiscences.
“When my father moved his business here in 1957, military officers and Europeans from the Cantonment came to get watches fixed.” says a bespectacled Syed Mahmood. I peek into his shop; the Paris Watch Company.
 It is filled with timepieces; grandfather clocks hang on the wall and squat little brass vintage alarm clocks tick merrily inside a tiny work cabin. “Our earlier shop, the Pearl Watch Company (present Mota Chambers) was on Brigade Road. Business was good there.” The shop shifted to Shivajinagar in 1957.
“My family was originally from Chikmagalur where my grandfather had a circus. He was good with animals but it ran at a loss so he shifted to fixing watches.” My eyes widen. I have unexpectedly come across astory on this rainy evening in Bangalore. Perhaps the city speaks only when we stop to listen.
Syed Mahmood’s father, Syed Jaffer,was a respected horologist,well known amongst vintage watch collectors in the city.”One day in the late 70’s, Dr.Ajaz Ahmad, a Unani specialist from Mysore called him about a very important job.
Watchmakers across the country and beyond had failed at it since the three missing parts were irreplaceable. My father manufactured the parts,re-assembled the clock in 30 days and took it to Delhi where he presented the working Mantel Clock to its owner, the Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi. He charged only `3000 for the job” says Syed Mahmood “but Mrs.Gandhi gave him `10,000.”
Syed Jaffer refused to teach his son the craft through books. “I learnt how to repair and assemble watches standing beside him all day.” His eyes grow moist. “He was a very fine man.”
Syed Jaffer was returning from weekly prayers at a mosque in Kumbarpet when he was unknowingly caught in police firing on MG Road in December 1986, duringa protest over a fictional story in a local newspaper. The stray bullet damaged his voice and his vocation. His shaking hands never fixed a watch again till his demise two years later
The shop fills with sadness. Syed Mahmood wipes his eyes.
The clouds pass and thestories end. The men discuss world events. Paris Watch Company goes back to work. Syed Mahmood hunches over a dial and scrutinises it carefully.He fixes all kinds of clocks and watches including new ones, but the vintage French mantel clocks are a personal favourite. “Like the English clocks, they are almost impossible to replicate.”
Customers arrive to pick up their resurrected Omega or Rolex watches. They tell me that his skill and dedication too, are equally irreplaceable.The shop’s reputation remains unaltered by time.
The writer is a cultural documentarian and blogs at aturquoisecloud.wordpress.com

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> Columns> Others / by Bangalore Mirror Bureau /July 14th, 2014

Mystic aura of MS

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M.S. Subbulakshmi is a rare phenomenon in the history of our country. She is an all-in-one — a great artiste, a philanthropist, a wonderful human being, a cultural ambassador, a rebel in her way and much more. She is the first musician recipient of Bharat Ratna, the highest civilian award in India.

Ragamala Publication, Mysore, is bringing out a book on the musical journey of M.S. Subbulakshmi. The book is titled ‘Bhuvanada Bhagya MS’ in Kannada. The book has four sections. The first section deals with the childhood of MS narrated in her own words and how the seeds of music were sown into her. Then the historical times and its forces, which have shaped MS and her long spread musical journey.

Second section has articles on the music of MS by musicians of great repute and perceptive critics. This section also has an article on the role of cinema in shaping the music of MS.

Third section consists of exclusive interviews by reputed percussionists and violinists who have accompanied MS. The last section presents the Presidential address of MS on the occasion of receiving the prestigious Sangeetha Kalanidhi Award and her interview by another great musician Vidushi Mani Krishnaswamy. The book has a rich collection of photographs of renowned photographers like Avinsha Pasricha and Raghu Rai.

The book will be released on 15th July, Tuesday, at Veene Seshanna Bhavana in city at 6 pm by V. Ramnarayan, the editor of ‘Sruti,’ India’s premier magazine on performing arts, Chennai. He will also share the memories of his long association with MS. The well-known Kannada writer S. Diwakar will speak on the book, which will be followed by the rendition of some of the favourite kritis of MS by a young talent Uttara Swaminathan of Bangalore, a disciple of Vidushi Jayanthi Kumaresh. The entire programme will be concluded by about 8 pm.

Music-lovers are requested to attend the function in large numbers. They are also requested to encourage editor/publisher T.S. Venugopal by purchasing the released book which will be available at a concessional rate of Rs.100 per copy.

— K. R. Mohan

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 14th, 2014

New office-bearers of Mysore District Journalists Assn.

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Mysore :

K. Deepak was elected as the President of Mysore District Journalists Association (MDJA) in the elections to the governing body held yesterday.

Deepak defeated his lone rival Kundur Umesh Bhat by a margin of 28 votes to bag the top post.

S.T. Ravikumar was elected City Vice-President defeating his rival Jayanth by a margin of 15 votes. Gajendra was elected Rural Vice-President defeating his rival Bherya Mahesh by a margin of 47 votes.

Lokesh Babu was elected General Secretary defeating his rival Subramanya by a margin of 34 votes. Srikanta Swamy was elected City Gen. Secretary defeating his rival Sashikumar by 58 votes.

Madhusudhan was elected as Treasurer defeating his rival Raghavendra by 29 votes. H.S. Sachhith was earlier elected unopposed as Rural Secretary.

The following were elected to the Executive Committee: Manju Kote, Ram, Hampa Nagaraj, Vatal B. Anand, D.C. Diddahalli Raghu, D.N. Mahendra, Nanjangud Madhu, Dharmapura Narayan, Ramachandra Ganga, Lakshminarayan Yadav, Nagesh Panathale, V. Mahesh Kumar (Kollegal Mahesh), M. Ravi, H.M. Aravind, P. Rangaswamy.

Interestingly, Ram and P. Rangaswamy, who have been elected to the Executive Committee are brothers.

In all, 50 candidates had contested for 22 posts, with two candidates each contesting for the posts of President, city Vice-President, Rural Vice-President, General Secretary, Secretary and Treasurer and a total of 38 for 15 Executive Committee posts. The election to MDJA Executive Body (2014-17) was held between 8 am and 2 pm yesterday, with 274 members out of the total electoral strength of 292 casting their vote.

Senior Journalists Echanur Kumar and M.S. Kashinath supervised the election.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 14th, 2014

Jawa, Yezdi bikes vroom on city roads

International Jawa Day today

Jawa and Yezdi bike owners taking out a rally this morning from front of the house of late F.K. Irani in Nazarbad to celebrate the International Jawa Day.
Jawa and Yezdi bike owners taking out a rally this morning from front of the house of late F.K. Irani in Nazarbad to celebrate the International Jawa Day.

Mysore :

About 300 bikers this morning took out a rally with their precious good old Jawa and Yezdi bikes vrooming on the main roads of city to mark the 12th International Jawa Day.

The roads came alive with the sounds of Yezdi and Jawa as their owners took out their pride and joy to mark the day.

These iconic machines, called the ‘King of Roads’, were manufactured by the erstwhile Ideal Jawa (India) Ltd.

The rally, which was organised by Jawa Friends Club, Mysore, began in front of the house of late F.K. Irani, Managing Director of the then Ideal Jawa factory in city and passed through Nazarbad main road, Hardinge Circle, Doddakere Maidan road, Chamaraja Double road, Narayana Shastry Road, Devaraj Urs Road, JLB Road, Ramaswamy Circle, Saraswathipuram Fire Brigade road, Apollo Hospital Road, Vijaya Bank Circle, Vishwamanawa Double Road, Kukkarahalli Lake road, Open Air Theatre road, Hunsur Road, Vontikoppal Road, KRS Road, Jawa factory Road and will culminate at Prestige Function Hall near Columbia Asia Hospital later in the day.

Sameer, one of the organisers, speaking to SOM said that this year’s Jawa Day has been organised by about 40 friends who own Jawa and Yezdi bikes.

He said that every year, for one day, people across the city and from neighbouring Chamarajanagar, Madikeri, Mandya, Bangalore assemble at a specified place and will be riding Czech-made or Czech-inspired motorcycles Jawa or Yezdi to celebrate the Day.

‘We celebrate this day to show people that our motorcycles are still in use, and to just have some fun,’ he added.

Kishore and Hemali couple, who have come all the way from Bangalore to participate in the rally, said that over the years, these bikes have attained an iconic status as they are no longer available. If available, they are sold for over a lakh.

He also said that though the day is celebrated in Bangalore too, I wanted to celebrate the day in Mysore as it is the birth place of Jawa and Yezdi bikes.

Kishore said that he owns a 1995 model Yezdi Roadking and added that his bike is serviced in Mysore.

Madhusudhan and Keerthana from Mysore, who are participating with their 1996 model Yezdi Roadking said that it is for the third time they are participating and added that it was awesome to ride with numerous bikes manufactured by Jawa.

The motorcycles were manufactured at Ideal Jawa (India) Ltd., the first automotive company founded in collaboration with Jawa Motorcycle Company, Czechoslovakia in Mysore.

Production of these motorcycles stopped after Ideal Jawa shut its operations in 1995.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 13th, 2014

Suttur Seer presents ‘Basava Ratna’ awards

Basava Ratna awardees (sitting from left) Brahma Kumari Lakshmiji, Star of Mysore Editor-in-Chief K.B. Ganapathy, Helavarahundi Siddappa, Mahesh and Adappa Shetty are seen with Sri Shivaratri Deshikendra Swamiji, Co-operation Minister H.S. Mahadeva Prasad, MLA Vasu, Sharana Mandali President and office-bearers.
Basava Ratna awardees (sitting from left) Brahma Kumari Lakshmiji, Star of Mysore Editor-in-Chief K.B. Ganapathy, Helavarahundi Siddappa, Mahesh and Adappa Shetty are seen with Sri Shivaratri Deshikendra Swamiji, Co-operation Minister H.S. Mahadeva Prasad, MLA Vasu, Sharana Mandali President and office-bearers.

Mysore :

“The celebration of Basava Jayanti will be more meaningful if everyone practically follows the great social reformer’s principles in their lives,” opined Co-operation and Sugar Minister H.S. Mahadeva Prasad.

He was speaking after inaugurating the ‘Basava Ratna’ awards (2014) presentation function organised by Mysore Sharana Mandali at Rajendra Bhavan in JSS Hospital premises here last evening.

Regretting that the present day Government employees lacked honesty and determination in their work, Mahadeva Prasad advised the employees to work for the development of the society rather than merely working for leading their life.

Earlier, Suttur Mutt Seer Sri Shivaratri Deshikendra Swamiji presented the ‘Basava Ratna’ awards to Brahma Kumari Lakshmiji of Brahmakumari Ishwariya Vishwavidyalaya for Spirituality, Star of Mysore Editor-in-Chief K.B. Ganapathy for Journalism, Helavarahundi Siddappa for Government service, Adappa Shetty for Religious service and Mahesh for Social service.

MLA Vasu, litterateur Prof. Maleyuru Guruswamy, Sharana Mandali President Mugur Nanjundaswamy, senior Vice-Presidents M.B. Veerabhadrappa and B.S. Virupaksha Shetty, Convenor M. Chandrashekar, General Secretary M. Jayaprakash, Hon. Advisors K.S. Nagasundar, S.S. Shastri and Siddalingappa, Secretary T. A. Madhukar and others were present.

Mysore Naganna and team presented ‘Tatvapada’ programme on the occasion.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 13th, 2014

Always meant for art

 

The wall of the pathway to the garage is adorned with paintings
The wall of the pathway to the garage is adorned with paintings
To May Kottukapally Demann, art was anexpression of life — vibrant, colourful andalways evolving, never static. Today, her home in Indiranagar is a gallery.
In a quiet road leading to Indiranagar Club, one space grabs attention. Among independent houses enclosed within high compound walls, a beautiful rendition of the Tree of Life in stone mosaic is on the facing wall of a compact-looking house. Along the compound wall, colourfully-painted butterflies and birds exhibit a decided joie de vivre. There are Bastar art works, Warli paintings and painted murals all over the outer walls. But the spirit of the space is underlined by the piece de resistance near the garage: a tribal mural of men in shirts and trousers on horses, holding bright green parrots in their hands, yesteryear maharaja style.

Whimsical and whacky, the mural is signed by a tribal artist from Rajasthan who has scribbled the year 1997 at the bottom. The front door is flanked by a mosaic of bronze dwaarapalikas (figures who guard the front entrance) on the wall. Within, wherever the eyes rest, there is a painting or a mural in super-bright colours. Even in the four bathrooms and what once used to be the kitchen. Gallery 545 takes its name from its door number in a tony area of Indiranagar, and used to be the residence of the late May Kottukapally Demann.

Visitors to the gallery do not express surprise when they see art in the space. After all, the space has known art since it was built. Sonali Singh and Deepika Mogilishetty, founders of Gallery 545 say that it is in fact, a “great honour” to be allowed to run their gallery from the precincts of Demann’s home.

The Grand Doyen 

Hailing from a well-known old Kerala family, May Kottukapally Demann grew up in England and Germany and married a German, Harald Demann. A passion for art led her to travel across Europe and she became a prolific collector. When she returned to India, Demann became the secretary and member of INTACH.

Her daughter, Sonja Demann, says living without art was unimaginable for her mother. “She really had an eye for beautiful art,” she says. In fact, different styles of Indian art from different Indian states lived happily within one room.

There was not a single free space left on her house walls, both inside and outside. “But it all seemed to fit just right,” says Sonja, “as if they belonged together — the angle, the colour scheme, the workmanship. To me, her house was like a museum of all Indian art.”

Museum before gallery

Demann had a large collection of modern Indian art from artists such as Husain, Sunil Das, Jamini Roy, Brendres, Adimoolam, Alphonso, Vasudev, JMS Mani, Peter Lewis and others. “My mother knew nearly every artist who came to Bangalore,” Sonja says. A variety of bronze figures were distributed all over the 2,300 sq ft house. When Singh and Mogalishetty wanted to start their own art initiative, they had seen several spaces before hearing of Demann’s residence. “When we saw the stone sculptures from Orissa outside we were stumped. We knew we had found the right space,” says Singh. But it meant a lot of responsibility as well which is why most of the works have been removed by Sonja after the gallerists requested her to do so.

The walls however remain emblazoned by mural, folk and tribal art. There are also colourful Madhubani paintings and Gond tribal art. Sonja says, “Gond art is an expression of the belief: Viewing a good image begets good luck.” There are also Pithora paintings from Gujarat. In fact May Kottukapally Demann had no domestic help because she enjoyed taking care of the artworks herself. And the value of the art in her residence led her to screen visitors to her house and also the gardener.

Art lover 

“In those days, artists felt honoured to be invited to paint at her residence,” Singh says. An artist once told Sonja “here lives someone who really understands art and us….you can feel the passion….your mother is like one of us.” And that is why she was frequently called to inaugurate both traditional and modern art exhibitions.

In her last days, May Kottukapally Demann was hospitalised. Sonja Demann plastered every inch of the hospital room with family photos and paintings by her daughter Leticia. “I wanted to keep her surroundings colourful to motivate her in her fight against cancer. At times, despite her pain, we would leave the hospital to go for art exhibitions. Her eyes would light up.”

After she passed away in 2011, some artists suggested Sonja convert her mother’s house into an art museum. “But I am happy that her house is being used for art. Her spirit and passion for art will always stay connected to 545.”

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> Entertainment> Lounge / by Jayanthi Madhukar, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / July 10th, 2014

Boot camp biryani

Once grimy haunts of roving soldiers, Bangalore’s military hotels have smartened up

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Mention Kannadiga food and most people think of Udupi hotels: dosa, idli, bisi bele bhaat and a general air of puritan vegetarianism. But there is a long tradition of Bangalorean food that is all about meat: the Hindu military hotel.

How did the military hotel get its curious name? “Most hotels were run by the Maratha descendants of Shahaji Bhonsle who conquered Bangalore in 1638. They added the prefix Hindu to make it clear that they did not serve beef or pork,” says artist and art historian Suresh Jayaram. Others believe the hotels served Bangalore’s many roving soldiers, both British and Indian. “People believed that soldiers needed meat every day to fight. They used military hotels to meet and plan their campaigns,” says Rajiv L who runs the Shivaji Military Hotel in South Bangalore.

In those days, most hotels were tiny, grimy dives, with an all-male clientele and service so curt it verged on the insulting. The food was served on banana leaves laid on the floor and cooked on a wood fire. They stuck to what they were good at: biryani , mutton chaap (or chops), kaima (keema by another name), local chicken, and ragi mudde (ragi balls), washed down with country liquor.

These days, most military hotels have smartened up with laminated tables and proper seating. Customers now range from office goers and students to politicians and film stars — and the Hindu prefix has been dropped. Nearly every military hotel claims to have Kannada film star Ambarish as a customer; perhaps his macho image makes for the perfect poster boy. Like the Udupi hotels, the emphasis is on fast turnover; this is not a place to linger on. Somewhere along the way, they also stopped serving liquor. Prices have risen from a reputed eight annas for a plate of food (at the beginning of the previous century) to around Rs 140 for a biryani in the smarter hotels.

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The granddaddy of most military hotels is undoubtedly the Shivaji hotel in Jayanagar, started in 1924. At peak lunch hour, the queues stretch out to the pavement. When I visit, my choice of dish is a no-brainer: the famous donne biryani in chicken or mutton, named after the leaf bowl in which it is served. I get a generous, overflowing portion, enough for two, plus a fiery gravy, pachdi (a South Indian version of raita) and a rasam, all for Rs 140. The biryani is piping hot and delicious, that perfect balance between greasy and dry, the rice fluffy, but not chewy, and generously peppered with chunks of chicken.

So busy are Rajiv and his brother Lokesh, the third generation of hotel owners, that it takes me three days to pin them down for an interview. When I finally speak to them, I do it in the kitchen, where a row of massive cauldrons bubble and boil over charcoal fires. Lokesh stirs a soupy concoction of rice, mutton and spices in the biggest one, at least five feet wide.  Shivaji’s has a staff of 15, but only Rajiv, Lokesh and two other close family members do the cooking, using carefully guarded family recipes. “The staff don’t have our kaiguna (loosely translated as haath ka jadu),” says Rajeev. “And you must have that goodwill, that passion, to make it right for the customer.”

At 28, Manoj Kumar is one of the younger customers, but he has been coming nearly every single day since he was ten. “This is the best biryani I have ever had, across India. The charcoal fire gives it that special taste,” he says. Other regular customers agree, “This is the only place where the biryani still tastes the same as it used to a decade ago.”

While Shivaji may be the most popular, its competitors have their fans too. The Ranganna Military Hotel, not far away, began as a roadside shack. Now, it’s a spotlessly clean Udupi-style joint. But a bit of its past history still survives on the walls, which are covered with black-and-white photos of the owner, Munirangappa, a wrestler in his heyday. His sons, Sunil Kumar and Sendil Kumar, walk me through the long menu.

I am told to try the leg soup — known up north as paya — as an appetiser. The soup arrives in a steel tumbler, the trotters neatly laid on a plate. It’s like a very meaty rasam, fiery, peppery and a kick in the palate. This is the Kannadiga version of chicken soup, a cure-all for every ailment. “Very good for women who have given birth,” assures Sunil. “It’s full of calcium.” The waiter tries to persuade me to eat the trotters too, but I can’t manage that, or the thale mamsa (literally head meat, from a goat) that he assures me is the house speciality. Instead, I go for the safer option:  flaky Kerala parathas crisp as paper, and kaima redolent of garlic and coriander.

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The ragi mudde, a palm-sized ball of ragi with the consistency of Play-doh, is a quintessential Kannadiga dish. If properly made, it can be delicious. If not, it can be like eating a cannonball. Luckily, the ragi mudde at Ranganna’s is soft as a cloud, perfect for soaking up the chicken gravy that goes with it.

If the slightly gentrified environs of these hotels don’t do it for you, try S G Rao Military Mess, which, at over a hundred years, is probably the oldest military hotel in Bangalore. This is a true dive, tucked away in a tiny street in Akkipet in the heart of old Bangalore pete (town). Most dishes here are priced below Rs 80 and everything seemingly unchanged from how it used to be a century ago. The mutton korma here is particularly good, rich and creamy.

Nati (local or country) chicken is best had at Maratha Darshan, run by Naveen Lad and his mother. Right behind local Congress headquarters, this hotel is crammed with party members and politicians. One bite of the peppery, spicy chicken may bring tears to your eyes, even so you may find yourself ordering seconds.

Despite their general air of living contentedly in the past, change is catching up with military hotels. Most now have a separate family room. At Shivaji’s, young Jayanagar moms in jeans jostle for a table with elderly gentlemen in snowy white veshtis. The waiters now wear plastic hair nets and gloves, and the brusqueness of old has given way to a disconcerting politeness. Ranganna’s has switched to cooking on gas stoves because getting wood for a proper fire is difficult. They also serve fried fish. But most customers refuse to wallow in nostalgia. “Change is good,” says one of the fiercely loyal customers at Shivaji’s. “It’s clean now. No liquor-shiquour. Earlier, I could not bring my wife here. Now I even bring my daughter.”

As prices rise and competition gets fiercer, owners hope their children will carry on the family tradition. “When I was young, I worked all morning in the hotel, then studied the rest of the day for my bachelor’s degree,” says Rajiv, the emotion apparent in his voice. “Three generations of us have slaved for this hotel. I hope we can keep the Shivaji name going.”


Where to go

It’s best to get to your hotel early if you want to avoid waiting in a queue. Carry cash; they won’t accept credit cards.  All the hotels here are open Tuesday–Sunday.

Shivaji Military Hotel

780 1st C Main, 45th cross, 8th block, Jayanagar
8 am to 3 pm
Ph: 91 9845149217

Ranganna Military Hotel

KR Road, Banashankari, Bangalore
7.30 am to 4 pm, 7 pm to 10 pm
Phone: 080 6452 8777

SG Rao Military Mess

OTC Road, Akkipet, Chickpet, Bangalore
6.30 am to 3 pm
Ph: 91 98459 58799

Maratha Darshan

4, Miller Tank Road, Queens Road Cross, Cunningham Road, Bangalore
12.30 to 4 pm, lunch only
Ph: 91 9880551328

source: http://www.business-standard.com / Business Standard / Home> Beyond Business> News / by Kavitha Rao / July 12th, 2014

TN CM Jayalalithaa’s sister meets brother in T.N.Pur

Mysore :

Shailaja, who claims to be the sister of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa, met her elder brother M. J. Vasudevan, who stays at Srirangarajapura in T. Narasipur taluk on Monday.

Shailaja who recently appeared in TV channels claiming to be the sister of Jayalalithaa, visited the residence of her step-brother Vasudevan at Srirangarajapura.

Shailaja, in a statement issued to a newspaper recently, had claimed that she was unaware about the whereabouts of her step-brother, who was the son of the first wife of her father R. Jayaram.

Vasudevan, upon reading the report, contacted the newspaper office and came to know of his step-sister, following which Shailaja met him at his residence on Monday evening.

JayalalithaaBF14jul2014

Jayalalithaa is a native of Mysore

R. Jayaram, who was the son of N. Rangachar, a Palace doctor during the era of Nalwadi Krishnaraja Wadiyar, had 2 wives named Jayamma and Sandhya. While Vasudevan was the son of Jayaram’s first wife Jayamma, Jayakumar, Jayalalithaa and Shailaja were born from his second wife Sandhya.

Jayaram, after separating from his first wife Jayamma, later lived with his second wife Sandhya at Lakshmipuram in city.

Meanwhile, Vasudevan said that he had contacted ‘Star of Mysore,’ when reports of Jayalalithaa’s birth place began to appear in newspapers and gave clarification in this regard.

Pointing out that Shailaja had prayed at Chamundi Hills and Srikanteshewara Temple in Nanjangud for the victory of her sister Jayalalithaa in the Lok Sabha Polls, Vasudevan said Shailaja visited Chamundi Hills and Nanjangud once again to fulfil her vows, following her sister’s success in the poll.

source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News  / July 09th, 2014