Kasundi () is the Bengali variety of mustard sauce or relish. It has the pungent paste of fermented mustard seeds, spices and sometimes dried mangoes, dried Indian plum and olives. Kasundi is popular as a dipping sauce in Bengali cuisine.
In modern times, Kasundi is popularly served with Bengali snacks like cutlets and chops, and deep-fried spicy treats, as it brings tartness and pungency to the flavours. It also can be served as a dip with other snacks, as well as sandwiches, pizzas, burgers, omelettes, salads and other food. But, traditionally it was served neither with these treats nor in such quantities at home. In the past, it was stored with care, served sparingly and in small quantities, and paired with hot stir-fried greens, never fish or meat.Plavaneeta Borah, Durga Puja 2017 Special: Kasundi, Bengali Cuisine's Favourite Mustard Sauce, September 25, 2017 The practice of pairing kasundi with non-vegetarian dishes evolved in the commercial eateries, beginning with batter-fried fish.
Kasundi has always been a revered fixture of Bengali households, its making used to be almost a religious rite, with many restrictions and rituals.Swapna Pradhan, Retailing Management, page 294, Tata McGraw-Hill Education, 2009, With modern household appliances becoming commonplace, its preparation is no longer a complex ritual. It also is now industrially produced, and widely available in eateries as a sauce and supermarkets as a bottled condiment. Among the bottled kasundis, those following the recipe of Bikrampur, in undivided Bengal is reported to be the best. Kasundi has spread outside Bengal, across India and into the Pacific Ocean countries like Australia (popular as eggplant kasundi) and New Zealand (popular as tomato kasundi). In Australia and New Zealand, kasundi is often part of the Christmas gift hamper. Around the world many different recipes of kasundi are available, like Kasundi Scotch Eggs, Chilean Sea Bass, Spicy Barramundi or Chhana Aam Kasundi Paturi.Anjan Chatterjee, The inglorious mustard, Telegraph India, 2020-09-22
Families were forbidden to make kasundi in the month of a birth or the year of a death in the family, or if some tragedy had occurred to them in the past while making kasundi. For families who were not forbidden, failing to make kasundi in a particular year meant they would be forbidden to make any in the next 12 years. The way to avoid that was to give away mustard seeds to a Brahmin.
Renuka Devi Chaudhurani, doyenne of Bengali cuisine, The road from game pies to gujiyas, Mumbai Mirror, Aug 13, 2017 wrote in her book Stree Achaar ("women's rituals") that it was mandatory that a Brahmin makes it, not the women of the household. The women were allowed only to wash, dry and pound the mustard seeds, which were then given to the Brahmins. For families that had women making it, the role of the Brahmin was still important in setting the time of kasundi making, lighting the fire to boil water for kasundi and putting the water-filler earthenware pot on the stove.
Black and yellow mustard seeds were first thoroughly washed and drained. The washing of mustard seeds was endowed with ceremonial importance in many parts of Bengal, where all the mustard seeds to be consumed by the family during the coming year were washed in one go on the day of Akshaya Tritiya. Mustard processing was ceremonially prohibited after that day. Washing the mustard had its own set of rituals — groups of married women bathed in odd numbers, then washed mustard seeds facing east wearing still wet . They sang and chanted for wealth, health and well-being while washing. Mustard was washed in a pond or a river, though washing it under a tap is an acceptable alternative in the modern days. For washing and straining a man's dhoti was used, not a woman's saree.
After sunning, it was sifted. The mustard was then brought back into the house amid much ululation and lit up ghee-lamps after it has been presented to the gods. Five kinds of fruits, two unripe mangoes on the same stem, betel leaf, betel nut, Cynodon dactylon ( dhoob) and paddy were also offered to gods along with the mustard. Next the mustard was ground, often with spices, into a fine pulp. Moderation was needed when adding spice, as over-spicing could spoil the kasundi. The seeds were pounded for two to three days to take away the bitterness and introduce the pungency ( jhaanjh). Meanwhile, water from the same pond or river in which it had been washed was boiled for a fairly long time in a freshly made earthenware pot.Rebati Mohan Sarkar, Through the Vistas of Life and Lore, page 558, Punthi Pustak, 2000, A little hot water and salt were added to make a paste, sometimes with one or two green mangoes dropped into the preparation, and paste was put in a new earthenware pot in the main house of the family by a woman of the family who had a living husband. One could touch the earthenware pots only after bathing and putting on fresh clothes.
Mustard in the sealed pot was then left to ferment for about two days in a cool place. This is the time when the flavours developed - the distinctive pungency, the subtle tang and the spicy notes of an ideal preparation. Once it had slightly fermented, the pots were opened and offered to pregnant women, who were in their third trimester, as Sadhbhakshan. The ritual also involved giving the pregnant women their favourite foods, along with their elders' blessing. After that it was bottled and sunned for a few more days. If made under the right conditions, kasundi remained edible for years.
Three or four days later, on an auspicious day of the week (i.e. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday), a part of the prepared kasundi was put into a small, new earthenware pot with a spirit, a religious rite. Then the pot was covered and sanctimoniously put in a safe place in the house to be opened on the first day of the month of Asharh (June–July). On the first day of the month of Asadh, fish was prohibited for all the members of the family. On that day Goddess Parvati is worshipped as Nistarini (lit. "one who delivers from difficulties") by women of high caste Hindu families of some districts of Bengal.
Chaudhurani mentions a dozen spices that were added to the kasundi, including green and black cardamom, cumin, coriander, nutmeg, mace, long pepper, chillies, black pepper and wild celery seeds. It also was made with a combination of fruits like mango, tamarind, indian jujube ( kul) or Spondias pinnata ( amda). The base kasundi is used to make tomato-kasundi, unripe mango-kasundi and other variations.Aliza Green, The Magic of Spice Blends, page 105, Quarry Books, 2015, Satarupa Banerjee, 101 Ways to Prepare Kababs, pages 33-34, Pustak Mahal, 2001,
Origin
Traditions
Process and rituals
Types of kasundi
Jhal kasundi
Phool kasundi
Gota kasundi
Tomato kasundi
Aam kasundi
Eggplant kasundi
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