Coming
to grips with the grape.

Do you like grapes? The Romans did. There are endless pictures,
immortalised further by movies like
Ben
Hur
, where Roman he-men, and nobles recline languorously against silken
cushions, while a nubile wench holds a bunch of luscious grapes over their
faces, tempting them to reach out and take a
nibble.
ONCE UPON A
TIME
Grapes, in times of yore, had Hedonistic associations. Besides,
thanks to that overactive god, Bacchus, lover of the grape, especially in its
distilled forms, the grape had a certain ignominy by association.
Grapes, in India, were till not too long ago, the lure of the
exotic. They came in from Kabul or were grown sparsely in the country, and
therefore were not only very transitory, seasonal delights, but were also
something of a luxury.
All that has changed dramatically of course. The
Hyderabad grape revolution, the flooding of markets with the
Gulabshahi
and
Anabshahi
varieties and their seedless
versions and the emergence of Nasik and other parts of Maharasthra, and parts of
Southern India as grape-growing regions, have seen the grape becoming a popular
snack, extending itself from being just a means of quenching thirst on a hot
summer day, or, more potently, on long party evenings.
GET
YOUR GRAPES
Grapes have today become something of a regular on tables:
They add to the table decor, thanks to their colour and pleasing shape, and the
bunches are often used as part of the centrepiece.
Thanks to the fact that
India now imports grapes from California, where, thanks to geography, the season
comes at a time when our own vines are bereft, Indians can enjoy grapes all
through the year.
A
HEALTHY SNACK

Which is great news for the palate, but greater news for health
and fitness freaks. With their natural sugars and high water content, and the
right amount of roughage, grapes are a great pick-me-up and full of energising
goodness.
According to research conducted by the California table grape
industry, the Indian consumer quite loves her imported grapes. Forget the fact
that they are top quality and succulent in their freshness and perfection, even
as a positioning statement, they work just fine. And though Indians will NOT eat
locally grown grapes with seeds, seeds are not such a matter of concern
obviously, if the grapes are imported.
Both the seeded and seedless
varieties have hit it off with the Indian buyers, and thus encouraged the
importers to seek out even more varieties to put on offer, the coming season,
beginning November. Let’s take a look at what is commonly called the food
of the Gods...
WHY ARE
GRAPES SO SPECIAL?
Earlier, it was the fact that they were rare. Today,
however, nutritionists sing their praises as the com-plete fruit that has
phytonutrients that enhance good health and help fight against cancer-causing
free radicals. They even help keep the heart healthy.
House proud women
love grapes because they look good on the table, and are a great way to dress up
a salad, a main course dish, or a dessert. Grapes have found their way into
seafood and meat dishes and are used to enhance vegetarian dishes.
And
last but not least, is the fact that like wine and grape juice, table grapes
have qualities that help protect the heart and blood vessels against oxidative
tissue damage. This finding, courtesy research undertaken in the US of A,
suggests that you don’t have to imbibe intoxicating liquids dis-tilled
from the grape to keep your heart ticking happily (other factors being equal),
munching on bunches of grapes will do just as well, thank you.
Table
grapes and wine contain many of the same polyphenols, aka disease-fighting
phyto-nutrients, and are effective antioxidants. Even after a heart attack,
grapes, (in this case the study used California grapes), improved blood flow and
heart pumping capacity, and reduced the area of ’tissue death’ that
followed a heart attack.
That’s good news — the kind that makes
grape eating that much more of a pleasure.
And to add to simple joys, here
are some ways of converting the globe of colour into a visual and gastronomic
treat.
Recipes