Versuchen GOLD - Frei

Family holidays with kids, pots and pans in tow

Mint Hyderabad

|

May 10, 2025

Combining new cuisines with familiar flavours of home can make travel easier for kids—and adults

- Roshni Bajaj Sanghvi

Who carries a granite pan and a silicone spatula in their check-in luggage for a three-day trip? The same parent who tucks steel bowls and small spoons into cabin luggage, so that their primary-schoolgoing kids have familiar, child-sized cutlery to eat with during the journey. As parents of three children—one aged 9 and two 7—with three persistent and very varied appetites, my spouse and I plan snacks for holidays before we make schedules.

A few months ago, in a little apartment at a ski resort in Switzerland, while I sliced Swiss cheese and stirred homemade, pre-roasted, ready-to-cook buttery millet khichdi, I glanced at my phone. My spouse was walking through the cold aisle at the alpine town's supermarket, sending me photos of local spiced ham and salami. We were exchanging notes about which one seemed least processed. He's always been vegetarian, the sole herbivore in our family of five. However, if our kids want to sample some meat products, he'll dispassionately, albeit briefly, tolerate handling animal parts.

A short while later, we were all sitting around the warmly lit dining table, snowflakes fluttering past our street-level picture windows, eating a meal that to anyone in India or Switzerland would be utterly peculiar: Swiss-butter-finished millet khichdi spiked with curry leaves, turmeric and Guntur chillies, frozen petit pois straight from the bag (they tasted like sweet vegetal popsicle balls), and slices of Emmentaler and Graubünden cold cuts.

WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Your money moves for every chapter—single to parenting

Managing financial priorities and risk appetites amid a transition by households

time to read

3 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Why Google's AI is unlikely to overtake OpenAI's ChatGPT

Gemini may be the 'better' bot but ChatGPT might be harder to quit

time to read

3 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

The US economy presents a case for being 'cautiously optimistic'

Indicators suggest weakness but it won't last long and a recovery would be good for global growth

time to read

3 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

India plans global EV summit in March

India is reworking its electric mobility strategy after recent supply chain shocks, including the rare-earth magnet crunch and muted traction for earlier efforts to attract major global electric vehicle (EV) makers.

time to read

2 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Inspector raj rollback: Let's turn this small start into a crescendo

India has begun to clear up a regulatory thicket that should proceed apace to give all our businesses more space to breathe

time to read

3 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

India’s battery dreams trip on visa hurdles for Chinese pros

Problems in renewal of visas for Chinese technicians have slowed the pace of buildout of India’s lithium-ion battery manufacturing factories for electric vehicles and energy storage, according to two people aware of the matter.

time to read

1 min

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Pernod Ricard exits Imperial to bet big on premium spirits

French spirits major Pernod Ricard India is sharpening its focus on premium alcohol, exiting the mass-market whisky segment even as it launches a new India-made brand aimed at consumerstrading up.

time to read

2 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Time, and not capital, isa disruptor: Wakefit founder

The IPO-bound company has developed an asset-light approach to building offline presence

time to read

2 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Mint Hyderabad

Sitharaman urges global action on new economic risks

The finance minister said that economic governance must rest on fairness and responsibility

time to read

1 mins

December 03, 2025

Mint Hyderabad

Chinese rare-earth dealers are dodging Beijing’s export curbs

Chinese rare-earth magnet companies are finding workarounds to their government's onerous export restrictions, as they seek to keep sales flowing to Western buyers without falling afoul of Chinese authorities.

time to read

1 mins

December 03, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size