試す 金 - 無料
Sound bites
Brunch
|January 18, 2025
Crunchy textures are taking over our soups, salads, sushi, even desserts. Chefs break down the hype around the crisp and crackle, and the trick to getting it just right
Forget molecular foams and umami. The new food obsession is one you can both see and hear. Crunchy textures are everywhere. Soups are coming out of the kitchen topped with crispy-fried noodles. Sushi gets a dusting of crunchy batter bits. At Asian restaurants, there are rice crackers to start with, and fortune cookies at the end. And on the street, the top vada pao stalls add besan choora to the pao; dabeli is hidden under nylon sev; even a ragda pattice gets blessed with crushed pani-puri shells. It's more than an Indian trick now. Israeli-British chef Yotam Ottolenghi serves butternut squash cooked with poppadom; and black chana and mango curry topped with namkeen Bombay mix.
Science says we're hardwired to like crunchy foods.
Biting into something that provides clear haptic feedback (we hear it inside our heads and feel it in our jaws) sends a signal that food is fresh.
Around the world, local words for crispycrunchy foods are onomatopoeic. Italians say croccante; the Japanese say pori-pori and kari-kari; the Russian term for crispy crust is khrustyashchaya korochka; north India loves karari bhindi; south India loves murukku; we literally have a snack brand called Kurkure. We asked Indian chefs how they're making the most of our textural home advantage.
Tribal Gourmet, Delhi Tanisha Phanbuh, founder of the NorthEastern pop-up kitchen, knows that traditional recipes from the region aren't big on crunch. Most local food is mashed, steamed or tender. "But we have fresh salads to do the job," she says, and adds generous portions to her preparations.

このストーリーは、Brunch の January 18, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Brunch からのその他のストーリー
Brunch
Soft-launching 2026
No fancy resolutions, no grand wishes for world peace. Instead, here's looking forward to some modest wins this year
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Glow up, please
2026 is looking good for Vir Das. He's directing a movie, touring, crafting new comedy. It can get even better, he believes. Less GRWM, more cuddling; less AI, more IRL moments. Here's what he's manifesting in the New Year
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Slim, but a little shady
Has the era of body-positivity come and gone? Thin is back in. Almond moms dominate the chat. Here's why we're headed for disaster
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Turns of the century
These 10 novels came out 100 years ago. They launched careers, caused scandals, changed literature. Read them now, they're still full of fire
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
This week, we're...
Deep diving. - Look, we never said we knew James Cameron well. Turns out, we know less than we thought.
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Aisha Ahmed
Actor, @AishaRAhmed
1 min
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Get flavour-bombed
Bamboo biryani from the Araku valley, omelettes from Surat and every bite in between. Delhi's Street Food Festival may be our best guide to how India eats now
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
Stretch to your own beat
Silent-disco yoga involves more than exercising with headphones on. It needs focus, special playlists, fine-tuned audio. Can it make fans come back for more?
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
It's Y we're thrilled
Elon Musk's Tesla is finally here. It's sleek and, at ₹68 lakh, predictably pricey. It handles Indian roads just fine. But what you're really buying is the hype, the tech and a front-row seat to the future
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Brunch
That's how we roll
What a year for Indian skating! We've broken into the international league, won gold, set new records, gone viral for our moves. How did our favourite childhood hobby turn pro in just one generation? Hear it from the young champs
5 mins
December 13, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
