Episode 201: Food is at the Center of Everything

Gita Mazumdar says, “She was made in India, on the coconutty west-coast along the Arabian Sea. What luck to have been nurtured by a playful father, an orderly mother, and both her grandmothers.”

In Gita’s first few years, “she was held for long hours by her beloved Badi, an elderly Adivasi (indigenous) woman who cared for her while her parents, both doctors, worked. Gita’s first food were Badi’s unusual grains cooked in clay. Gita cried for Badi when they moved away from that early home. The story is that Gita refused food, chanting ‘Badi’ a hundred and eight times before her father lost count. Her paternal grand-mother, Mein, prepared bhakri, confident that it would break the spell. Hours past bedtime, Mein placed the spiced bread in front of Gita. She regarded it silently, looked up and wailed ‘Baadiiii!” Exasperated, Mein said, ‘Eat your Badi’s fat chapattis’ and snapped off the lights. The next morning, there were no signs of bhakri and no more chanting.” This is how I begin today’s podcast conversation with Gita Mazumdar. An Ayurvedic Indian Cuisine chef, photographer, wife, mother, friend, film maker, and conscientious community connector. She continues describing a life that eventually circles back to her paternal grand-mother Mean’s recipes and the way women pass on their stories from one generation to another. Food is at the center of things. DOWNLOAD

She is in the midst of arranging those stories and refining her recipes into a cookbook that brings to life a rich history of ancestry 11,500 years old. Lifestyles that nourished one’s body, mind, spirit, and soul. This kind of wellbeing is missing in the fast-paced lifestyles that are making us unwell.

Hear Gita describe her life and the Mystic Murrabba project: food for body and spirit. Listen in to other parts of our conversation that will nourish your spirit and inspire you to create a lifestyle of connectedness and wellbeing:

  • Ayurvedic Indian cuisine and your wellbeing.
  • Gita’s Kitchen Philosophy and Hygiene. The percentages between food nutrients and what we need for digestion.
  • 23 and Me DNA testing results and how far back Gita’s ancestry goes.
  • A cross cultural event Gita brilliantly overcame when she married Jim.
  • What her three adult-children tease her about.
  • How she overcame cultural disjointedness between our Eastern and Western cultures.
  • A common Indian saying, “Indifferently made food will only satisfy half a man’s hunger.” Why is food preparation so important?
  • Redefining what is important in your life at different stages.
  • Why Project Mystic Murrabba is not a business.

Thali is the way Indians eat on a regular basis; an Indian style meal. The meal is prepared with seven components that make up a complete meal. Each region in India has a different Thali but is prepared with the same seven components in mind. There is particular attention paid to details.

  • There is a Rice dish, a lentil dish, a cooked vegetable, some kind of bread, fermented pickle, some kind of chutney with lemon or lime (some added acidic flavor), fresh vegetables, and a small bite of sweet to encompass all the different flavors.
  • “The entire Thali meal consists of seven components: 7 colors. 6 flavors. 5 textures. 4 elements: earth, fire, water, and  air. 3 different qualities (temperaments) that wake you up, calms you down, and encourages the balance in between. 2 You never eat alone so you eat together with at least two people. The emphasis is on ONE UNITY that we are all a part of. We remember we are part of an Ecosystem; part of a cycle connected through this daily ritual two to three times each day, to what we are,” says Gita. Below is Gita making sour wheat dough bread. It was soooo satisfying.

WeMentor Self-Leadership Activation Exercises

After listening, do the following three WeMentor Self-Leadership Exercises:

  1. Take this risk: Prepare a Thali meal with the seven components listed above. If preparing it doesn’t work, order a meal from Gita and share it with at least two other people.
  2. Self-Compassion: Notice how your body and spirit responds to the Thali meal.
  3. Gratitude Challenge: Thank all those hands that have prepared your Thali meal. You can do this at every meal. Thank those that harvested the grains and vegetables. Thank those that prepared the fruit you consume. Thank those that packaged the food. Thank those that prepared and served the food. Acknowledge the community that you are connected to. We participate in daily rituals that connect us as an ecosystem that keeps us alive and well.

Self-Leadership Mentoring

  • Get One-On-One Mentoring during your transition. It is much easier to change when you know what is happening in your inner world. Paul Turek of Turek Consulting LLC says, “Nancy is a well-connected leadership development icon in this market… she’s got an interesting perspective on identifying and addressing leadership opportunities within oneself that is timely in our diverse and mobile workforce these days.” Get more meaningful conversations and useable tips every week.

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Podcast Guest Mentor

Gita Mazumdar. Enjoy regional cuisines from India. The best ingredients are solar-powered and raised by nature’s perfect cycles. Our bodies recognize the elements, seasons, and life force of what we consume. It is her quest, in this increasingly careless time, to examine and find what is real and good, and make an offering. There are studies that exclaim this and that, and then there are further trials that reverse those claims. Gita’s gujarati grandmother said that her medicine was food and her food, medicine; that it had been tested for over three thousand years by the mothers that preceded her. Hence, she ate the traditional Thali daily. This was never a monotonous meal! It varied by time of day, time of the lunar month, time of the solar year, and season of the eater’s life. It was achieved by preparing foods using the still-practiced Ayurvedic philosophy of making several dishes, consumed in varied proportions in accordance to each individual. They had, at best, at least seven colors, six tastes, five textures, four components, three temperaments, two eaters (a shared meal) One Unity.

Gita’s philosophy is to use naturally grown plant-foods*, with as many ingredients in their whole form. (Oil pressing is a curiosity, but not yet part of my repertoire.) She shops at the Saint Paul farmers market through the year and am often able to prepare entire meals from items I purchased directly from growers there. Gita will continue to study ways to dry, can, preserve and freeze the local harvest so she can develop and make future offerings during the snowy months. To supplement the market, she shops at the Co-Op; for spices and some ingredients, at the Indian grocers. Gita will also share some of the ingredients she brought back from India and a few from her own garden.

*There are occasional exceptions. For instance, she uses Milk and Cream (For making butter) bought from Lucas Kapper OF the Big Red barn, a family owned and run farm. They have sixty-six cows. This is sparingly used and will be indicated on the menu sent with each meal. She may also use fresh eggs bought from local farmer, Jessica, of Gilbertson farms.

Episode 201: Food is at the Center of Everything

Nancy A. Meyer, M.A.
Author: Nancy A. Meyer, M.A.

Nancy A. Meyer, M.A., is a seasoned entrepreneurial leader, business and life mentor/coach/teacher, podcaster, author, and certified mindfulness yoga and meditation integrator (she integrates those skill sets into everything). Nancy’s compassionate and collaborative approach reinforces resilience while maintaining accountable conversations supporting how you redefine your lead while redesigning your business. Nancy calls this “Dual Innovation Leadership.”   Nancy founded WeMentor, inc. in 1992 to change the leadership in our country by providing emerging and existing business owners with mentoring in Dual Innovation Leadership. She has mentored thousands and is eager to work with you! Assert self-leadership and get started today! Clients say, “Nancy is a compelling, engaging, and ‘decipher the trees from the forest’ kind of mentor, speaker, and leader. A dedicated entrepreneurial leader and mentor who role models what she preaches. Her style and candor enrich the content she delivers and the results clients experience.” Nancy accepts people where they are while inspiring them to breakthrough into new dimensions:  As an Entrepreneurial Leader (Innovator),  As a Competent Business Owner (Practitioner)  As a Mentor (Role Model)  As a Spiritual Being and Self-Leadership Master! Start by subscribing to WeMentor Mondays with Nancy PODCAST. Join your peers and...

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