Keshtu



"Look! The wife and the courtesan are important, but never forget your first crush!" Ajith (name changed) once stated, to underscore his choice of chai shops! He was just eighteen, but his philosophies were that of a fully-ripened grihastha, with rich (well, let's just say plentiful) allusions to women - especially courtesans and "jaaris" (his pejorative for women).

The "first crush" he was referring to was Keshtu, the tea vendor, the sole proprietor of the eponymously named chai shop, strategically located across from Hostel 1 and adjacent to the chemical engineering department.

(In the public interest of academic completeness, the "wife" was the college canteen, and the "courtesan" was Back Post).

Legend had it that Keshtu was antecedent to even the college and Back Post. For over four decades, he had survived intense competition and ran his operations with the efficiency of a munshi and the frugality of a bania.

His dingy chai shop sold chai and singada, the taste of which I cannot quite get out of my system, even today. It was that bad! But as if to pay off karmic debt from a previous life, we consumed the aqueous chai and the fetid singada every day.

Whether it was after a bout of basketball, or a difficult viva-voce session, or the rare relic called a campus interview, we washed down our vows with the watery mixture served in cheap glass tumblers, cleaned in a dirty vessel of slop.

Keshtu, with able assistance from "Butru", served his customers with solemnity, and was frequently rebuked for providing such horrible fare. The sport that he was, Keshtu took all that in his grotesque stride, slept peaceably at night, got up at dawn with resolve, and prepared the same concoction as he had done the previous day. To those that needed it, Keshtu offered the reassurance that things in the world would never change.

In summer, the industrious man that he was, Keshtu would shift to the Neem tree adjacent to the basketball court and serve sweet Lassi, which he garnished with cherries, and Bournvita. Even his biggest detractors had to accept that during the summer months when the mercury touched forty eight degrees Celsius, Keshtu’s delectable Lassi cooled their bodies and souls.

Tell me about your experiences at Keshtu or your own favorite "bunk" shop.


Interested in reading my other blogs?

How about my ode to old Hindi film music? Which is here --> THE GOLDEN AGE OF HINDI FILM MUSIC.

The first episode is HERE.

Or my eulogy to one of the greatest playback singers of India? SP BALASUBRAHMANYAM.

36 comments:

  1. Awesome Brags! Reliving REC days through your eyes, getting to know about so many people, places and incidents which we were oblivious about😊

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    1. Thanks Soma ji!!! My pleasure. Although Keshtu, I thought, was not entirely out of bounds. You gals had visited right?

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  2. You forgot to mention about the lassi made one by two and then ask him add extra malai, ice,coconut and bournvita so that the quantity equals to almost one full lassi each..

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    1. Ok :-)))!!! I am sorry for the oversight! But look, it got you to come here and post, right?

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    2. I do remember that. I am surprised though Keshtu let that be. I think he was more generous on the lassi stall then he was in the chai shop.

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  3. Nicely illustrated and narrated Puttu!! Was amused to see the mention of singada, odia version of samosas.. Nothing beats Odia singada (!keshtu version is what I mean) with cup of tea!!! you have to taste this and maybe next year during rkl reunion times..

    Remember growing up, some of the most delicious samosas and other snack items I ate were at street vendors. Apart from yummy taste, the memories are strong because of the experience of sharing the moment with friends and siblings.. I am sure Keshtu was an adda for hangout. Chai and Singada was just a bahana..friends and sharing a moment or two was what took you guys back every time..lovely piece and thanks for sharing

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    1. Hey we just have to visit all these hangouts next December , Jolly !!!

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    2. @Sunita: I will unquestioningly give in on the glory of the Odia singada - with black salt and a chai as companions. Nothing to beat it!

      Keshtu definitely was an adda - witness to many pivotal moments in the history of REC, I am sure.

      The best singadas that were served, for me, was from Singada babu - another one of those characters that visited us in the hostel. He carried his singadas, burras, and chops in tattered, grimy, old cardboard box, around the hostels and sold it. They were delicious! Nothing to beat it. Poor singada babu would sell all his delicious and then had to negotiate with people who insisted on paying up later! Tough job!

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    3. 'Tattered, grimy , old card board boxes ' ..... :))))))))

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    4. I am now craving an oily singada or Alu chop form a tattered , grimy card board box :(

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    5. Singada babu.....do singada aur do alu chop dena...grimy card box se...namak ke saath

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  4. " The sport that he was, Keshtu took all that in his grotesque stride, slept peaceably at night, got up at dawn with resolve, and prepared the same concoction as he had done the previous day. To those that needed it, Keshtu offered the reassurance that things in the world would never change."
    Brilliantly funny �� Puttu !!! And the illustrations !! You are using bitmoji for this too now ��.
    But look here Puttu.. all your stories make us realise more and more that we girls were cheated out of the rich cultural heritage of our institution .. the resolve is getting stronger and stronger to sue .. we dunno whom .. so we'll just go ahead and sue you .. Thassol ..

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    1. As far as my hang out is concerned .. no sir .. we were not allowed the richly dismal and dingy experiences of having fetid samosa served by grotesque men ..
      But I did have a hang out , other than home , being a dayski.. Sita's house !!
      My strongest and most cherished memories of those days are of sitting in her study ... up to absolutely no good .. and being served yummy home made snacks and tea at regular intervals by a grumpy kid sister who knew we were up to no good ..
      Come any exam , and I would move into Sita's place without so much as a by-your-leave to Aunty .. and the universal mom that she was , she took it in her stride , keeping an unfazed countenance and feeding me the choicest of food , like I was the fourth kid of the house .. that was a glorious mom , if there was any ..
      And then ofcourse there was the inglorious daughter .. with a pious exterior and a completely evil interior .
      I remember this vivid scene of attempting combined study for EEE, disgruntled and clueless.. and we suddenly hear this peal of laughter from outside .. we look out of the window and see this little kid swinging merrily on the gate , unburdened by EEE ..
      Sita looks at me with this wild gleam in her eyes and says.." chal pakad ke peet-te hain "...

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    2. OK, from here on, you can talk to my lawyer.

      Look, Keshtu, Panda, Mahesh ji, and all were great hangouts, but it is the people that made these places memorable. So, I am sure you had your own hangouts that were made memorable because of your presence! So, don't sue anyone. If you still insist, I will send my lawyer, Govind, who has a strong forefinger and hates tarikhs!

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    3. @Rachna: :--))). So, Sita was your Keshtu?! Look, I am sure she's appreciative of the kind words...but Roshomon taught us that there are several sides to a story. Let Sita clarify and relate to us the duress of putting up with you and preparing food for you! OK?

      But seriously, lovely story on "combined studies" and the foods that Sita's mom fed you!!! Thanks _/\_!!!

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    4. We used to stay up whole night to study ... and gossip ... and then would get sleepy and tiptoe to the sparkling clean kitchen , potter around and make our tea .. can you beat it , I remember the transparent brown tea cups they used to have .. and the taste of the adrak chai is as tangible today ..as it was then !!! Sita's adrak chai remains my favorite till date !!
      We would have our tea solemnly , make a pact , put an alarm for one hour later .. Then wake up , repeat the above steps till it was morning ..

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    5. And who's Roshmon ?? Nice name .. tell him to teach you proper things .. hoon ..

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    6. Now I am being called Keshtu!!! I think I smell a lawsuit, and even your trusted lawyer Govind cannot scare me away. I might even get Keshtu to testify as Character witness.

      Rachna, I cannot remember the kid swinging on the gate. I am pretty sure the "peet-te hain" must have been your idea. I do remember another gate-swinging incident which shall remain un-mentioned.
      I do remember the incredulous and disapproving look Mayank once gave us , when we told him that we studied together during exams.
      Miss those all-night chatting sessions though. And let me tell you, I think my mom loved you more than me, because you complimented and enjoyed her food, something I never did!

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    7. The other gate swinging incident :))))))).....oh man ... wouldn't Puttu love to hear about this ???? But no .. I cross my heart in the name of your adrak chai.. this secret shall stay unmentioned till it grows fetid ..

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    8. There the two go again! What are you both talking in code language?

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    9. (mindvoice: I need to get better customers for the blog. This kaamikel hegemony is getting too much)

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    10. Hzxhzxhxzhxz... no getting away from us now .. we breed, multiply and gleefully infest our target blogger ..
      Krish , come on .. don't slack ..

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  5. If the famous Keshtu's was adjacent to the Chemical Dept, I wonder why we never ventured there! I blame this missed opportunity on the boys in our class who never gave Keshtu the rightful press-coverage he deserved. I don't remember if we ever heard about him, until now. :(

    Wonder how old he was at the time. I am hoping he is still around , so we can visit him and take selfies with him and his singadas. Not sure I want to try his chai or Lassi though!

    Really love the cartoons, except the image of your throwing up, which is now etched in my brain and chooses to surface when ever I take a sip of my tea.

    Thank you for allowing us to see the college life from an angle we totally missed out on.

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    1. Haan !! For each of the above paras ..
      What loser friends we had yaar ! They never took us to Keshtu ?
      I mean .. A grotesque man serving fetid singadas, with aqueous chai in cheap glass tumblers cleaned in a dirty vessel of slop ???
      And we never got to see this vision ??

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    2. Yeah...blame it all on the boys. What were you all doing? Did you ever look around???

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    3. No sir .. we looked down and walked ... got run over by on coming traffic so many times ...

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  6. Brilliant!! Even though I never visited Kestus, it was no lesser than experiencing it live sitting on the benches there. For us, it was the pania( read in Odia) chai with extra sugar in a large still glass which we so eagerly looked forward to after classes every single day.. Sit with the glass in the verandah and call out names of girls for whom visitors flocked the LH was kind of a ritual.. Seriously, your blog brings back such wonderful memories of those khatta mitha char saal of my life.. keep writing and let us relive..

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  7. We were not lucky even to get those oil dipped Singada to accompany our pania chai

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    1. Wonder why Keshtu didn't think of having his wife set up a stall outside LH! Business would have been good with LH'ers and their visitors! Visitors would have bought more, to impress the LH'ers. And LH'ers without visitors could have hung out there and witnessed the visits from closer quarters! Lost Opportunity!!!! :(

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  8. I have bitter-sweet memories of Keshtu. Bitter- because this was the hallowed ground where I got the beating of my life and was "tamed" by the so-called "Mr.REC" of the time. Sweet because-well, for one the chai was as sweet as it could get but mainly because it was the "adda" where we used to hang out in between lectures whenever we got the opportunity to sneak out. The singada (rightly described by the author as "fetid") was definitely out of the world and, I daresay, out of the universe. Somehow magically, when you took a sip of the chai along with a bite of hot singada, the combined effect was quite agreeable. One, of course, was well advised not to watch Keshtu or his assistant "Boothroo" wash the empty glasses or one risked throwing up as so nicely depicted above.
    To be fair to Keshtu, the lassi that he dished out during summer was quite refreshing. He also tactfully served the lassi a safe distance away from the tea shop ambience.
    I could write more but my mother has already called out to me twice to have dinner.
    BTW, @Sita, not sure if Keshtu was married. Can somebody confirm?

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    1. Achcha ?? Wasn't even married ?? And yet girls were not introduced to him ? Hmmm...

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  9. One would forget Principal's name but never ever Keshto.. Small hut, half-washed glasses (in same water for whole day), cutting chai.. but what a soothing to throat and to tone of hostel life it was.. One of fav Maddu gang location..especially one Maddu who owes so much money to Keshto..Keshto could have purchased a home in Vasant Vishar @ Delhi.. His chat hut was at strategic location of right at corner turning to hostel, in front of play grounds and at junction to get out.. .. Summer would come with temporary lassi shop, backpost shops changed, but Keshto remained for ever.. Business Magnet Keshto..

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    1. :-))).

      "Small hut, half-washed glasses (in same water for whole day), cutting chai." Super!!

      "Keshto could have purchased a home in Vasant Vishar @ Delhi"
      :-)))))))....Lol! I think I know who that person is!

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  10. I think Keshto has received his fair share of accolades from the folks passed out years ago. This is a classic case of time heals "everything". That "everything" includes - pathetic chai, exorbitant and unfair price against your name in the Udhari khata, and bad behavior to his non-core customers.

    I would be the one who would be strongly against any charity against the guy - sorry!

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  11. Thanks Anil, for sharing your opinion - importantly a contrarian view.

    I frankly didn't have a special interest to promote him or any axe to grind. He was probably not even among my top 3 chai stalls in the campus. But, we can't deny the fact that Keshtu was a landmark in college.

    On unfair price, bad behavior...:-). Let it be, yaar. He was just a product of his times:-).

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