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    Home»Film»The Story of Sweetness in Sepia tones
    Film

    The Story of Sweetness in Sepia tones

    Renu RamanathBy Renu RamanathSeptember 13, 2024
    Ginger Biscut
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    In Ginger Biscuit, Sudha Padmaja Francis captures the stories of North Kerala’s bakery culture, blending history with personal memories in every frame.

    It’s a documentary as crisp as a biscuit baked to the perfect brown. Something to be savoured
    slowly, bit by bit, relishing the taste of every morsel and absorbing all the delectable chunks of
    history that is hidden in every shot, every angle.

    Sudha Padmaja Francis’s ‘Ginger Biscuit’ is a delightful journey through the stories of North Kerala’s
    bakeries which introduced the very culture of baking to Kerala. Simultaneously, it is also a diving
    back into our own personal pasts, reminding us of the childhood pleasures that came wrapped up in
    crisp butter paper.

    Bakeries were an integral part of life for any child growing up in small town Kerala. During the days
    before the factory made breads and cakes and biscuits started to throng the shelves, local bakeries
    baked their own bread. And cakes. And biscuits. The aroma of baking surrounded the little shops.
    And every child has her own bakery tale to remember. Bakery goods were not everyday affairs.
    They were once-in-a-while treats that were doled out when parents got a raise, a bonus, when
    cousins came visiting or when there were very, very distinguished guests.

    A taste of history

    Early days

    It was from the north of Kerala that the history of baking in Kerala originates. Of course it
    is from the British that the Malayali learnt to bake, and it dates back to the late 19 th century.
    Mastering the art of exact measurements and temperatures must have been quite a challenge for
    those first bakers of Kerala, even India who used the traditional wood fired ovens and almost
    ancient methods.

    Baking has now become a huge industry. Factories churn out massive quantities of baked good
    which flood the counters of numerous bakeries, big and small, throughout Kerala. People choose
    their bread, biscuit and cake by the brand name. the ‘bakery bread’ is generally looked down and
    frowned upon as the factory products advertise better hygiene and quality. In the face of this
    culinary deluge, most of the old, original bakeries have almost vanished.

    Those who still have not shut shop, are struggling to retain a foothold, refusing to compromise on their original recipes and methods to which they still cling onto with infinite pride. They are a part of the past, a living
    memory. They are shards of microhistories, that are often forgotten and wiped out as monolithic
    macrohistories are getting composed.

    It is into these microhistories that Sudha is diving into as she steps into the small, dingy kitchens of
    the old bakeries and into the bylanes of history. But these microhistories, the stories of your
    neighbourhood bakeries, are also a part of a larger socio-political history, silently telling how a
    community used trades such as weaving and baking to follow the advice of reformatory leaders such
    as Sree Narayana Guru to step away from their traditional occupations like toddy-tapping, which
    were often belittled by the larger society. It also hints at how the proximity to the ruling British
    helped the communities that were deemed lower in the caste hierarchy to obtain a better social
    ranking. Baking must also have helped this

    From treats to tradition

    ‘Ginger Biscuit’ is also a documentary that turns upside down all the popular notions on how-a-
    documentary-should-be. It is not a slick product with smooth edges and a glossy surface. Rather,
    it’s like a powerful collage made up of torn chunks of paper, each bit throbbing with life.
    The way Sudha does not try to hide herself from the frame while interviewing the people inside the
    crowded, small kitchens behind the bakeries is endearing. And her intimate conversations with
    them, sometimes in broken sentences, sometimes in muffled tones, add more life, than any
    polished commentary could.

    And ‘Ginger Biscuit’ is not Sudha’s first attempt to explore those cobwebbed corners of our intimate
    history. ‘Ormajeevikal,’ (Memory Beings), an earlier documentary made with a PSBT-Doordarshan
    Fellowship, explores the subaltern music culture of Kozhikode, and ‘A Tale of Threads and Fingers,’ is
    a documentary on the weaving cooperative societies of Kerala, predominantly in north Kerala.
    Sudha uses a portion from S.K. Pottekkat’s celebrated novel, ‘Oru Theruvinte Katha,’ (Tale of A
    Street), which is quintessentially a saga of Kozhikode, to open the film, and returns to it in between.

    The use of animation, by Rithun Manohar, to illustrate the portion from the novel, as well as at the
    end of the documentary to portray the making of a ‘fairy tale cake,’ which is no longer made, adds to
    the charm of the film. The cinematography is by Kamal K.M., and editing by Afsal A.M. with subtitles
    by Arsha Unnithan and Aswathi P Babu. And the film features, Lucky Star Bakery, Kozhikode,
    Krishnan Bakery, Kozhikode, The Cochin Bakery, Kozhikode, Mambally Bakery, Thalassery,
    Jayabharathi Bakery, Thalassery, Sheen Bakery, Kannur, Malabar Bakery, Kannur and Brownies
    Bakery, Kannur.

    A graduate from the University of Reading, UK with a Masters in Creative Enterprise (Film), Sudha’s
    first short film, ‘Eye Test,’ has won the National Award for Best Cinematography in 2017 and was
    screened at many international film festivals. She is currently a research scholar at the School of
    Humanities and Social Science, Indian Institute of Technology, Palakkad.

    ‘Ginger Biscuit’ was recently screened at Kerala Museum at Edappally as part of the JANAL Archive
    that is attempting to open up a digital canvas for the history of Kerala. The screening was followed
    by an interaction led by Dr. Suryanandini Narain, from JNU, New Delhi who joined online.

    Baking in Kerala British Colonial Influence Culinary Heritage Documentary Film Ginger Biscuit Documentary Kerala Bakery History Kerala Food Culture Local Bakeries Microhistories North Kerala Culture Nostalgia in Kerala Socio-political History of Kerala Sudha Padmini Francis Traditional Baking Methods
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    Renu Ramanath
    Renu Ramanath

      Renu Ramanath is an independent journalist and theatre critic. She is a consulting editor with India Art Review.

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