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Color Loom
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The New Bride Gets a Special Gift
In Delhi, before we were married I lived the glorius colonial life, with servants and a cook in the Esprit company house, so I’d never had to cook a thing. While we were packing to move to America, Kiran turned to me and asked in a voice that sounded concerned, “Can you cook?” I laughed. “Yes, but I don’t know anything about Indian food.”
Kiran told me, “Don’t worry, Mummy will give you her recipes.” But like all Indian mothers, she had the recipes in her head.
“I’m sorry, but you’ll have to measure them out or I’ll never be able to do this,” I told her. I had to have my teaspoons and tablespoons.
So, being a scientist (she is a doctor), Mama went into her kitchen and methodically measured out the basics of Punjabi home cooking for me. She filled the lined pages of a small brown notebook with her hand-written recipes and presented it to me as a gift when we left for America.
She was smart; she knew she was insuring that if her son got homesick for India, it wouldn’t be because he was missing home-cooked Indian food.
As you can see, the ink is disappearing, but it’s ok - the recipes are in my head now.
My first Indian Dish – Yellow Dal
A typical Indian meal consists of dal, a vegetable, yogurt, with or without meat. You can skip the meat because dal plus yogurt makes a complete protein, but all Indian meals must have a dal. There are many varieties of dal; the easiest to make happens to be most people’s favorite – Yellow Dal. Indian cooks are fond of using a pressure cooker to speed things up but this dal doesn’t require it. Instructions follow for making it on the stove-top and with a pressure cooker if you have one.
Yellow Dal – 30 minutes
1 cup Moong Dal (yellow split, available at Indian grocers and health food stores)
2 inch x 1 inch fresh peeled ginger chopped fine
½ tsp turmeric
1/4 – 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper (check hotness before adding)
1 tsp salt
3 cups water
Tadhka - garnish
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1 medium onion chopped coarse
1 tsp whole cumin seeds
1 handful celantro chopped coarse
1 tomato chopped coarse
Soak dal in 3 or more cups of water for 1/2 hour or more. After soaking wash several times until water runs clear. Drain.
Place dal in a saucepan with 3 cups water, ginger and spices. Bring to a boil. Turn down and simmer uncovered 15-20 minutes. Stir occasionally. Taste – dal should be soft not crunchy. Watch carefully that dal doesn’t get overcooked or it becomes gluey. Add more water if it becomes dry or when reheating. The consistency should be more watery than porridge, but not as watery as soup.
If cooking in a pressure cooker – place washed dal and spices in pressure cooker instead of a saucepan. Cook on high heat until the first whistle. Turn off immediately. Let cool for 15 minutes. Cool off under the tap and open it up. Dal should be done.
For Tadka – garnish – heat oil in a small frying pan. Add cumin seeds. Stir for 30 seconds. They should make a popping sound. Add onions, fry on medium heat until brown about 20 minutes. When nearly brown, add tomato and chopped cilantro and cook until tomato is soft. Pour into dal and stir lightly.
Serve along with white or brown rice and Indian meat and vegetable dishes. A store-bought wholewheat tortilla makes a good substitute for a chapatti.
Enjoy! You can make lots of tasty new dishes from leftover dal, which I will tell you about in future posts.
Welcome to our blog. Truth in Laura’s words and Kiran’s pictures. We think of it as a big scrapbook where we can share the experiences of our life and the many things that turn us on. Topics like…
Inspiration - where design comes from.
Our History - for those who want to know how we got here. Our backgrounds. How we started in business. The winding road we traveled to become Color Loom.
Textile Talk - for textile junkies. Technique and history and random textile trivia.
India Up Close - We’ll take you deep into an India you have never seen with Kiran’s beautiful mini photo essays. (He has a dual life as a professional photographer as well as a principal of Color Loom)
Taste of India – My favorite Indian recipes and how I came to be a pretty good Indian cook. And of course, pictures of food.
- Laura Singh
Ikat is everywhere these days in fashion and home furnishings.
But most of what is featured as ikat in magazines or blogs is not real ikat but prints or jacquards made to simulate handmade ikat. Ikat is actually an ancient resist process of tying and dyeing the pattern into the yarn before the fabric is woven. Real ikat is done in only some areas. Southeast Asia, Central America, Japan, Central Asia and India.
When we started designing clothing in 1983, we began by designing ikat in India. It was the 80’s and Issey Miyake was the inspiration.
See the picture in the post Our History Part 1 about how we started in business.
These photos showing the ikat process were taken by Kiran on one of the many design trips we made to a weaving village in Andhra Pradesh to work on new designs.
Laura Singh
Photos by Kiran Singh
The village square surrounded by houses and shops. Bullock carts are used to transport crops and fabric.
In each weaver’s home there is a light well and an area on each side for a loom. The door in the back leads to the rest of the house.
A couple prepares the warp on a special wooden wheel that winds just the right amount for a bolt of fabric.
The dyer marks the pattern from the graph paper on to the yarn with a pen and ties those marks with a string. Then he wraps rubber from tire inner tubes around the yarn tightly so that the dye won’t penetrate. Only the open areas will take the color.
A weaver’s wife standing next to a dyed weft for a sari. (The weft is one continuous thread that weaves back and forth across the warp to make the fabric)
A woman preparing the yarn for making the weft. (The yarn that goes the width of the fabric is called the weft)
The road to Color Loom has taken many twists and turns. Here is how we started out.
Jumping Ship
In India, we both had great corporate jobs. I worked for the clothing company Esprit overseeing production, living in Delhi. Kiran was Administrative Manager for one of the first Indian computer company.
On our first date we discovered we both had dreams of having our own business. Something creative, linking East to West, bringing modern design to traditional crafts.
Fell in love…got married…moved to Berkeley…
I got a job as VP of Production for Jessica McClintock, overseeing 125 subcontractors in San Francisco making 90,000 garments a month. I barely slept a night, waking up, worrying about if we produced enough each day.
It was insane.
Kiran bought folk art and antiques from India and got them placed in Gumps and a leading interior design showroom in San Francisco. He sat at home waiting for his dowry boxes, and magnificent statues of Indian gods to sell. They sold.
But – it was so-o-o boring.
We knew we had to do something else.
I took a trip to India and made some clothing samples out of ikat fabric with the help of Kiran’s friends who had a factory. The clincher was a black and white double ikat padded bomber jacket. Back in SF, while shopping at Saks Fifth Ave the sales girl asked me “Who’s the designer for your jacket?” I was thrilled to tell her it was me.
Maybe we were on to something.
Local Heroes
We asked ourselves “What can we do that would be fun, creative and not too big that would connect us to our community?”
Kiran came home one day with the answer. “How’d you like to have a store in our North Berkeley neighborhood? I found a great space.” Maybe we’d do folkart and antiques.
Without a dime to our name, we met the landlords. When they told us they were looking for a natural fiber clothing store, without missing a beat, we looked at each other and said in unison “That’s what we do.” We were both thinking of that jacket. We forgot about antiques.
We signed the lease, persuaded an old business contact to loan us some money, took off to Delhi and hung out in the factory creating clothing for our new store- Laura & Kiran.
From the beginning our collection was color co-ordinated with simple styles that fit well, in cotton and silk that we designed ourselves. Mostly ikat. From the hour we opened the doors and the first customer came in and said “Wow.” And then bought several outfits, we knew the store was a hit.
At last, we were out of the corporate world.
Happy to be local heroes.
Laura Singh
Photos by Kiran Singh