Dilli 6
There is a ‘very old’ (the board says so) Jalebi and Samosa
wala right at the beginning of the lane- you can smell and taste the ghee and believe
the owner, when he tells you that his ancestors made samosas for Akbar! You
should ignore the fact that Chandni Chowk was set up after his reign was over…
We didn’t enter the historic Central Baptist Church- one of
the oldest in North India, just across the street. But we couldn’t not stop to
pay homage to the 9th sikh guru, Tegh Bahadur, who was beheaded for
his beliefs, at what is now Gurudwara Sis Ganj Sahib. The ghee of the Kada Prasad
acts as an excellent lip balm…
Natraj Bhalle Wala has been there since 1940. We have had
better chaat elsewhere, but then, this place is pre-independence and we needed
a picture.
Our team is full of angst-ridden melancholic poets. So we
went to Mirza Ghalib’s haveli at Balli Maran. The museum was very quaint but
the English translations on the walls almost made me a melancholic poet! Please
only read the original verses.
We also ate Daulat ki Chaat ( which is very foamy milk
froth) and enormous naans at Kake Di Hatti. Though our aim was to only look for
silver, we found many more colours, shades and stories, on our trip down Dilli
6 lanes.
Comments
Confused me. How? Unless explained in detail HOW?
Still do nor know.
You are a past master of what I could never learn.
To the heart of the matter with such economy of words
I salute you.