"You will forget how to wait," the old woman said, and left.
The next week, she bought a grinding stone. The week after, she called her mother for the paratha recipe. Now, Kavya watched her roll the dough into perfect circles, each one a little universe.
She explained: In a Punjabi kitchen, you'll find butter and cream, wheat and mustard greens—food for a land of cold winters and warring clans. In a Bengali kitchen, mustard oil and panch phoron , fish and the sweet-bitter tug of shukto —a river culture that learned to savor contrast. In a Gujarati kitchen, sugar in everything, even the dal—because a desert people learned to preserve and balance. In a Kerala kitchen, coconut in three forms—milk, oil, grated—and a steam pot called idli that predates the common era.
"Every dish is a migration," Anjali said, flipping a paratha on the tawa. "The tomato came from the Andes, but now tamatar ka kut is as Indian as the Ganga. The chili came from Mexico, but can you imagine a vada pav without it? We took what arrived and made it ours. That's not dilution. That's digestion." The rain grew heavier. Kavya put down her phone. She stepped into the kitchen, washed her hands at the steel sink, and picked up a rolling pin.
Anjali didn't say "finally" or "it's about time." She simply shifted aside and placed her daughter's hands on the dough.