A yellow fever predating CSK
The Hindu
Since the 1950s, C. Kunhiraman General Stores in Royapuram has a recipe for success that any dessert parlour would give its right arm for
Arriving at C. Kunhiraman General Stores in Royapuram on a rather humid August day, one comes upon a packed crowd, each person holding a paper cup filled with golden yellows — either mango ice-cream or mango juice. This lively scene is on replay since the 1950s. So is the story of C. Kunhiraman’s phenomenal success as a neighbourhood retail business.
Round the corner, Madras Day demands a retelling of the story. Why not? It is a story that does not pall on the listener, nor the narrator. Akilesh Baskaran, who runs the shop along with his cousin, agrees to tell the famous story one more time for ears younger and removed from the neighbourhood.
Founded in 1925 as a general store by Akilesh’s grandfather C. Kunhiraman, the retail business added sodas and lime juice to its offerings in the 1930s. Another two decades would lapse before the business would take on the yellow hue.
After Kunhiraman’s demise, Narayani found herself holding the reins of the shop. That was in the 1950s. And she soon discovered an ally in the king of fruits, the mango. She introduced mango ice cream with the help of the staff. In no time, it was in demand. Narayani was only in her 20s.
“The anglo-Indian community was very supportive then, and we owe much of our success to them, who used to buy mango ice-cream in bulk. When many left the country, our business experienced a lull. However, it has recently picked up again, thanks to social media,” shares Akilesh.
“The ice-cream has not changed a bit since the last time we visited in 1993 before moving abroad,” shared Ramachandran C and Anuradha R, originally from Mylapore, as they joined the conversation with their scoop of vanilla and mango.
Behind the consistent flavour is considerable effort.
Tapping ‘neera’, a sweet nutrient-rich sap derived from coconut spathe, using the Coco-sap Chiller developed by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR)-Central Plantation Crops Research Institute (CPCRI), Kasaragod, Kerala, has raised the hopes of farmers in earning income from coconut trees, even while keeping monkeys at bay.
The films presented at the Sci560 Film Festival were selected through an open call and curated by a jury composed of members from the Bangalore Film Forum and the SGB team. The festival’s screenings highlight various aspects of Bengaluru, from its urban landscape to its technological advances and deep-rooted scientific traditions.