Homemade chocolates: A taste of the Nilgiris
The Hindu
They became popular during the tourism boom in the 1990s and early 2000s
“Homemade” chocolates in the Nilgiris have almost become as iconic as the district’s native wildlife and forests. However, the origins of the treat are far more recent than one would believe, with the boom in tourism during the 1990s playing a significant part in the rise in the popularity of “Ooty chocolates”.
Heritage enthusiasts tracing the cultural origins of the Nilgiris’ famous cuisines believe that the “homemade chocolates” are remnant of the time of the British colonists.
According to P.J. Vasanthan, a Coonoor resident, the history of the homemade chocolates was only around 70 years old. They became popular in the 1990s and the early 2000s during the period when the district witnessed a huge boom in tourism. “Tourists visiting the district reached for the chocolates to take back home for family and friends, and slowly the homemade chocolates became more and more popular and have now become synonymous with the district,” he said.
Though the origins of Ooty’s chocolates are far more recent than the district’s other iconic flavours, such as varkey and tea, chocolate-makers in the district said the colonial legacy of the British played a significant role in chocolate becoming popular among residents and tourists. “The Nilgiris is culturally very close to a classic British town, where eating cakes and chocolates was always very popular,” said Muralidhar Rao, owner of Modern Stores and managing director of Moddy’s, a famous bakery and confectionary in the Nilgiris.
Mr. Rao said Modern Stores since 1951 has sold its homemade chocolates. “The butlers who worked for the British families shared their recipes with us, and over the years, the few varieties of chocolates which were sold at the store has expanded to encompass around 150 varieties of chocolates, truffles, ganaches and fudges,” he said.
He said the Nilgiris’ cool climate was also extremely favorable to chocolate-making. “The original chocolate-makers in the Nilgiris, around a handful of whom are still in business, including Moddy’s, produce chocolate which is of high quality and standards, continuing the traditional recipes which were used when we first opened,” he insisted.
Fazloor Rahman, managing director of M&N Chocolates, said his family had started making chocolates in 1942. “Known as the Sheikh store, British people would come to our family’s store to purchase cigars. Eventually, some butlers trained members of our family in making chocolates for the British,” said Mr. Rahman.