Reading Comprehension Practice: Part 4
There’s the crush of
traffic outside and the air is still with the heat of summer and the aroma of
baking. At the junction of Perambur’s Paper Mills Road and Foxen Street, at the
cusp of the slowly-vanishing world of Anglo India, is Ajantha Bakers.
A mosaic-tiled stairway leads to the bakery on
the first floor, overlooking tin-roofed garages and tiled houses that have
risen and slept under the warm blanket of comfort this aroma exudes. Ajantha
Bakers has been part of this Anglo-Indian stronghold since 1972, baking wedding
cakes, pound cakes and marzipan-rich, chewy Easter eggs.
But, during the week between Palm Sunday and
Easter Sunday, it is hot cross buns — soft, slightly spiced and tinged in
nostalgia — that sell by the thousands. Says KS Subhash, managing director,
“When my father KT Sekhar started the bakery, he had plenty of Anglo-Indian
friends and customers. They still form the backbone of our clientèle, and it is
their recipes that we largely use, whether in our butter cakes or whole-wheat
breads. Our Easter eggs and bunnies made of marzipan and chocolates are ready
at least two weeks ahead of the festival. For the hot cross buns, which are
eggless, we use the best of spices blended with raisins. That flavour is
unmistakeable and we bake about 25,000 buns. They sell out within a few hours.”
Ajantha Bakers sells its buns on Thursday, “so
they keep fresh” on Good Friday, when they are traditionally eaten. “Priced at
Rs. 65 for a pack of five, the buns are retailed at our 14 outlets and ordered
in bulk by churches.”
Choose your flavour
In Britain, where it first originated, hot
cross buns have been celebrated in a nursery rhyme and sold in supermarkets
through the year.
The bar at The Bell Inn, Essex, has buns from
every Good Friday since 1906 suspended as buntings. Belief is that hot cross
buns hung in kitchens prevent fires, and the faith behind them would never let
them go mouldy. Hot cross buns have also been mixed with unusual flavours such
as Earl Grey tea, rum-soaked sultanas and potato-bread dough.
In Chennai, though, it is the standard recipe
that is followed. At the iconic Buhari Hotel on Anna Salai, hot cross buns will
be available from Thursday. The hotel that has stood here since 1951, has had
an in-house bakery since the 1960s. Above the roar of traffic and customers
tucking into plates of biryani on a busy Friday afternoon, Nawaz Buhari,
managing director, says, “The egg-free recipe for hot cross buns that we follow
comes from the Vietnamese bakers who worked here when we started out.” While
the famed McRennett will stock hot cross buns priced at Rs. 40 for a pack of
four from tomorrow, hotels such as ITC Grand Chola and Hyatt Regency already
have trays laden with Good Friday and Easter goodies at their gourmet shops.
Family tradition
Harry MacLure, editor, Anglos in the Wind,
says of his childhood in Tiruchi, “It was tradition at home — the air used to
be filled with the spiced aroma of hot cross buns baking, but now we just buy
it off store shelves. We look forward to breaking the fast with this simple
delicacy and a coconut milk-rice gruel with coconut chutney.”
Lenten treat
Hot cross buns have long been a symbol of
spring and fertility. According to pagan legend, oxen were sacrificed and their
horns symbolically emblazoned on freshly baked bread. The words ‘bun’ and
‘Easter’ are derived from the Anglo-Saxon lexicon meaning ‘sacred ox’ and
‘Eostre’, the goddess of spring. The four quadrants made by the cross on the
bread are said to have represented the phases of the moon. The modern version
of the hot cross bun is a British invention that came with Europe opening up to
trade with the East. Spices and salt started to cost less and the sweet-savoury
bun with a pasty white cross on its brown top became a Good Friday baker’s
treat. The cross came to symbolise Christ’s passion and death, and the spices,
the mixture with which his body was embalmed. So popular and wholesome were the
buns, that they were baked through the year, and Queen Elizabeth I had to issue
a royal decree to stop their year-round baking, so that their religious
symbolism wouldn’t be lost.
(1). Consider the following statements
regarding the Ajantha Bakers as given in the above passage:
1. It is situated in Perambur.
2. It has been part of Anglo-Indian stronghold
since 1872.
(1).Which of the above statements is/are correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both are correct
(d) None is correct
(2).
Where did hot cross buns come from?
(a) Britain
(b) Perambur
(c) USA
(d) Spain
(3).
Which of the following statement regarding Ajantha Bakers is incorrect?
(a) They are famous for chewy Easter eggs.
(b) They are famous for wedding cakes.
(c) Hot cross buns are ordered in bulk by churches.
(d) It is famous for only
hot cross buns.
(4). What is 'Eostre’ in context with the pagan legend as
described in the passage?
(a)
horns
(b) Bread
(c)
Goddess
(d)
moon
(5).
From where the egg-free recipe for hot cross buns came?
(a) India
(b) Vietnam
(c) China
(d) Burma
(6).
Choose the word which is Most Opposite to the word printed in bold in
the passage
tucking
(a) spread
(b) enfold
(c) push
(d) seam
(7).
Choose the word which is Most Opposite to the word printed in bold in
the passage
gourmet
(a) connoisseur
(b) critic
(c) gourmand
(d) destitute
(8).
Choose the word which is Most Similar to the word printed in bold in
the passage
delicacy
(a) inelegance
(b) coarseness
(c) heaviness
(d) elegance
(9).
Choose the word which is Most Similar to the word printed in bold in
the passage
embalmed
(a) wrap
(b) squander
(c) waste
(d) neglect
(10). Choose the word which is Most Similar to the word printed in
bold in the passage
decree
(a) word
(b) rap
(c) directive
(d) verdict
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