Business With Pleasure

THEY WILL BE SERVING MENINO'S SAMOSAS IN HEAVEN FOR BREAKFAST TODAY

Herald Team

The man who delivered joy and happiness to all in Loutolim , will take his most cherished creation to heaven. A creation which should put him in an eternal hall of fame of culinary masters, who married the taste of fresh beef with the tastiness of a crisp samosa, deeply fried and served them to legions of people in Loutolim, Raia and Margao.

By the time he left us, on Friday, after ailing for over three years, his samosas became synony­mous with his name, without any branding exercise, promotion or PR. The aroma wafted across the river Zuari and the wind took it to far corners of our land, word of his samosas, reaching the re­cesses of Pernem and Canacona. And when it reached those places, they were etched in people’s minds as ‘Menino’s samosas’ and many journeys to Salcette weren’t complete till a parcel of samosas was bought in Loutolim and taken home

Loutolim has indeed, and deservedly basked in the greatness of Emil­iano Da Cruz and Mario de Miranda. But as the village mourns the passing of his son Menino, this Sunday afternoon, it wouldn’t be out of place to conjure that while Mario whipped up earthy day to day humour, Emiliano produced soulful music and delivered mirth, and Me­nino curated, created and produced the best snack, Loutolim, arguably Sacette, arguably Goa, produced. Music, artistic humour and comfort snacking, the troika of Loutolim’s sons, served them to us.

Menino’s passing should ideally be the first opportunity to recognize the art of achieving greatness by a simple homegrown idea of putting minced beef in a samosa preparation of flour, salt oil, after knead­ing dough and frying it deep. A “Menino’s beef samosas’ trade mark perhaps, or even a GI status that would protect this creation from any culinary plagiarism.

At first bite, a crispy outside would break with smoke bursting through the pores. Soon the onions mixed with fresh beef would meet your finest culinary senses on the tip of a salivating tongue. He reserved the best for Sundays, hoping that his homegrown production line of manual labour would make enough samosas for the mass goers. With his shop strategically placed right next to the side entrance of the church on the road that goes from the village to the Ponda- Margao highway, the popular Menino could not create enough to serve beyond two rounds of mass goers. Every samosa he fried, was bought and eaten in light­ning speed and if you went after 11 am, you would see a very content­ed Menino but no “Menino’s beef samosas’

Let’s meet the creator of this samosa masterpiece, who has now gone to meet our creator, a little too soon. Born on October 15, 1956, Me­nino Antonio Fernandes began his professional life at the Arlem beer factory. Soon he left to join as a sailor on the barges that sailed the rivers in Goa, carrying cargo mainly ore. However, when he decided to not work for anyone and start a small business of his own in his village, his wife of 35 years Tereza gave him quiet support. His “gada’, (stall) which then became a small shop of sorts, became a pit stop even for those who did not eat his ssmosas but hung in there to chat, exchange news about their world at large including little morsels of breaking news across the eclectic waddos of Loutolim. Menino himself was from Kharabhat, the ward which gave Menino to Loutolim and to Goa and the world.

For yours truly, Menino and his samosas, were the first introduction to Loutilim and perhaps even to the village life of Goa in 2004. Every Loutolim story had Menino in it, or even if the story didn’t center around him, it was narrated or emanated in the vicinity of his gada. For reporters looking for the mood in the village stories, especially during the elections, this was a news center. Ask Joaquim Gracias, the resident scribe of Loutolim, its evergreen minstrel and a permanent fixture at Menino’s shop and he will readily acknowledge the role this spot has played in the profession that he loves.

For three and a half years now, Menino has been literally bed- ridden but happy that his son Mathew took over the art and the business and run it so effectively that Menino’s absence was not noticed in the qual­ity of his samosas. But his smiling genteel presence was sorely missed and now, he is forever gone.

But his legacy will live, as Mathew has ensured, a proud son, carrying on the work of his simple father, who created a simple masterpiece.

They will surely be serving Menino's samosas in heaven for breakfast this morning

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