Charcoal black
KARACHI: “There was a time when people bought sacks full of charcoal from us and came back to buy more the next day. But today gas for cooking has taken the place of coal and reduced our sales,” says Mohammad Saeed.
“The snack bars and restaurants still buy from us for barbecuing but other customers only come here around Bakra Eid. Those who love barbecued meat have now bought gas grills and they don’t come to us at all,” he adds while sitting up on a charpoy inside his shop surrounded by logs and other wooden waste from which he manufactures charcoal off Queens Road.
And how does he do that? “By creating a depression in the ground, placing the pieces of wood in it and burning them before covering them up with mud to deprive them of air,” he says. “After a while, what you are left with is charcoal that you can burn for preparing the most delicious food in the world. No meat cooked in gas ovens or over gas grills and stoves can match the flavour of a barbequed tikka, kebab or boti prepared over charcoal,” he challenges. Well, no arguments there.