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Home Cover Story

The Taste of Home Indians Never Leave Behind

PICKLE/ACHAR

June 4, 2026
in Cover Story

Intro: Long before refrigeration, supermarkets and packaged foods became part of everyday life, Indian kitchens had already perfected the art of preserving seasons in jars. From sun-drenched terraces lined with clay martabans to the unmistakable aroma of mustard oil, spices and raw mangoes, achar has remained one of India’s oldest and most cherished culinary traditions. Yet pickle in India has never been merely a side dish. It is memory, migration and emotion preserved together. For millions of Indians living far from home, a single spoonful of homemade achar can evoke childhood summers, family kitchens and forgotten courtyards more powerfully than words ever can. This is the remarkable story of how India’s humble pickle travelled across oceans to become a global symbol of nostalgia, identity and belonging.

Byline: Dr Venkatesh Ganapathy

Author’s Bio: Author is a Faculty Member, ICFAI Business School, Bangalore.

Main Body:

A Taste of Home in a Jar

Close your eyes and imagine it—the sharp bite of raw mango, the earthy warmth of mustard seeds, the fire of red chillies hitting the back of your throat. That single sensory rush can transport an Indian thousands of miles back home in an instant.

That is the power of achar.

It is not merely a condiment. It is memory, identity and belonging—bottled in oil and spice, sealed with the warmth of every grandmother who ever made it.

Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam, a man who touched the stars, never forgot the taste of his mother Ashiamma’s kitchen in Rameswaram, where a humble banana leaf carried rice, sambar and a spoonful of tangy homemade pickle. The greatest minds, it turns out, are often nourished by the simplest jars.

And perhaps that is the enduring magic of achar. It occupies a place far beyond the dining table. It connects generations, preserves family histories and carries the emotional geography of home. Long after people leave their villages, cities or even their country behind, the taste of pickle remains a faithful companion—a small but potent reminder of where they come from.

Yet the story of Indian pickles is not merely personal. It is also civilisational.

Over 4,000 years ago, long before refrigerators, supermarkets, or industrial food processing existed, Indian communities had already mastered the sophisticated art of preservation. Cucumbers, native to the Indian subcontinent, were being pickled as early as 2030 BCE. Earthen pots were packed with mangoes marinating in mustard oil and rock salt, buried beneath cool soil, and left to slow-cure in the earth’s natural temperature. Fruits and vegetables were sun-dried until they shrivelled and concentrated in flavour, then layered carefully into clay martabans with generous handfuls of aromatic spices. It was practical ingenuity at its finest — a way of capturing the abundance of one season and carrying it safely through months of scarcity.

Even the words we use today carry echoes of that long culinary history. “Pickle” is believed to derive from the Dutch word pekel, meaning saline or brine, while “achar” traces its roots to Persian, where it referred to the preservation of meats, roots, leaves, vegetables, or fruits using salt, vinegar, honey, or syrup. Two different words, two separate etymologies — and yet both point to the same ancient and universal human instinct: the desire to preserve the finest flavours of a season and carry them forward in time.

So deeply is pickling woven into Indian civilisation that the tradition carries a different name in nearly every language spoken across the subcontinent — Uppinakaayi in Kannada, Urragaya or Avakkai in Telugu, Urukai in Tamil, Uppillittuthu in Malayalam, Loncha in Marathi, Athanu in Gujarati, and Achar in Hindi. This remarkable diversity of names is itself proof of how inseparable the practice is from Indian life and memory. One could reasonably argue that the art of pickling did not merely flourish in India — it may well have originated here.

Blurb-1

From ancient clay jars buried in the earth to modern kitchens across the world, India’s centuries-old pickle tradition continues to preserve not just food, but memory, identity and belonging.

The Summer Ritual That Binds Us

In India, the arrival of summer has never signified only heat and school holidays. In kitchens across the country, it has traditionally meant one thing above all else: pickle season.

It is a time marked by the clinking of glass jars, the rhythmic thud of chopping boards, and the intoxicating fragrance of mustard oil warming beneath the harsh afternoon sun. Across the country, this ritual unfolds differently but with equal devotion. In Tamil Nadu, tiny maavadu mangoes are pickled whole with mustard seeds and chilli. In Andhra Pradesh, avakkai — thick-cut raw mango packed generously with fenugreek and fiery red chilli powder — is treated almost like a religion. In Rajasthan, families gather together to stuff plump red chillies with bold masala blends. In Gujarat, lemons are bathed in jaggery and turmeric until they turn golden, soft and syrupy. In the misty highlands of Nagaland, bamboo shoots are fermented with the searing bhut jolokia and earthy mustard oil into something smoky, pungent and unforgettable.

The undisputed monarch of them all, however, remains mango pickle — crafted from raw mangoes harvested at their tartest, firmest and most perfect stage of ripeness. Every region confidently claims to produce the finest version, and every such claim carries the quiet authority of generations.

The process itself, wherever it is practised, is deliberate and unhurried. Fresh produce is selected carefully at the peak of the season. Spices are ground patiently on stone slabs. Ceramic jars are left beneath the open sky until the oil glistens like liquid gold. It is a labour of love in the truest sense, and every stir of the spoon carries within it the weight of ancestral memory.

For many Indians, pickle-making is inseparable from the most vivid recollections of childhood — helping grandmothers choose the perfect raw mangoes, grinding spices in open courtyards, and waiting impatiently as large ceramic jars sat basking in the summer sun on terraces and balconies. Those warm jars, brimming with freshly prepared achar, contain within them an entire era of Indian domestic life.

Blurb-2

Whether it is Andhra’s fiery avakkai, Gujarat’s sweet lemon pickle or Nagaland’s fermented bamboo shoots, achar remains the emotional thread connecting Indians to home — wherever they may live.

More Than a Side Dish

Indian pickles do far more than merely flavour a meal — they transform it completely. A single spoonful of mango pickle served beside hot rice and ghee is not simply a garnish; it is often the soul of the plate itself. Traditionally, Indians consume just a small portion with every bite, allowing the sharp intensity of the pickle to elevate every other flavour — the sourness cutting through the richness of rice, the spice awakening the palate, and the oil binding everything together in perfect balance.

Beyond taste, traditionally prepared achar is genuinely beneficial for health. Fermented naturally with salt, cold-pressed oils, and preservatives such as lemon juice or vinegar, Indian pickles are rich in probiotics that support digestion and improve gut health. They are prepared without synthetic chemicals or artificial additives. Even the organic waste generated during pickle-making is returned to the soil as natural fertiliser. The ingredients are local, seasonal and sustainable. Choosing a jar of traditionally made achar is, quietly, one of the wisest food choices a person can make — both for personal health and for the environment.

In Indian cuisine, no meal feels entirely complete without it. Whether paired with curd rice in Chennai, Hyderabadi biryani in the Deccan, dal-chawal in Bihar, or a simple paratha in Punjab, achar remains the constant — the thread that ties India’s diverse regional cuisines to a shared emotional and cultural identity.

The Pickle That Travels With Us

What is perhaps most remarkable about achar is that it never stays behind when Indians leave home.

It is often among the very first things packed into a suitcase. Indians living abroad describe it as a non-negotiable comfort food, tucked carefully into checked baggage beside theplas, namkeen, and packets of homemade masala. The attachment runs so deep that there are stories of grown adults — including senior corporate executives — nearly breaking into tears after having jars of homemade achar confiscated at airport customs. The loss, in those moments, is not merely of a condiment. It feels like the loss of home itself.

Wherever the Indian diaspora has settled, achar has travelled, adapted and evolved. The Telugu diaspora in the United States and Gulf countries stockpiles gongura to recreate authentic Andhra meals. British-Indian households cherish Gujarati chhundo. Indian families in Canada reach for Kashmiri potato pickle during long winters, drawn to its warming spices and comforting familiarity. In Auckland, Indian migrants prepare spicy achar from feijoas — a fruit they may never have encountered growing up, yet instinctively know how to pickle. In California, backyard Meyer lemons become the season’s prized batch of homemade achar, shared generously with neighbours and friends during festive gatherings.

Today, Indian pickle brands export to more than fifty countries worldwide. Innovative chefs in London drizzle mango pickle oil over avant-garde dishes in fine-dining restaurants. Indian pickle exports, including gherkins, have grown significantly — from nearly $200 million in FY21 to a record $256.58 million in FY 2023–24 — driven largely by rising demand from European markets. The next phase of growth is expected to emerge from organic varieties, innovative regional flavours, and younger global consumers discovering achar for the very first time.

A Jar Is Never Just a Jar

Yet what no export figure or market report can truly capture is the emotional weight a jar of achar carries when it crosses an ocean.

Pickle invokes memory in its purest form. There is something almost magical about it — one taste, and suddenly you are no longer seated at a dining table in a foreign land, but back home once again, sitting cross-legged on the kitchen floor, watching someone who loved you stir a clay pot beneath the warm afternoon sun. It recalls summer vacations scented with mustard oil and sunshine. It recalls recipes whose precise taste exists nowhere else in the world — not in restaurants, not in supermarkets, not on any online marketplace — because they belong uniquely to one family, one courtyard, one grandmother, one clay jar buried in the earth decades ago.

For Indians living abroad, achar is perhaps the most honest answer to the question of where they come from. It requires no translation and no explanation. Open the jar, and the story reveals itself — in the heat of chilli, the sharpness of sour mango, and the slow, layered complexity of something prepared patiently with time, care, memory and love.

That is why every Indian abroad misses it. And that is why, no matter how far Indians travel from home, the pickle always finds a way to travel with them.

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