Samosa, jalebis, pani puri seem to be quarantine star dishes

jalebi
Stock photo of Jalebi or Jilbi or imarati, indian sweet food fried in pure ghee, selective focus

New Delhi: With neighbourhood mithai shops shut because of COVID-19 lockdown, people have donned the chef's hat to make samosas, momos, jalebis, and even golgappas at home with the help of the Internet.

According to Google search trends, recipe related searches hit a new record high, peaking on Sunday, April 19. The data showed searches for 'chicken momo recipe' spiked 4,350 per cent, while that for 'Mango icecream recipe' rose 3,250 per cent in April.

Dalgona coffee – which became an online sensation as people shared photographs and videos of their creation on social media channels – saw a spike of 5,000 per cent on how to make the drink. Interestingly, while cake topped the search tally for recipes during the month, people also looked for instructions around how to make samosa, jalebi, momos, dhokla, pani puri, dosa, and paneer dishes. Coronavirus was the third most searched topic in India during April – behind film and meaning that are consistently highly searched topics in the country.

However, compared with search interest in cricket – which is also a highly searched topic – coronavirus-related searches in the month were more than four times that of the average monthly volume for cricket. The state with the highest search interest in April was from Meghalaya, followed by Tripura and Goa, the data showed.

Top trending searches included Coronavirus tips, Coronavirus prevention, and lockdown as people searched for things like 'new guidelines for lockdown' and 'how to get e-pass in lockdown.' While there were questions like 'will lockdown extend after 3 May' and 'Is AC safe during coronavirus', people also sought answers to queries like 'How Kerala controlled coronavirus,' 'How to wash vegetables coronavirus,' and 'When will lockdown end in India.'

The comments posted here/below/in the given space are not on behalf of Onmanorama. The person posting the comment will be in sole ownership of its responsibility. According to the central government's IT rules, obscene or offensive statement made against a person, religion, community or nation is a punishable offense, and legal action would be taken against people who indulge in such activities.