The Wizard’s Table Codex
Food Is Weird: Bite-Sized History
— Entry 002 —
The Curious Case of Curry Leaves
A single leaf can hold a hundred years of memory—
and sometimes more..
History – The name is a lie. Let’s start there.
Curry leaves—Murraya koenigii—are not used in any dish called curry. Not in the way the West imagines it, anyway. They are not the flavor of yellow powder in your supermarket. They are not interchangeable with cumin or coriander.
They are not even meant to be eaten whole (unless you know what you’re doing).
They are something else entirely. They’re a scent. A spark.
Native to South India and Sri Lanka, curry leaves are often tossed into hot oil at the beginning of cooking, where they sizzle, twist, and release something almost indescribable—bitter, green, citrusy, medicinal, ancestral.
Weird truth #1
They’re called “curry leaves” in English because colonizers heard the Tamil word kari and slapped it on everything they couldn’t pronounce.
A leaf? Curry. A sauce? Curry.
A civilization? Curry. Ha!
Weird truth #2
Curry leaves have no actual connection to the powdered “curry” blends sold in Western supermarkets. Zero.
Completely made up.
This is what a misunderstanding caused. And yet, these little leaves endure.
They show up not just in cooking, but in Ayurveda—said to aid digestion, support hair growth, and boost vitality. They’re still sold in bunches at dusty roadside stalls and cradled in the palms of aunties who know that no rasam, no sambar, no upma is complete without them.
What’s in a name.
They are not loud. They do not beg for attention. But if they’re missing, you’ll know.
This is why food is weird.
Because one leaf can carry a whole culture. And one name can erase it.
Food for Thought
A little leaf. Wrapped in truth. Carried by scent. Bittersweet and defiant.
Entry 001