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'We choose verticals that focus on end users'
The Nasscom-McKinsey Perspective 2020 report notes that healthcare will emerge as a very big opportunity for outsourcing services. ANANDA MUKERJI, managing director and chief executive officer of Firstsource, feels his company is in the right place to make its mark in the global BPO business. The outsourced healthcare space represents an approximately $17-billion opportunity in the US alone. The industry is expected to grow at over 50 per cent CAGR (compounded annual growth rate) over the next five years. With healthcare contributing close to 40 per cent of its revenue, the sixth-largest BPO player’s early bet on the segment seems to be paying off. Mukerji spoke with SHIVANI SHINDE on how its healthcare acquisitions have panned out and the way forward. Excerpts:
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DIY fine-dining

The Imperial, Delhi, tries its best to turn you into a master chef. - T N Ninan: Losing a city">T N Ninan: Losing a city - Rlys to earn crores using sites for commercial purpose - 46 monuments in Delhi to be spruced up before CWG - A bitter harvest - DU undergrad get Rs 32 lakh package - Vanita Kohli-Khandekar: The South Indian dilemma">Vanita Kohli-Khandekar: The South Indian dilemma From expecting to eat gourmet food at restaurants, many have graduated to wanting to sample the same high-quality fare at home as well. Enter, the Imperial Culinary Club, an initiative that Delhi’s Hotel Imperial has started to help you bone up on recipes from different cuisines, so that when you do step into the kitchen you are able to make the finest foods. Held every fortnight, the Imperial Culinary Club has already completed two sessions before I attend the Kashmiri food cook-out, the third in the series. As is well known, Kashmiri cuisine is meat-centric. It is also time-consuming, requiring several hours of preparation before a full meal is ready to serve. For the gushtaba, for instance, the meat has to be pounded for at least an hour and a half before it is ready to be cooked. The flavours in Kashmiri cuisine also come from unique ingredients that are available in the Valley, but now, of course, can also be easily procured from Delhi’s INA market. The session has some hiccups. The recipes that have been given out don’t match what the guest chef is making. The recipes are full of errors (there are several delightful errors: in the nadroo yakhni recipe, a line at the end exhorts you, cryptically, to “add nadroo and make it hot”) and the method over-simplified. The chef also improvises with the ingredients, much to the consternation of the participants. But the general manager and vice president of the hotel, Vijay Wanchoo, himself a Kashmiri as well as a chef, manages to soothe ruffled feathers and keep the show going. Once the dishes are ready and we troop in to eat, one thing becomes clear about Kashmiri cuisine — it isn’t diet-friendly. And, normally, the ladies who lunch — the mainstay of clubs like this one (though the hotel says they also get hotel guests), are those who survive on water and dry bread. But all tucked in, despite the generous helpings of fatty ingredients that have gone into the meal. The winter months are, however, a good time to experiment with Kashmiri food. So, we offer you some recipes that you can try at home during this season.[----------] FAVOURITE RECIPES TABAK MAAZ 1,600 gm ribs 2 lt water 15 gm whole black cardamom 10 gm haldi 50 gm saunf 20 gm whole cinnamon 200 gm ghee 15 gm whole green cardamom 15 gm jeera 600 ml milk 200 gm curd 40 gm garlic paste 10 gm ginger powder Salt Blanch ribs. Heat milk and rest of ingredients, except ghee, together. Keep on flame till milk evaporates completely. Then stir-fry ribs using ghee as cooking medium. Cook till ribs have a golden crust on both sides. Pour over masala, and serve hot. GUSHTABA 1,600 gm mutton leg, boneless 100 gm fat A pinch of dry pudina 50 gm besan 10 gm blue cardamom 30 gm saunf powder 500 gm curd 10 gm black cardamom powder 10 gm green cardamom 30 gm garlic paste 5 gm green cardamom 50 gm desi ghee A pinch of Kashmiri jeera Salt Clean mutton leg well and cut into cubes. Using wooden hammer, beat cubes on a flat stone and simultaneously add fat and salt as per taste. Then add black cardamom and mix it properly. The beating process takes almost one and a half hours for this quantity. Now make small balls out of this mixture and boil in a bowlful of water for 15-20 minutes or till balls are cooked. Mix besan and curd well. Add cinnamon, green cardamom, Kashmiri jeera and some water. Boil mixture till properly cooked. Now add saunf powder, black cardamom powder, garlic paste and again boil all this for a further five or six minutes. Now add mutton balls and remaining water to gravy and boil for 10 more minutes. Add desi ghee, green cardamom powder and dry pudina. Serve hot.


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