Shikran is a dish that is hard to miss if you grew up in a Marathi household.

Just three ingredients: milk, chopped bananas and sugar. Add it the way you like. You can mash the bananas if you want and there is absolutely no cooking involved.

One can call it a solid banana milkshake, or even a banana dessert.

It’s versatile. Eat it as part of breakfast or as a snack. It can be quite filling in itself if eaten copiously and might give one food coma. Of course, I am ignoring the raging debate about whether the milk-banana combination is healthy.

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Today on social media, there are food bloggers elevating shikran by using coconut milk, adding cardamom and finely-sliced almonds, and replacing sugar with jaggery. It’s supposed to give it a different texture, they say.

It’s not just my comfort food. Shikran takes me back to my childhood days, when life was simpler – I would eat shikran while watching cartoons like Bob the Builder or Pokémon before heading to school.

I had stopped eating shikran a long time ago, but returned to its comforting taste over the past year. The dish – if it can even be called that – is so simple that one has to try hard to get it wrong. But somehow I still cannot make it the way my mother does.