Showing posts with label BENGALURU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BENGALURU. Show all posts

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Want Lot, Waste Not: Zero-Waste and Sustainability in Indian Restaurants

 


(This article first appeared in the 5th November 2023 issue of The New Indian Express newspaper's Sunday Magazine section on page 8 and online here https://www.newindianexpress.com/lifestyle/food/2023/nov/05/waste-side-story-putting-waste-to-use-2629446.amp)

Friday, June 30, 2023

Hotel Review: Shreyas Retreat Bengaluru

 


This review was first published online on 30th June 2023 in Luxury Lifestyle Magazine, UK https://www.luxurylifestylemag.co.uk/travel/hotel-review-shreyas-retreat-in-bengaluru-india/ 


Friday, March 6, 2020

Bowled Over!

Known for its wholesome appeal and colourful components, the meal-in-one bowl is fast becoming one of the hottest international food trends—from its savoury to sweet avatars. Smart Life brings you a few such bowls from across the country.  




By Raul Dias

Almost instantly spelling out the words ‘Comfort Food’ in big, bold alphabets, the one bowl meal has a certain easy-going, pretence-free vibe about it and one that has achieved popularity and hipster-chic credence over the last couple of years. Not only are they a convenient and clever way to mix all of your favourite ingredients together, but for whatever reason food just seems more interesting when served from a bowl!
Be it an Asian-style Buddha bowl, a Korean bibimbap-influenced bowl or a fruit and oats-laden breakfast bowl topped with the very fashionable and au courant sliced avocado and chia seeds, the bowl meal is here to stay.
We’ve compiled a list of a few such bowls here in India that have left us, well…bowled over with their brilliance.

Hot Pot Bowl
At Pra Pra Prank, Gurugram
A hot pot is a classic Mongolian rice dish that is served with various vegetable and meat toppings which come sizzling hot in a stone pot. One gets fantastically browned brunt rice at the bottom of the pot, making this dish extra delicious. In this version of the one bowl meal, wok tossed Schezwan-sauced rice is topped with chicken, water chestnuts, roasted peanuts, sweet corn kernels, chives, mushrooms and fried garlic. What makes this dish even more special is that it gives the diner the unique experience of eating from a sizzling stone bowl into which all the ingredients are mixed in front of them. “I came up with this idea because when we were preparing for our new menu, winter was approaching. And so, I thought that I should present my guests with a memorable experience,” says Chef Aryav, the Executive Chef at Pra Pra Prank. “And I thought that there can be nothing better than a sizzling hot meat and rice dish which stays hot till the last bite!”

Morning Glory Bowl and Tokyo Pork Bowl
At Shibuii, Mumbai
Offering two distinct bowls—one vegetarian and one pork-based—this new Pan-Asian restaurant champions this food trend. To begin with, the morning glory bowl is composed of a serving of morning glory leaves tossed in garlic and chilly and then bathed in yellow bean sauce. This is complimented with steamed aromatic jasmine rice. To complete the meal, the bowl also consists of delicately hand rolled vegetable spring rolls drizzled with a tangy hoisin sauce, which gives the meal that extra something. To add to it, the bowl also includes some starch in the form of finger potatoes in a sweet and spicy sauce.
On the other hand, the Tokyo pork bowl is made up of delicious and succulent chargrilled pork belly slices glazed in a spiced curry broth made with the stock of pork, herbs and vegetables. All this is perfectly paired with steamed jasmine rice with prawn crackers and a hand-rolled spring roll adding some crunch to your meal-in-one bowl.

Chilli Tossed Tuna Poké Bowl
At Toast & Tonic  Bengaluru
Generally, this Hawaiian-origin one bowl wonder is a delicious concoction where soy- and sesame oil-marinated raw tuna cubes are served atop vinegared sushi rice. Predominantly a lunch dish, poké (pronounced poh-kay) has taken over the world as a healthy, highly nutritious and fun way to eat fish and rice. Dishing out one of the yummiest iterations of the dish in India we’ve had the pleasure of eating, Toast & Tonic in Bengaluru’s Ashok Nagar does things a little differently with their Chilli Tossed Tuna Poké Bowl. Here the traditional sushi rice is substituted for the short-grained and sticky Gobindobhog variety from Bengal, with the bowl topped off with a passion fruit and pineapple vinaigrette, a halved, beetroot-pickled boiled egg and fresh avocado cubes. All of this is then sprinkled with micro mustard greens, shards of nori (dried Japanese seaweed), fried onions and a sprinkling of the very fashionable chia seeds.

Hot Stone Bowl
At Molecule Air Bar, New Delhi
Drawing in great inspiration from the classic Korean dish called bibimbap, the super colourful hot stone bowl served here consists of warm jasmine rice accompanied by various ingredients like water chestnuts, broccoli, peanuts, sprouts, tofu, spring onion, peppers, chicken, with a fried egg sitting atop it. One also gets to choose a sauce of your liking. Here all the ingredients are mixed in a heated stone bowl in front of the guest at their table and served piping hot. “This dish has very warm flavours which are just right for the winter season,” says Mohammed Anas Qureshi, the Brand Chef. “And as it is served in a hot bowl, the dish stays warm for a longer period of time. The whole idea of this dish is to serve our guest something which brings warmth to their dining experience this season.”

Kiwi Banana Smoothie Bowl
At The Daily Bar & Kitchen, Mumbai
We’ve truly saved the ‘sweetest’ bowl on this list for last with the fruity, all-day breakfast treat that is the yummy kiwi banana smoothie bowl at Mumbai’s The Daily Bar & Kitchen. This bowl is made by blending fresh kiwis and chopped bananas with yogurt that is perfect for people following a healthy diet. Coconut powder is incorporated into this mixture for added flavour, post which it is kept in the refrigerator to chill for a couple of hours. The dish is then served in a bowl and topped with slices of both fruits, delicious toasted granola and some chia seeds to add the right amount of texture. “Banana and Kiwi are my favourite fruits and I usually choose these when I am on the go. Being my staples, I decided to incorporate these two in a smoothie bowl allowing my breakfasts to be super healthy and easy to make,” says Liton Bhakta, Head Chef, The Daily Bar & Kitchen. “Since it worked so well, I decided to add this to The Daily’s menu and ever since it has been the most ordered smoothie bowl!”

(A differently edited version of this piece was first published in the March 2020 issue of The Week's Smart Life magazine)


Friday, January 3, 2020

Bengaluru on a plate!

Famous for its dynamic and ultra-casual dining scene, India’s ‘Garden City’ of Bengaluru has an interesting bunch of new restaurants offering a range of cuisine and dining experiences to suit everyone




By Raul Dias

No longer content at being relegated to a ‘third place’ ranking when it comes to dining out in India—when compared with the rather flashy Delhi restaurant scene or with Mumbai’s high concept driven one—the city of Bengaluru is rapidly carving out its own niche. And it does this by playing host to a number of interesting restaurants that each mirror the city’s love for relaxed, ultra-casual dining with a focus on good food.
We bring you four such eateries, each poles apart from the other as far as cuisine and ambience is concerned, but each tied in together by the culinary philosophy of Bengaluru. One where the main focus is strongly on good food in environments that references the easy-going ethos of India’s Garden City!

Mikusu at Conrad Bengaluru
Ulsoor
Though prima facie—thanks to its delightfully onomatopoeic name—Mikusu at the Conrad Bengaluru might seem like a purely Japanese restaurant, the truth is that while it is one, it also prides itself on being an “Asiatic affair” featuring a mélange of Japanese, Chinese and Thai cuisine influences. All this is set against a luxurious, aesthetic backdrop that reflects a sophisticated Asian vibe. It achieves this with the help of key décor pieces such as a delicate cheery blossom branch-inspired light feature and a Japanese yukata art piece made from bits of Chinese blue pottery among other pieces. Overlooking the hotel’s verdant foliage outside its large floor-to-ceiling glass windows, Mikusu is an oasis of calm with a menu featuring some highly nuanced dishes and drinks. Sent out and curated by Executive Chef Praveen Shetty and Chef Rawat, expect to find dishes here such as the traditional Thai tom yom soup, spicy salmon sushi, vegetable futomaki, tuna sashimi, and mains from the kitchen such as sriracha lotus root and grilled fish with togarashi garlic. For desserts indulge yourself with a host of mouth-watering treats such as the passion fruit tiramisu, and the almost-sculptural looking strawberry religieuse and black forest entremets. A special mention for all you cocktail lovers: make sure to call for a curated range of exquisite sake-based and exotic Asia-inspired cocktails that are made table side by a bartender behind the restaurant’s specially purposed mobile cocktail cart.

GoNative
Lavelle Road
A true-blue, feel-good kind of a place, surrounded by a virtual forest of live plants and lush foliage, GoNative is a space of not just calm and serenity, but also one where good, honest-to-goodness food and beverages trump all. To begin with, the all-vegetarian, alcohol-free restaurant uses indigenous grains, pulses and spices that are consciously chosen for their positive impact towards the environment, society and wellness. Spread over two levels, the rather huge dining space features a host of seating options, ranging from a large communal-style table to smaller nooks for intimate gatherings—all lit wonderfully by lights and eco-friendly chandeliers made by GoNative’s in-house lighting brand called Oorjaa. But coming to the food, all their dishes celebrate traditional and familiar flavours in slightly unusual and contemporary ways. Dishes like the bright green soppu neer dosa served with a veg gassi, the innovative cabbage akki roti served with a gongura thokku and the filling banana, almond and date milkshake are also said to be made from pesticide-free ingredients, homemade condiments and fresh organic produce that are sourced from farms around Bengaluru. They also periodically change their menu to integrate seasonal fruits and vegetables into their dishes. This keeps the food light on the tummy, nutritious and healthy. But that’s not all for this eco warrior of a restaurant, not only does GoNative claim to segregate waste, but all organic matter is also composted, and their takeaway containers are biodegradable and plastic-free. Go green, GoNative seems to be the mantra here!

Foxtrot House of Subculture
Koramangala
Dubbing itself as a place modelled on a frat house, Foxtrot House of Subculture claims to be Bengaluru’s new address for good times. And we simply cannot get over the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde kind of hybridity that this place is imbued with. A bustling coffeehouse focussed in the outdoor patio area during the day, Foxtrot transforms into a thriving cocktail bar indoors during the night with plush couches and crystal drop chandeliers creating the ambience. And as an added plus, Foxtrot is also the home to Mimansa, a health cafe, store, and studio for your daily yoga regimen. The menu here is a global mix of small plates and some large plate options, leaning towards forgotten, hyper-local Indian creations mixed with global ingredients and vice versa. It is divided into breakfast, brunch, south Indian menu, lunch trays with numerous dependable options like the beetroot galouti and the chicken tikka kulcha for snacks and the Tellicherry mutton boti and soya haleem for mains. Their signature cocktails like the lavender- and vodka-based poison ivy and the dark rum- and turmeric-based tornado are also quite impressive with a great mix of flavours. We like!

Cantan
Lavelle Road
Totally devoid of the expected and rather clichéd embellishments like plenty of calligraphy and Chinoiserie one finds at most Chinese restaurants today, Cantan is a like a gentle, refreshing breeze. Calling itself a ‘Chinese Bar House’, the twin-level restaurant nestled along the leafy Lavelle Road in the heart of Bengaluru is a rich multi-sensorial experience with as much subtle drama in its ambience as there is in its sumptuous fare. Speaking of the former, here you will encounter elements like the red dragons laying claim over the bar, the clay tile clad feature wall above the bar inspired by the Great Wall of China and lit-up panels, continuing design details from the lower floor as well as evoking a tea room. Crafted by Executive Chef Prashanth, a veteran in his field, the food’s central theme is inspired by Cantonese fare, specifically from Guangzhou. Think hearty hot pots, Shaokao style Chinese barbeque skewers of aromatic meats and vegetables ready for a wood-fire oven, cold plates, dainty dim sums, the freshest seafood tossed in house-made sauces, and a line-up of stellar signature cocktails like the plum and gin-based Cantan XO. For afters, don’t forget to leave some space for the pillow-y, cloud-like Cantonese steamed cheesecake with a zesty mulberry coulis to give the dessert that perfectly tart send off.

(A differently edited version of this piece was first published in the January 2020 issue of The Week's Smart Life magazine)



Monday, November 4, 2019

Themed Bites!

Cashing in on the recent international trend of the ‘Themed Restaurant’ are a host of interesting eateries across India where everything from a vintage train-themed restaurant to one where you can buy the plate you’re eating on are drawing in those seeking to dine with a difference.








By Raul Dias

Who amongst us doesn’t like an evening peppered with loads of fun, laughs and great food and drink thrown into the mix? Enter the themed restaurant where dining out is coupled with some true-blue innovation. All this, in a setting that is almost phantasmagorical and deliciously thematic. A worldwide phenomenon for the last few years, India is finally witnessing a mighty surge in the themed restaurant.
The latest to come knocking on India’s doors is the robot restaurant that has become a sort of mainstay in places like Tokyo and Seoul. Staffed by a posse of humanoids with names like Arya, Ramya and Zoey, and simply called ‘Robot Restaurant’, this eatery in Bengaluru’s Indiranagar neighbourhood is drawing in diners by the drove since it opened in August this year.
We take a look at a few other such themed restaurants across the country. Places where there sure is a lot of dining room drama—both on and off the plate!    

Frontier Mail
Turbaned servers dressed like train attendants help you climb onto your designated carriage from the mock ‘railway station’ recreated below, as they stack your coats and bags onto the overhead shelves. Said carriage is an exact replica—if a tad larger—of an actual train dining car, embellished with all the grandeur and glamour that was associated with train travel in the early 1900s. Yes, providing a unique dining experience, Frontier Mail at the majestic Noor Mahal Hotel in Karnal has been designed recreating the legendry Frontier Mail train that operated between Mumbai and Peshawar during pre-independence days. Wood panelled walls gleam in the light of crystal sconces, while you sit on richly-upholstered chairs facing a polished wooden table. Interestingly, the wooden planks one sees under the mock train compartment are the actual ones over which the Frontier Mail once used to run. Even the menu at Frontier Mail comprises of dishes from the regions through which the train made its initial journey. Here is where you get to indulge in everything from fragrant biryanis of the erstwhile North West Frontier Province to Indo-Western fusion dishes like blue cheese stuffed fish kebabs to even a Mumbai-style prawn curry. For afters, make sure to end your meal with a serving of the sublime paan-flavoured ice cream.
Noor Mahal Hotel, NH1, Sector-32, Karnal (NCR).
Tel: 09996787884 / 891 / 892

Plum by Bentchair
This new Mumbai restaurants takes the whole themed restaurant idea to another stratosphere with its sheer innovative brilliance. The result of the coupling between a hospitality and a furniture brand, Plum by Bentchair, which along with its sister restaurant of the same name in New Delhi’s plush Aerocity enclave, bills itself as India’s first true ‘retail restaurant’. Here the diner has the option of buying whatever catches their fancy in the breathtakingly beautiful and eclectic space nestled in city’s Kamala Mills restaurant super hub. From the furniture to the lights to the plates, everything is on sale. From the design aspect, the entire restaurant is a display area of different collections and is all about the minute details, which are colourful, kitsch and eye-catching. Every dimension is well-kept and blends into each other rather than being distinctive. As for the food, the Pan-Asian cuisine menu is composed of signature dishes like the black fungus and bamboo shoot salad, edamame truffle wontons and the divine East Asian curry pot, among scores of other yummies like their extensive range of sushi. Speaking of which, upping the ante as far as innovation in food is concerned, Plum sends out the wacky-yet-yum Nutella banana sushi for dessert.
3rd Floor Trade View Building, Kamala Mills Compound, Lower Parel, Mumbai.
Tel: 022-61344237

The Bedroom at The Flying Elephant
With an oddly incongruous name like ‘The Bedroom’, this themed section at the even more strangely named multi-leveled The Flying Elephant restaurant in Chennai revels in its rather playful nature. We’re informed that the reason it is called The Bedroom is because it is the most private portion of the otherwise high-energy restaurant. Precariously perched at the topmost level with a vertigo-inducing view of the rest of the gargantuan restaurant down below, this section seats up to 20 diners and is kitted out with silver-gold accents on the luxuriant upholstery and a bright red table. The space exudes a quiet luxury and makes a sophisticated style statement with a sparkling chandelier that is its focal point. Menus at The Bedroom are specially curated for the space. So that one can expect everything from succulent andana kebabs or hot pizzas from the wood-fired pizza oven to the decadent pork belly—a signature dish at The Flying Elephant. Some of the other creature comforts diners can indulge in here include both a private butler and a private bar dispensing yummy ‘Prohibition Era’ cocktails that hark back to America’s swinging 1920s.
Park Hyatt Chennai, 39 Velachery Main Rd, Guindy, Chennai.
Tel: 044-71771655

Prankster
Calling itself India’s first food and brewery campus—all inspired by the collegiate way of life—the rather playful and whimsical Prankster in Gurugram packs a mighty punch with an unbridled feeling of youthful energy, all thanks to its campus-like theme. The cuisine at this cool-n-casual first-storied restaurant can best be described as ‘progressive nostalgic’ where the chefs attempt to fuse numerous indigenous dishes with contemporary techniques and a twist. The extensive menu is peppered with innovative dishes like the choley kulche doughnut which is served with a gaajar achaar mousse, sambhar cappuccino and the nitro dahi bhalla savoury ice cream that not only evoke childhood memories but gives the diner of today a creative and innovative experience which one won’t forget in a hurry. Choose to spend your evening seated at one of the many campus zones like the library, the mixology lab, the amphitheatre or perhaps at the hostel room that is perfect for a private party with its bunk beds and study tables.
8-9-10, Sector 29, Main Market, Gurugram (NCR).
Tel: 0124-4266653


(differently edited version of this piece was first published in the November 2019 issue of The Week's Smart Life magazine)



Saturday, March 31, 2018

Dining with a Conscience!


From restaurants staffed by members of the transgender and hearing-impaired communities to disabilities-friendly cafés offering braille menus and more, inclusivity is very much on the menu at a few such path-breaking eateries across India.



By Raul Dias

Third Eye Café, Navi Mumbai
This recently-opened café was launched with the intention of providing not just employment to the third gender, but also giving them a sense of identity and inclusiveness. With a staff of six transgender employees, including the manager and servers, this café dishing out everything from fluffy falafel with tahini yoghurt to a flavoursome butter chicken, truly walks the talk of its motto that’s emblazoned on its walls. It reads, ‘Be The Change You Want To See’.
Palm Beach Galleria Mall, Sector 19D, Vashi, Navi Mumbai 400703. Call: +91-9619204894


Kalakkal Café, Chennai  
As India’s first ever ‘inclusive’ cafe, this ramp-equipped café in Chennai’s Kotturpuram neighbourhood is an initiative by Vidya Sagar, an NGO working for children and adults with special needs. Offerings like their scrumptious burgers and the retro-cool ‘goti’ sodas can not only be ordered off a Braille menu, but also with the aid of their very artistic pictorial menus. But that’s not all. The café has tactile walls and even some eating aids via a few nifty apps like All Access where users can scan logos and QR codes to access audio menus.
No 1, Ranjith Road, Kotturpuram, Chennai 600085. Call: 044-22364712


Om, Bengaluru
A few years ago, Bhavna Jain was looking forward to doing something different at her vegetarian restaurant Om in Bengaluru’s tony neighbourhood of Koramangala. A chance encounter with a visually impaired Bharatanatyam dancer, led Jain to seek the help of EnAble India, an NGO that works with the differently-abled to come up with a Braille menu that she followed up with an audio menu shortly. Today, this modest eatery serving tasty thalis meals sees a steady stream of visually impaired and other differently-abled people making it their de facto hang out spot every day.
18, 36, Ground Floor, Raheja Arcade, Near-Heart Beats, Koramangala 7th Block, Bengaluru 560095. Call: 080-40989595


Sheroes' Hangout, Agra
Run by a group of enterprising acid attack survivors, this bright and cheery café has amassed serious street cred every since it opened its doors a few years ago. And that’s not just because of all that inspiring girl power, but also because of its reasonably priced food. Here, take your pick from a selection of all-veggie delights like the home-style bhindi masala and the Indian street food mainstay, the gobhi Manchurian! The café also serves as a venue for organised events for social interaction such as debates, book launches, social awareness conferences and music session among other socially relevant initiatives.
Fatehabad Road, Opposite The Gateway Hotel, Taj View Chowraha, Tajganj, Agra 282001. Call: 0562-4000401


Mirchi & Mime, Mumbai
Two of this fine dining Indian cuisine restaurant’s greatest calling cards are a well-curated menu—with delights such as a melt-in-the mouth mushroom galouti kebab and a guinea fowl done Lahori style—and its wait staff. The latter is made up entirely of well-trained hearing and speech-impaired individuals. All the diner needs to do is simply point at the illustrated menu card and indicate the number of portions. An easy-to-follow gesture glossary is also appended to the menu to facilitate other dining accoutrements like cutlery, crockery, salt, pepper and spices.  
Trans Ocean House, Lake Boulevard, Hiranandani Business Park, Powai, Mumbai 400076. Call: 022-41415151



(An edited version of this piece was first published in the 9th April, 2018 issue of India Today magazine)


Sunday, October 22, 2017

New Flavours Galore

Right from the wonders of Mexican moles to Peruvian ceviches and the Ethopian messob, a whole smorgasbord of new restaurants around India are referencing myriad Latin American and African cuisines like never before, making ‘tis the season for a bit of exotic flavours on our plates!




By Raul Dias

There’s no doubting the fact that India has, for the last couple of years, been ensnared in the
vice-like grip of a raging culinary vortex that’s spewing out every conceivable cuisine trend that,
we the diner, are only too happy to lap up (pun intended!). Never mind how outré or over the top
they may be. Today, we may know our Thai tom yums from our Italian risottos and our Korean
gimbaps from the now de rigueur Japanese gunkan makis.
But recently, there has been a whole new breed of restaurants cropping up around the country.
Each representing a few hitherto unknown cuisines of Africa and Latin America. Each hoping to
break the Italian-Chinese- Japanese cuisine ‘hegemony’. And each making it their mission to
make sure we acquaint ourselves with exotic eats like fluffy injeras from Ethiopia, jellofs from
Nigeria and churrascaria from South Brazil, among others.
And while there have been (failed) introductory attempts made in the past with places like
Ubuntu in Mumbai serving South African food, the recently shuttered Manny’s Square in Delhi
doing its bit for Nigerian cuisine and even a short-lived Brazilian restaurant called Churrascaria
Brazil in Bengaluru, the following are bold new places that are making valiant inroads onto the
experimental Indian diner’s tabletop, straight out of Africa and Latin America…

Latino Vibes
Introducing tongue twisters of dishes like pão de queijo (cheese fritters), escondidinho (steak
topped with mascarpone cheese) and rocambole de espinafare (veggie-filled spinach rolls) to the
Indian diner’s culinary lexicon is this restaurant Boteco—with two branches in Pune and a new
three-months- old one in Mumbai—that claims to be the country’s first all-Brazilian eatery. And
yes, they do a mean version of Brazil’s national drink, the caipirinha which is the refreshing sum
of its cachaça, sugar and lime parts.
Bringing to Mumbai a range of exotic Pan-Hispanic flavours, Luca charts its food expedition
from the mercados of Mexico with a chocolate-laden chicken mole to the balmy islands of the
Caribbean (callaloo with okra) to finally, the sunny beaches of Coastal South America with their
riff on the Puerto Rican plantain classic tostones. Hints of colonial influences show up in dishes
like a ‘Latinised’ Spanish paella and a Portuguese feijoada.
Nestled in the heart of Gurugram’s Crowne Plaza hotel, Wildfire is an all-grills Brazilian
restaurant that takes a pescatarian detour from the usually meat-saturated churrascaria theme
with its seafood dishes like the pan fried red snapper pan fritto dentice and brodo di pesce zuppa
di saffron-redolent fish soup. But that’s not to say that the meat lovers are ignored. Take your
pick from the linguisa pork sausage, the tenderloin fraldinha or perhaps, the minty lamb paleta
de cordeiro.
Helping India discover that there is a whole other raw fish world out there as opposed to just sushi, Lima in Mumbai proudly shows off its Peruvian underpinnings. Offering a range of
ceviche—from a traditional yellowfin tuna tiradito one to a veggie-friendly enoki mushroom
iteration. All this, as you nurse a few of Lima’s signature cocktails like the pisco-saturated Lima
sour, served with a frothy cloud of meringue.

Out Of Africa
Offering up a mindbogglingly large menu of Ethiopian delicacies from the teff-flour made bread
called injera to the national dish of chicken doro wat spiced with the traditional berbere spice
mix and a carom seed and olive oil cake called nech azmud, Abyssinian, the year-old Chennai
restaurant in Alwarpet, has almost everything—including the low-slung furniture and
ingredients—brought in from Ethiopia.
While prima facie there may nothing remotely Nigerian to the look and feel of this Marine Lines,
Mumbai restaurant, a glance at Greeen Onion’s menu will throw up myriad surprises in the form
of the tomato-y jellof rice with a huge hunk of deep-fried chicken, served with fried plantain
slices as accompaniments and the funky smelling, dried fish redolent goat onugbo curry, best
mopped up with balls fashioned out of the log-shaped semovita fufu that’s flecked with pieces of
okra. Straight out of a 1001 Arabian Nights in its décor and like its name Fez alludes, this
Moroccan and North African restaurant in New Delhi’s Chanaykapuri area is a repository for all
things North African from its lamb tajine jazzed up with preserved lemons to its Tunisian stew
served with cous cous.
Interestingly even the QSR (Quick Service Restaurant) concept has cottoned onto the exotic
cuisines’ appeal. For the last few years, Galitos, a QSR in Bengaluru’s Whitefield has been
giving patrons a taste of South Africa and its neighbour Mozambique with is very popular peri-
peri chicken, the kebab-like Afrikaner sosaties and the heart-y mealie pap soup that’s made with
corn meal and flavoured with tomato and basil.
Run by the cultural wing of the Ethiopian Embassy in Chanaykapuri, New Delhi, eating out at
Blue Nile, an über-authentic Ethiopian restaurant cum café is both educational and palate-
pleasing. The staff are on hand to guide you through the nuances of this North-East African
cuisine that has its flagbearers the fluffy injera bread made from rice, teff or corn, the black lentil
rich defen mesir and the begg tibs which is sliced lamb fried with onion garlic and fresh chilli.

(A shorter, differently edited version of this piece was first published in the October 2017 issue of The Week's Smart Life magazine)

Monday, February 20, 2017

A-N-A-T-O-M-I-Z-E: Chilli Tossed Tuna Poké


By Raul Dias

Kekaulike Market in Honolulu in Hawaii’s Chinatown may not be anything to write home about, with its dank, smelly interiors that reverberate with the cacophony of fishmonger calls and other assorted sounds. But within its cavernous bowels it holds a secret few outsiders are privy to. Dishing out probably the best poké on the Big Island, Maguro Bros. has a perpetual queue of prospective patrons lining up at its nondescript Formica-topped counter.
And it was there at Maguro Bros. that a few years ago I had an edible epiphany of sorts when I dug into my very first bowl of a traditional Hawaiian poké (pronounced poh-kay). Simply put, a mélange of soy- and sesame oil-marinated raw tuna cubes served atop hot sushi rice, poké is rather erroneously classified as a ‘salad’ on menu cards across the world.
Unable to find a desi doppelganger worthy of comparison, I had almost given up hope of ever tasting anything that came close to that poké. All that changed when I recently chanced upon Chef Manu Chandra’s iteration, which he serves with his own unique twist at the New York East village-style casual eatery Toast & Tonic in Bengaluru’s Ashok Nagar. Eschewing the traditional sushi rice for the short-grained and sticky Gobindobhog variety from Bengal, Chandra risks the poké purists’ wrath with aplomb.

He takes further detours by sending his rather transcendent chilli-tossed tuna poké off to the table anointed with a passion fruit and pineapple vinaigrette, a halved, beetroot-pickled boiled egg and fresh avocado cubes—all of this garnished with micro mustard greens, shards of nori (dried Japanese seaweed), fried onions and a sprinkling of the very au courant chia seeds.

(This column first appeared in the 19th February 2017 issue of The Hindu newspaper's Sunday Magazine section on page 8 http://www.thehindu.com/life-and-style/food/chillitossed-tuna-pok/article17324871.ece)