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Posts Tagged ‘Indian’

Subcontinental Class

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Marylebone’s Blandford Street has acquired something of an enviable reputation in foodie circles as being the epicentre of much of London’s great dining. L’Autre Pied (which has recently lost its founder Marcus Eaves to its big brother Pied A Terre), Il Baretto and, soon, Simon Rogan’s L’Enclume pop-up, Roganic, which is one of the year’s most anticipated openings, all adorn this otherwise modest road. However, it is perhaps its most atypical offering, Trishna, which has attracted much of the attention such it opened in late 2008.

Sister restaurant of a much-acclaimed operation in Mumbai, it has attracted plaudits both for head chef  Karam Sethi’s excellent and innovative cooking and for the atypically sensible prices. To put these into perspective, a set lunch of a seafood biryani or lamb curry, served with a beer or glass of wine, clocks in at a mere £10, and a five-course lunch complete with a wine flight is a bargain at a snip under £40. This fits with Sethi’s admirably avowed intent to make this a fine dining restaurant that everyone can enjoy, at any time or at any budget.

However, serious gourmands are likely to make a beeline for the ‘Taste of Trishna Koliwada Menu’, which offers a choice of five or seven courses with matching wines. Given that the most expensive means of enjoying this is £84 – barely the price of an a la carte without wine in some restaurants – this chimes perfectly with the restaurant’s ethos. The cuisine is impeccable, concentrating on a range of influences and ideas that are firmly rooted within subcontinental cooking but also offer innovative twists on old staples. The signature dish, curried Dorset brown crab, is a thing of joy and wonder, but a green chilli-flavoured hariyali sea bream, duck seekh kebab with pineapple chutney and a delectable mango rice pudding all run it extremely close.  The wines, ranging from a punchy Gruner Veltliner to complement a chargrilled wild tiger brawn to an impeccable Montagny premier cru to serve the crab, are all an enormous pleasure to quaff, sip, swallow or gurgle, depending on your preference.

An evening that you might well want to be doing some gurgling or quaffing at are Trishna’s series of Wine Chap ‘Not Your Average Curry Night’ events. As the name might suggest, these – weighing in at the frankly ludicrously good value price of £45 per head – offer the restaurant’s cuisine matched with both wines and less obvious drinks, including beers, ciders and sherries. I was involved at an early pairing evening of these, and I can testify both to Tom Harrow’s – the ‘Wine Chap’ himself – almost supernatural knowledge of wine and the eclectic range of drinks on offer. It makes for an unmissably entertaining experience.

15-17 Blandford Street, London W1. www.trishnalondon.com. Wine Chap night details at www.trishnalondon.com/currynight.

Indian Nights

Friday, December 17th, 2010

Though very much a foodie city, Indian cuisine remains somewhat overlooked in Hong Kong – but not anymore. Ista, which comes from the Sanskrit word meaning rest or comfort, is a subtle, discrete and warm restaurant located at the top of Lan Kwai Fong which is redefining the traditional Indian dining experience in the city.

Warm, inviting and decorated with toasty browns and rich creams, latticed black dividers and a sinuous metallic copper bar, Ista is a grown-up Bollywood starlet. Shaking off preconceptions of what an Indian restaurant should be, Ista eschews the ubiquitous Indian artworks, furniture and traditional music for contemporary tunes and sparkling wine glasses, custom-designed leather chairs and a (currently) very secret roof terrace.

The food too is refreshingly offered in the form of Indian tapas – small portions, beautifully presented – and the haute-cuisine-meets-street-food concept works well. Dahi poori, a traditional Indian snack food, is given a makeover and arrives as a delightful miniature crispy puff filled with homemade sweet/sour tamarind sauce and yoghurt and topped with crispy sev.

A light and zingy chickpea salad dressed with lemon juice was a refreshing accompaniment to chamman seekh kebab, minced cottage cheese mixed with bell peppers. Packing quite a punch was the mint chutney, pickle and tangy mango and tamarind chutneys – a world away from the sickly sweet processed stuff served in lesser restaurants. In fact, Ista is conspicuously health conscious. No slicks of greasy red oil here – everything is light and fresh, allowing the flavours to manifest themselves where they might normally be suffocated.

Tandoor specialties include galafi seekh kebab and salmon tikka. The lack of traditional “sizzling” platters further distances the restaurant from a traditional Indian joint – you won’t leave with the lingering smell of everyone else’s dinner.
Featuring some unusual items, including Wagyu beef, the menu draws inspirations from some of India’s most popular regional favourites. You’ll find seekh kebabs alongside a mild and creamy madras chicken curry, though the show stealer was the keema. A rich, minced lamb curry, it’s the perfect comfort food dish in winter and was devoured with a good slice of naan.

The floor-to-ceiling window that covers one of the walls floods the room with light during the day making Ista ideal for business lunches. But in the evening, the lights go down, and the room feels much more intimate.

Though not yet open, the terrace on the third floor is quite the hidden gem. With bright orange pillows, big, fat crystal ashtrays and canopied seating areas, it’s going to be a gorgeous city oasis to relax after work with a glass of wine and a delectable selection of Indian tapas.

Ista, 2/F Onfem Tower, 29 Wyndham Street, Hong Kong – +852 2530 5353

Fit For An Emperor

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

If you’re looking for a truly smart and sophisticated restaurant, where you can sample some of the most innovative food to be had anywhere in London, Kensington’s Bombay Brasserie is a shoo-in for a top choice. It’s an Indian restaurant with style and exceptional food, where the clientele return time and time again for an extraordinary experience.

You certainly won’t find the usual curry house staples here. Instead, expect a splendid mix of inventive cooking and luxuriously constructed dishes from Executive Chef Prahlad Hegde. Then there’s the genuinely friendly and attentive service, making everything that much more enjoyable.

A stone’s throw from Gloucester Road, the first impression you get on walking through the bar is faint surprise at how low-key it all appears. This fleeting thought is soon replaced by the opulence of the main dining room – a grandiose high-ceilinged space where you might imagine a Raj prince holding court. This magnificence is nicely offset by the conservatory next door – more intimate in nature – and an open kitchen.

The cuisine is special from the get-go; appetisers might include Tandoori Salmon, which is simultaneously delicately flavoured and subtly powerful, or ‘khurmani ki tikki’ – apricot and potato cakes with yoghurt and tamarind chutney, a dish that might even double as dessert if you feel so inclined. Main courses are the big draw here, and certainly don’t disappoint; whether you choose the mint and coriander spiced lobster – a magnificently decadent and delicious spin on an old favourite – or finely cooked and beautifully presented lamb chops with ginger and green herbs. The wine list offers an extensive range to accompany the range of dishes on off. My guest and I opted for an excellent Louis Jadot Pinot Noir, proving a very fitting complement to the meal.

Forthcoming highlights at the restaurant (from November to March) include a series of ‘Flavour Masterclasses’, including Flavours of Divali on 5th November; the sort of food you would expect to eat inside the Royal Palaces of India (18th March) and perhaps, most enticing of all, a ‘Chilli Celebration Dinner Season’ in the second half of January, where a menu will be devoted to showcasing the ways in which chilli can add both fire and subtlety to a dish.

Courtfield Road, London SW7 www.bombaybrasserielondon.com

Revisting India in London

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Rice_Pudding_main

Entering its 16th year in the heart of Mayfair’s cobbled lanes, Tamarind have won the Michelin star twice for their efforts; they first won it in 2001, and had it nabbed away in 2009 before the detractors had another change of heart. I spent the summer of 2004 in India, travelling from far in the North, down into the mystical backwaters of Kerala. Delhi cuisine is full of bold, vibrant and often fiery flavours. Trivandrum curries were sweeter, pairing fish with fresh local fruits. Needless to say, nothing I ate in the stunning subcontinent was even remotely familiar. The “curry” we order on a lazy Sunday evening in London has been adapted beyond recognition for the faint-hearted English palette, which is why Tamarind is so refreshing and truly authentic.

With its sweeping copper pillars and crisp white linens, Tamarind is sublimely elegant. I was welcomed by an attentive sommelier who recommended a beautiful South African chardonnay from Stellenbosch. I’m not usually a chardonnay drinker but it was a perfectly matched glass of wine. The menu is carefully divided into “genres” and with just a quick scan, it was immediately apparent this was unlike other London curry houses.

A selection of mini appetizers was selected for us. The Channa Chaat, a spiced chickpea dip with mint chutney and sweetened yoghurt topped with blueberries and tamarind chutney, might sound like an Indian houmous but was not. It may have been chickpea based, but the combination of sweet blueberry with tamarind chutney was nothing short of magnificent. A generous portion of monkfish arrived marinated in fresh coriander and spices alongside a heavenly Adraki Murgh chicken dish.

A simple cutlet of Kashmiri lamb shank so tender I could have cut it with a plastic fork was the highlight of the meal. Slow-cooked with whole spices, yoghurt, saffron and Kashmiri chillies, my main course was a perfect tribute to Indian cuisine; refined and delicate in texture yet entirely robust in flavour.

At Tamarind, the ambience, decor, cuisine and service are without flaw.

Not usually one for dessert, when the basmati rice pudding was placed before me, I simply had to try it. The creamy texture cleanses the palate beautifully while lending that subtly sweet finish, the ideal finale to the full-bodied spices so present in the previous dishes.

India is the most enigmatic of countries. Their culture and rich history materialises in the expanse and intricacies of their sumptuous cuisine. If you do find yourself in London with a craving for the authentic majesty of India, bypass your local tandoori and head into the heart of Mayfair…

Tamarind
20 Queen Street
Mayfair, London
W1J 5PR

T: 020 7629 3561
F: 020 7499 5034

www.tamarindrestaurant.com

Sub-Continent Class

Friday, March 26th, 2010

amaya_main

How do you make an Indian restaurant, a mainstay of just about every main street in British towns, a really interesting culinary destination? Some places, such as the excellent Rasoi and The Cinnamon Club, don’t attempt any bells and whistles, but concentrate on serving top-quality food very well cooked. Others, such as Benares and their recently opened sister restaurant Colony, provide an experience akin to a more European destination.

And then there is the Michelin-starred Amaya, the top end fine dining restaurant from the Masala World group, whose restaurants also include Chutney Mary, Veeraswamy and the ever-popular Masala Zone chain. Many people claim that the hugely successful Amaya is their favourite restaurant in London full stop, and it isn’t at all hard to see why on a recent visit. The atmosphere is cool and buzzy, with the open kitchen stations at the back of the restaurant each dedicated to a different way of preparing the food, whether it be cooking, grilling or using the tandoor oven.

The food is excellent, encompassing such unusual ingredients as scallops, oysters and goat’s cheese as well as more traditional options such as chicken biryani and tandoori lamb chops. If you wanted your ordinary run-of-the-mill poppadoms followed by chicken tikka masala though, forget it; there are no conventional curries on the  menu at all, with the culinary intentions being somewhat grander. Whatever you have is guaranteed to be as innovative as it is delicious.

While this is a great place to come for dinner – the stylishly designed room, vaguely reminiscent of L’Atelier de Joel Robuchon, and the comprehensive wine list ensure that a fantastic experience will be had at less than wallet-worrying prices – there’s also a surprisingly brilliant cocktail list (try the tequila and lychee daiquiri) which means that this is an equally good spot to come into for a quick bite to eat and a drink. Whatever you choose, there’s no doubt that this is a fabulous option.

Halkin Arcade, 15 Motcomb St, London SW1 www.amaya.biz

Sub-Continent Treasure

Monday, February 15th, 2010

moti_main

Living in South London I find myself spoiled for choice when it comes to Indian food with a great selection of different cuisine styles from the Indian continent. What I do miss are the higher end establishments which boast a much more unique style and selection of dishes. Because of this I was very happy to recently visit to Moti Mahal in Covent Garden heartily suggested to me by a couple of colleagues.

What I found was perhaps one of the most memorable Indian meals I’ve had in quite some time. The restaurant itself has a very pleasant, contemporary look to it , obviously aiming for the more discerning clientele. The relaxed and intimate lounge area and bar is perfect for a cocktail before sitting down and navigating through the menu.

The menu’s concept consists of dishes found along the Grand Trunk Road, a 2500km highway built by the Emperor Sher Shah Suri in the 16th Century. With a span from Sonargon in Bengal to Peshwar on the Northwest frontier of Pakistan there is a huge scope for traditional dishes along the way.

The menu is presented in a tasting style where several dishes will be ordered to build up a varying and exotic mix of tastes. Several dishes seemed to leap out off the menu, particularly Sorpotel, a Goan dish with an intense flavour with wild boar stewed with chillies, cloves, garlic and vinegar along with the smoothness of the Murgh Nazkat from Punjab and its basil poppy seed, cracked pepper and dill.

Having sampled seven or eight dishes I have to say I was very impressed. Although each dish had a strong and vibrant taste, none overpowered the other. I was also pleased that rather than the starters and the obligatory poppadoms that we were offered a large board of fresh salad – again a nice touch and the perfect way to start a meal.

Chef Ani has obviously put a lot of effort into creating the menu, placing emphasis on the finest local and global organic produce as well as a more traditional style of preparation by adopting the use of the “Thatee Grill” – a hallmark of rural Indian cooking.

Prices are towards the higher side but admittedly this reflects very well on the creativeness and quality of the dishes themselves, service is smooth and very warm as well. I’m planning on returning very soon to Moti Mahal with some friends as I know they will not be disappointed.

45 Great Queen Street, London WC2 www.motimahal-uk.com

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