Tuesday, May 24, 2016

FOODIE SPECIAL .......Table Toppers

Table Toppers


With pulled kathal and drinks in mason jars, formulaic menus are trending in restaurants. You aren't a fashionable foodie if you haven't tucked into these

It is not strange for restaurant menus to remind you of Bollywood potboilers. In the 1970s and '80s block busters, you could shut your eyes and still follow the plot: a blind sister, the long-suffering mother, the an gry young man, a bromance, a sizzling song and dance, the vamp and chiffon saris coming together in a happy ending. It is much the same at many of our buzzing restaurants in 2016. From the deconstructed vada pav on the slate to the runny curry in cutesy tif fins to desserts and drinks in mason jars, formulaic menus are trending and you could shut your eyes and eat through them.
The best chefs work differently. You can recognise the brightest, most talented ones from the whimsy of their menus. But once that surprise has settled and commercial success attained, the me-toos take over, serving with elan the same things that had seemed so inventive and fresh once. Bung in “pulled kathal“ tacos with baos and banta cocktails and you have a trendy restaurant going. Almost.
If the formulaic dishes of the past ranged from butter chicken and rogan josh to chicken a la kiev and mezze platters, today we have an entirely “new“ top-of-the pop list. You aren't a fashionable foodie, if you haven't eaten these:
1 Pulled Jackfruit Tacos:
Kathal, of course, is the hottest new discov ery of the millennial about town, who never quite managed to find the jackfruit on her plate at home. Or, perhaps, mother did exhort her to scoop some with a hot phulka when there was no pink pasta for lunch. But that exhortation was scoffed at.
That can be the only reason why so many people now consider what is one of the most common and oldest In dian fruits to be exotic. It took the genius of chef Manish Mehrotra of Indian Accent to make the homely kathal fashionable. He served this as a vegetarian substitute for his pulled pork phulka tacos in 2012. Since then, both the phulka as an Indian taco and the raw jackfruit curry -which can look like pulled pork, even if it doesn't quite taste the same -have had an unbeatable run, appropriated by all wannabe modern Indians, restaurants and people.
2 Deconstructed Vada Pav:
With chutney in a molecular, edible plastic pouch. The irony of converting a poor man's dish into gourmet chic may escape us, but, hey, we can always deconstruct it. Both deconstruction and vada pav are so utterly chic that if you haven't sampled either, you are as square as those ladi pavs, which few outside Mumbai ever get right.
3 Pork Belly:
Like the cafeisation of chaat, the gentrification of the pork belly is full of irony.One of the cheapest cuts of the meat, its renaissance as a chef's favourite in the US led to global popularity. In India, this means a stab at skewered pork belly tikkas with masala slathered on or, well, pork pakoras with chaat masala.
4 Baos:
All through the 2000s, American restaurateur David Chang's reputation rested on the huge popularity of pork buns, a reinvention of the Cantonese char siu bao, at his Momofuku restaurant. The average Indian diner perhaps does not know either. What she does know is the bao sandwich, which went mainstream after the suc cess of Manu Chandra's The Fatty Bao. Move over crispy lamb and chilli chicken, crispy chicken in the bao is here.
5 Quinoa Salad:
In In dia, we have been spared the kale but an inter est in global superfoods means quinoa is very much a favourite. We have the ecofriend ly and equally nutritious local su pergrains -the millets -but nothing is “super“ if it is not shipped from across the world.
6 Railway Mutton Curry:
What's in a name? asked Shakespeare in pre-brand days. A runny curry with tamer spices just cannot not be as flavourful as the “railway mutton curry“ set on your table in made-to-order brass, three-tiered tiffin box!
7 Red Velvet Cake:
Red cakes are back in fashion, globally, courtesy of the Game of Thrones parties. In India, they nev er went out of fashion. The Red Velvet has been trending in the metros for about five years now -considerably after the New York wave, which start ed in 1989 with its appearance as a groom's cake in Steel Magnolias.
8 Banta Cocktails:
You cannot get into a bar or on to Instagram without seeing this fizz.
Banta soda has got a new lease of life.
Lemon, orange, jalzeera and other flavours are spiked, marble-fitting machines installed at many premises and it is the It-drink for millennials who matter.
If you cannot appreciate the virtue of nostalgia, you've just lost your marbles.
9 Sangria:
It is perhaps one of the worst cocktails you can order at a bar. Most pre-make it terribly. And still it trends.
10 The Almost Trending:
These are the naanza (naan-pizza), seafood bhel, samosa-focaccia (don't ask why), hoppers with butter chicken... Have you eaten these yet?.
Anoothi Vishal

ET15MAY16

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