| As if to compensate, a host of "fine dining" restaurants have sprouted in the metros "" stand-alone establishments that offer first class ambience, great food, and a winelist that matches the five-star hotels "" all combined with that personal touch from the proprietor or chef being there to pamper guests. So let's take a look at the best stand-alone, fine-dining restaurants in Bangalore: |
| Olive Beach: A D Singh found this lovely old bungalow on Wood Street and turned it into one of the finest restaurants anywhere "" the trademark minimalist Mediterranean-style decor presages a Continental dining experience where one can choose the breezy outdoors or the interiors with low lighting and fat candles on each table. |
| Attentive waiters are a prelude to chef Manu Chandra's gourmet creations. Added attractions include the mandatory Sunday brunch (a sellout), a gourmet bazaar every second Saturday (the next is February 16 "" get a superb range of cold cuts and cheeses), a monthly flea market, and the occasional fashion show. |
| The place is a favourite with both the city's expats as well as discerning company people: Vijay Mallya celebrated his last birthday here; Nandan Nilekani is a regular, and I'm delighted to be able to use the place to host most of my wine tastings. A must-visit place, with a selected list of some 50 wines. |
| Sunny's: Arjun Sajnani used to do only theatre but seems to have found his calling as a restaurateur: starting with a three-storey walk-up in the heart of Bangalore, he migrated, two years back, to a prime location on Vittal Mallya Road (next to the spanking new UB City), and has never looked back. |
| The menu is unabashedly Continental but the preparations are great value and Arjun (or his partner Vivek) reputedly buy all critical ingredients themselves to ensure freshness and quality "" I do know that he personally approves each of the 40-odd wines listed. |
| Giancarlo's Place: Opened exactly a month ago, this is run by... Giancarlo, a terrifically handsome Italian! The second floor is the fine-dining area, while the terrace sit-out has the best-stocked bar outside any five-star hotel, a wood-fired pizza oven, and even an Italian pizza-master! |
| Uniquely, they stock only Italian wines (apart from Champagne and Big Banyan), and the initially 20-strong list includes respectable labels like Brancaia, Prunotto, Lungarotti, Mastroberardino, Antinori, Pighin, Falesco and Zonin. |
| Of course, there are many other good restaurants where one can also have good wines: Fiorano, Via Milano and Little Italy to name a few with Spaghetti Kitchen in the offing. And I have not even dared touch on places other than those serving Continental cuisines. |
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