Taking gourmet to the street
Restaurateurs also believe that street food offers the perfect opportunity to experiment with molecular gastronomy and, at the same time, keep younger audiences cued in with low prices. "One can't always eat at a street-side kiosk because of hygiene issues, and young people don't find it hip to hang out at these joints. That is why we take the flavours of the street and add a bit of quirk and panache to make them cool and trendy," says Zorawar Kalra, founder and managing director, Massive Restaurants. This is the reason that Kalra, after the fine-dine restaurant Masala Library in Mumbai, decided to open Farzi Cafe in Delhi.
“Finding the local chaat on a fine-dining menu is exciting“
Manish Mehrotra
Corporate chef, Indian Accent
Manish Mehrotra
Corporate chef, Indian Accent
Inside the chef's laboratory
For Mehrotra, bringing together the two opposites of street food and fine-dine cuisine is a challenge that any chef will enjoy. He will soon add a paapri pizza to his menu at Indian Accent, blending authentic Italian with Indian flavours. SpiceKlub, a casual dining restaurant in Mumbai's Lower Parel, has discovered a way for diners to eat pav bhaji without getting their hands dirty. The pav arrives in the form of bite-size buns to be dipped in the zesty mousse that simmers in a fondue pot. "Adding cheese and serving it in a pot didn't work. We changed the molecules to make them more liquid and introduced aeration so that the bhaji remained fluffy throughout," says proprietor Aditya Gupta.
While Chandra believes in experimenting with flavours to match every region's own unique palate, Kalra feels that gourmet street food needs to keep authentic flavours intact. "If you try our Bombay Bhel 2.0 at Farzi Cafe, you'll find the true Mumbai flavours, even if it is at a temperature you've never experienced," says Kalra. Farzi Cafe's bhel puri is frozen with liquid nitrogen and crispies. Kalra has also innovated with the vada pao and the menu includes a duck chilli version of samosa.
Within street food too, restaurants are finding takers for global flavours. The Fatty Bao, an Asian gastro-bar in Bangalore, has a number of gourmet adaptations of street food one would find in South East Asian countries. "Most of our customers are well-travelled and we thought it would be interesting to serve global flavours with a twist," says Prashanth, executive chef at the eatery.
Sujoy Gupta, executive sous chef at Taj Bengal in Kolkata too has been adding a contemporary touch to street food. Gupta has played around with the idea of paapri chaat, using the crispy paapri as a filling for sandwiches. In a twist to the traditional Kolkata kathi roll, Sharad Dewan, chef and area director (food production) at The Park, Kolkata, uses a pesto dressing for the paneer filling.
“We take flavours of the street and add a bit of quirk and panache to make them cool and trendy“
Zorawar Kalra
Owner, Farzi Café
Zorawar Kalra
Owner, Farzi Café
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Old wine in a new bottle?
SpiceKlub's version of pani puri takes the term "experimental food" rather seriously. Diners are expected to fill potent water and tamarind chutney into hollow puris with the help of test tubes and syringes. The trick here stops at inventive presentation, however, and there are no surprises in taste. The dahi papri includes a baked cracker, coriander foam and spherified curd that packs in the flavours of chutneys and masalas well. The vada pav comes with condiments in edible packets that is quite quirky, as is the deconstructed kulfi that can be paired with five flavours, including blueberry and salted caramel.
In Delhi, while Farzi Cafe outshines both in flavour and innovation, the portions are a bit of a letdown. The Bombay Bhel and the cafe's take on vada pao, with the stuffing encasing the bread, are both flavourful and zingy, even in the chilly weather. Monkey Bar in Delhi's Connaught Place has an exciting menu with quirky names like Mr Paneer Sharma (a spicy cottage cheese roll) and Shazia Imli (a sweet-sour alcoholic beverage), most of the innovations are in name only. Mumbai's favourite dabeli is served with an unsavoury hint of asafoedita and minus the crunch of the peanuts. While the cottage cheese roll tastes good and goes well with the hot winter cocktail, it does little in the name of innovation. The accompanying chutney, though, is fresh and zesty.
Manavi Kapur, Indulekha Aravind, Ranjita Ganesan and Kamalika Ghosh contributed to this report
Business Standard paid for the meals

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