By Sourish
Bhattacharyya
WHEN I went to meet the genial Manjit Singh Saini, who has brought the Florida-based Pollo Tropical (pronounced Po-yo
Tropi-kaal) to India, one big question raged in my mind: “Why Pollo Tropical?
Why not Burger King, or Quesnos, or whatever?”
As we sat down at India’s first Pollo Tropical at what was
earlier the Food Chowk behind DLF Place, Saket, Saini said he had one big idea
when he ventured into the restaurant business. He wanted to sell chicken, but
not fried chicken, because the new generation had moved on to grilled chicken.
Each visit to KFC, where he saw young people opting for the fiery grilled
chicken, convinced him of this significant dietary shift.
So when Saini, whose father had started Paramount, the
family’s thriving precision instruments business, in 1964, started scouting
around for a brand to bring into India, he first thought of Pollo Campero, which was eventually
brought into the country by Amit
Burman’s LiteBite Foods, after being impressed by the burgers he had eaten
at the chain’s outlets in Guatemala and El Salvador. He even checked out
franchising opportunities with Nando’s and ChicKing.
Saini’s love for chicken took him to far corners of the
world, but it was Pollo Tropical that beckoned him. He got to know from a
friend that a senior Pollo Tropical executive, Senior Vice President for
International Development, Marc Mushkin,
had travelled to India with a franchise trade mission led by the U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State for Commerce, Nicole
Lamb-Hale, in 2011. Locating his coordinates, Saini got in touch with Mushkin
on email and got invited to Florida for exploratory talks with the 25-year-old company’s
leadership.
Manjit Singh Saini (centre, standing) with Pollo Topical's Senior VP (International Development) Marc Mushkin, left, and U.S. Embassy's Minister-Counsellor John McCaslin at the franchise's opening |
A determined Saini landed in Florida, ate at 16 Pollo
Tropical locations in two days to convince himself that he had made the right
choice, and sealed the deal, which will see Paramount Cuisines, parent company of Pollo Tropical in India, opening
nine restaurants in the National Capital Region, Haryana, Punjab and Chandigarh
in the next two years.
The Miami-based chain, which is famous for its open
flame-grilled chicken, owns and operates 95 locations in the United States plus
four licensed restaurants on college campuses in Florida. And it has 33
international franchised locations in Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, Costa Rica,
Ecuador, Honduras, Panama, Trinidad & Tobago, and Venezuela. New Delhi is
the latest addition to Pollo Tropical’s expanding map and the group’s first location
outside the Western Hemisphere.
When I visited the Pollo Tropical (http://pollotropical.com) outlet
at Saket, I was surprised to find the 2,750-square-foot restaurant had a
1,000-square-foot kitchen — very generous by the standards of Indian restaurants.
A major part of it was taken up by the open-flame griller from Imperial (www.imperialrange.com), the
California-based global supplier of cooking equipment, and I saw whole chickens
with skin cooking in their own juices.
The cooking process, according to Shriya Kaur, who heads the F&B
operations at Pollo Tropical, can take up to 45 minutes. A PAR sheet (and I
thought these are used only by the gambling industry!) informs the kitchen
staff about the number of chickens that would be required for each time slot. It’s
that much systems-driven, which is why Mushkin has been here 12 times in the
last six months. Each chicken, for instance, weighs between 1,300 and 1,500gms
and is sourced from the Sonepat-based broiler breeders and poultry processors, Skylark Group (http://skylarkfoods.com).
The Pollo Tropical store behind DLF Place, Saket |
Before the grilling comes the most important part of the
process: marination. Pollo Tropical’s proprietary marinade is made with fruit
juices and a blend of Caribbean spices, and to ensure that each drop of it seeps
into the muscle fibres and bones of each bird, the whole chickens are placed in
a ‘vacuum tumbler’ that can take 75 of them at a time. Each chicken spends an
hour in the vacuum tumbler and has its flesh and bones pulled in different
directions in a way that ensures not a pore is without the marinade.
Other features of Pollo Tropical’s menu are the salads drizzled
with dressings made afresh daily, steamed yellow rice flavoured with vegetable
stock and served with beans, a bouquet of five dipping sauces (of which the
cilantro garlic and Caribbean pineapple are unbeatable), paneer preparations that taste refreshingly different and wholesome,
and potato wedges baked in a Rational oven (as is the paneer) so that they don’t get soggy and yet are not bone dry.
Saini is confident that Pollo Tropical will acquire a committed
following in the months ahead, so his team is busy organising food tastings at
the mall (DLF Place), active on Facebook and Twitter (social media seems to be
working best for them), and encouraging the early patrons to post reviews on
Zomato with freebies as incentives. Of course, at the end, it will be the food
that will do the talking.
This is Indeed the Best "Grilled" Chicken I have Ever Had.
ReplyDeleteBy the way, If I say that this is "
The BEST CHICKEN",I have ever had, then too it will not be wrong!!
I must put this quote to use :) :)
DeleteIt is indeed a grilled chicken I would love to have again, Gurpreet and Shriya!
DeleteI am very very keen to taste this chicken after the detailed description you have given us . The vacuum tumbler is a very interesting method of marination as the flavors come from within and arent slapped onto the surface of the bird . That is often a problem as the palate initially gets an intense dose of flavor , but as one gets to the flesh ones taste buds are subjected to a sawdust like blandness !Sounds like we have a winner of a dining option .
ReplyDeleteYou must plan and visit soon :)
DeleteAtul, we must go to Pollo Tropical and have a meal together!
DeleteHave been thinking of trying this, and now can't wait. Very soon.
ReplyDeletePawan, please go. You wouldn't regret the experience.
Delete