By Sourish Bhattacharyya
Dharmesh Karmokar is the co-promotor of Nom Nom along with Hitesh Keswani, who handles the financial side of the business that started with Juhu's Silver Beach Cafe |
DHARMESH KARMOKAR may not have acquired
celebrity restaurateur status like AD
Singh, Riyaz Amlani and Rahul Akerkar — three men with whom he
has worked closely in his formative years — but he’s well on his way to stardom.
Nom Nom at The Ashok--it's the first in Delhi after two successful openings in Mumbai--sprawls across the 11,000 square feet vacated by Nelson Wong's China Garden |
Of mixed Bengali-Gujarati parentage,
the Institute of Hotel Management (Dadar) 1992 graduate is the co-promoter
(with Hitesh Keswani) of the Silver Beach Café, the stylish hangout
of Bollywood’s glitterati at Juhu, recently rated by CNN as one of Mumbai’s ten
best, and Nom Nom, the “fun Asian” restaurant
whose first outlet in Delhi opens on September 12 at the 11,000-square-foot space
formerly occupied by Nelson Wong’s China Garden at The Ashok.
Having started life as a waiter at Ajay Piramal’s parties, earning Rs 500 a
night, a princely sum in pre-liberalisation India, Kamokar today is partnering with
Spice Global boss B.K. Modi, who’s famous in Mumbai as
the man who wears pink pants and is driven around in a canary yellow Bentley. It
was Modi who bid for and secured the 11,000-square-foot space that has made way
for the 180-cover Nom Nom, which has tiered seating to appeal to Delhi’s
hierarchical sense of honour, a live charcoal grill for the kebabs of the
rebellious Xinjian Uyghur Autonomous Region and a hand-made noodles counter. Nom
Nom’s two Mumbai outlets are in Juhu and on the Juhu-Versova Link Road. And
after the Delhi project takes off, Karmokar will get busy with launching his
company’s dessert brand, Park Bench.
Nom Nom has many winners on its menu,
starting with the star anise-flavoured chilli sauce that arrives at your table
even before you place your food order, dim sum sexed up with Japanese spices
and even cheddar cheese, sinus-clearing Chinese mustard prawns (a fiery
alternative to the standard-issue wasabi prawns), the banana leaf-wrapped
steamed basa (Parsi patrani machchi
meets Chinese spicing) served with prawn crackers tossed in sweet chilli sauce,
and for dessert, Ciroc’s coconut-flavoured vodka jelly with caramelised rambutan
and pina colada sauce. The restaurant’s circulating ‘tea book’ with 50 tea bag options
is from Basilur, the purveyors of “pure Ceylon tea”.
“We have gone creative with our
desserts. Darsan has been done to death,” says Karmokar. “Fun Asian”, he declares,
is the way forward for a market saturated with Cantonese options. “Restaurants
in China have taken fun to another level,” Karmokar says. “Shanghai consumes
more Chivas than the whole of India. It’s time we too learnt to live the good
life.” To drive home the idea of unalloyed fun, the music at Nom Nom will be
pumped up after 10:30 p.m. and Friday nights will be designated ‘Chow Nights’
after the Hangover character Leslie Chow, played by Korean American
comedian Ken Jeong. The prices,
Karmokar assures us, will be reasonable. “We don’t want to price ourselves out
of business,” he says, adding that he expects the average check per person to
be Rs 1,200 with taxes and service charge, but minus alcohol. The soups, for
instance, are priced at Rs 270.
It’s been an arduous yet rewarding
journey for Karmokar. “What pulled me into the hospitality industry was the
glamour,” says the 41-year-old whose father is in the jewellery business, and
at 70, still insists on being driven in his Ambassador to the fish market at
Vasai at 4:30 a.m. to be able to get the fresh catch. Karmokar remembers the time
when he was a hotel management student doubling as a waiter at a party at The
Taj Mahal Hotel. A friend of his father’s who was at the party looked very
concerned on seeing Dharmesh. “Beta, ghar
mein sab theek hai na?” he asked the young man. Those were the days when a
career in the hospitality sector was frowned upon by the older generation.
Having been groomed at Dadar by the
likes of Chef Vernon Coelho,
Karmokar started his career at the Taj when three industry stalwarts of today
held key positions in the iconic hotel — Subir
Bhowmick (Area Director of the Taj Hotels in Hyderabad) was the general
manager; Farhat Jamal (Area General
Manager of the Shangri-La Hotel, Mumbai), the F&B manager; and Raman Mehra (CEO, Graviss Hospitality),
the banquet manager.
Post-Taj, Karmokar joined Farrokh Khambata’s catering company
Flavours (and that was when he came in touch with AD Singh and Rahul Akerkar),
sold Apple Computers for six months, joined Riyaz Amlani’s fledgling company
and took Mocha from one to 16 outlets, worked with serial restaurateur Sanjay Narang, whom he describes as the
“smartest businessman in the hospitality industry”, launched the Gloria Jean coffee
chain for Micky Jagtiani, who owns
the Dubai-based Landmark retail
stores group, and Kapil Wadhawan’s Dish Hospitality, which has had a good
and bad run with brands of wavering fortunes such The Tasty Tangles and
Cinnabon.
“When you’re doing business, you’ve
got to be successful,” Karmokar says at one stage of our conversation. So far
he hasn’t done anything to suggest otherwise.
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