By Sourish Bhattacharyya
LAST NIGHT, the first batch of the Olive Culinary Academy (OCA) stunned
the packed-to-capacity gathering at Food
& Nightlife’s Delhi’s Most Delicious 2013 Awards at Pullman Gurgaon Central Park by producing a
three-course meal in 14 minutes and 45 seconds — their allotted time was 15 minutes.
Food and travel writer Rupali Dean
tasted the smoked gazpacho and could only speak in superlatives, and Food & Nightlife Editor Sumit Goyal just couldn’t stop having
the tiramisu.
What we were seeing on the stage — the
audience consisted of the doyens of the food and hospitality industry, starting
with K.B. Kachru, Anil Bhandari, Alok Shivpuri, Arvind
Saraswat, Manjit Gill, Davinder Kumar, Sudhir Sibal, Arun Chopra
and Shaju Zachariah, so it was
indeed a moment of revelation — was the birth of a new generation of chefs: sassy,
savvy, good at their work, and just loving it. Their backgrounds were as
diverse as India, which made the group just the kind of melting pot that would
produce the country’s first genuinely international cuisine experience. It is
the generation that can talk about dining at Eleven Madison Park (the New York Flatiron district restaurant ranked
No. 5 in San Pellegrino’s World Best 50 Restaurants in 2013) with the same ease
as they can comment on their mother’s rajma-chawal.
The brainchild of Olive Bar &
Kitchen’s founder AD Singh and his
star chef, Sabyasachi ‘Saby’ Gorai,
OCA is a brilliant initiative to nurture batches of young chefs who are, to
quote HR jargon, ‘industry ready’ and little powerhouses of talent. After the
show, I took AD to one corner and told him he should be prepared to lose his
entire first batch to an industry famished for talent. He did seem worried at
the thought, but he was excited by the idea of producing a new generation of
chefs whom any company in the world (especially his own!) would love to employ.
And as was to be expected of him, he was already planning how to retain these
talented people by reinventing the role of the chef. What about making them
brand ambassadors, for instance?
I could think of Eesha Singh, whose repartee left the normally loquacious ‘sadhak chhaap chef’ and TV presenter
Saransh Goila, easily fitting into the role. When she was explaining the dishes
being prepared by her fellow students, Eesha combined knowledge, good humour
and a radiant smile. Yet, she has the most un-cheflike background — an English Literature
graduate from Gargi College, Delhi University, she went to study contemporary
dance at the Broadway Dance Center and the Pushing Progress Company, New York, learnt
bartending while there and then worked with Ashley Lobo’s Danceworx Academy for
three years before becoming a student all over again.
Sabyasachi 'Saby' Gorai (third from left) and the young faculty of the OCA |
The other stories are equally
inspiring. Padmaja Kumari Jadeja,
whose father is the cook of the family, decided to become a chef after studying
English Literature at Indraprastha College for Women and Fashion Marketing at
the Pearl Academy of Fashion. Arshhia
Chawla, who notched up 85 per cent in Humanities from Apeejay School,
Saket, and then studied the Law for a year, chose to be a chef and not a
lawyer. Sahil Arora from Faridabad
went against the wishes of his elders, gave up his Business Administration
studies midway and abandoned the safety net of his family business to become a
chef. Mansi Chauhan, a Maths whiz,
is pursuing a B.Com. along with her dream of becoming a head chef, in five
years, of a successful fine-dining restaurant. Ritu Saigal is already preparing to open her own London restaurant
in 2014. Divija Singh from Mayo has
a law degree and a Master’s in Social Welfare from Jamia Millia Islamia. How
many industry veterans you know come with such qualifications?
In this inspiring young group, Sofia
Leyzarova is a name that stands out. Originally from Minsk, Belarus, Sofia grew
up in a small town in New Jersey dominated by Italian and Puerto Rican
immigrants, studied accounting and psychology at Rutgers, visited Delhi as an
exchange students at St Stephen’s College in 2009, and was working for three
years in New York City till she decided to join the OCA in the hope of
eventually opening a Russian restaurant in Delhi. With so much diversity, I can
see the kitchens of tomorrow taking on a completely new look. Each time I meet
Saby’s protégés Dhruv Oberoi and Megha Kohli (a product of The Oberoi’s
STEP programme, she has joined OCA after a stint at Olive Beach), I can’t stop
wondering about the cultural shift that is taking place in our stand-alone restaurants.
India’s culinary future is in very safe hands.
This made beautiful reading - as you said , straight from the heart ...
ReplyDeleteCongratulations Saby & A D Singh - The food scene in Delhi just got a big boost thanks to your initiative !
Atul, many thanks for your comment all the way from the Lake District. Yes, Saby and AD indeed making a difference.
DeleteTruly impressive; during my day's of HM, the only renowned Culinary schools in India used to be (& still are) OCLD, WMI and TMTP, but they all focused (and still do) on the holistic management skills of the professional. We seriously need something like a CIA (of similar standards) in India as well. With OCA, I feel the wheels of change have already begun and the coming years will see many interesting innovations coming to the Indian stand-alone restaurant space.
ReplyDeletePS: I'm quite enjoying the scoops of IRS, kudos Mr. Bhattacharyya
A good point and thanks for the appreciation.
DeleteThanx Chef Sourish Bhattacharyya for your kind words :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sahil, and I wish I were a chef!
DeleteWay to go. Well done Saby
ReplyDeleteSecond that, Chowder Singh!
Delete