By Sourish Bhattacharyya
WHAT’S the secret
of the perfect seekh kebab? I asked this question of three chefs, all winners
of the Delhi Gourmet Club’s Best Seekh Kebab of Delhi/NCR title, and none of
them was as forthright as Pradeep
Khullar of Chor Bizarre.
Delhi Gourmet Club's seekh kebab jury members with chefs Purshottam Singh (right) and Balkishen (left) at the Bukhara |
The bright young
chef, who looks as if he never eats the food he cooks, said it was the right
proportion of a goat’s kidney fat (250 gm for every 750 gm of mutton mince) to
give the seekh kebabs their sheen and bound and Amul processed cheese to act as
the binder. “Without these two key ingredients, it is impossible for us to conceive
our seekh kebabs,” said the genial chef, whom I had some time back given the trophy
for the best roghan josh at Food &
Nightlife magazine’s Delhi’s Most Delicious Awards. The other Chor Bizarre
secret is to use ginger and garlic paste, instead of using these whole, to
produce those juicy temptations that inveigle you to keep eating till you lose
track of time.
The Delhi
Gourmet Club’s demanding jury led by Rocky
‘Mr Old Monk’ Mohan, though, ranked Chor Bizarre at No. 2, with Bukhara’s meaty seekh kebabs (70-80 gm
apiece, I was told, which makes a plate of four a complete meal) besting the
Old World Hospitality restaurant by just two points. The styles of the two
kebabs are distinctly different — Bukhara’s were mutton-first, chunky
Frontier-style beauties, whereas Chor Bizarre were smoother, softer, more
gentrified. They’re like the village woman made famous by Nawaz Sharif acquiring
an urban gloss. It’s because less fat (not more than 20 per cent) goes into the Bukhara seekh kebabs to maintain
their rusticity.
At Bukhara, we
missed the on-tour-to-Kolkata Executive
Chef J.P. Singh, who, it is said, has fed more heads of state than we can
count on our fingers many times over, but we had the good fortune of meeting
his able deputies — Purshottam Singh,
whose professorial looks and athletic frame (he used to run up to the top of the
ITC Maurya’s Towers block every day when he was younger) doesn’t give away his
profession, and Balkishen, who has
travelled the world, from New York to Ajman to Hong Kong, with the Bukhara
brand since the time of the legendary Madan
Lal Jaiswal, the brilliant chef who passed away in a car crash. They are
the architects of a brand that feeds over 400 people a day and makes more money
than any other restaurant in the country.
At No. 3, and
a good eight points behind Chor Bizarre, was Kwality. Being a lover of gloss and glam, I am a great admirer of
Kwality’s to-die-for succulent seekh kebabs, so I was quite heart-broken by the
No. 3 spot, but when the tussle involves 15 formidable restaurants (shortlisted
from 30 by members of the Delhi Gourmet Club), final rankings can spring
surprises.
I couldn’t
resist asking Divij Lamba, the
Kwality scion who’s a Cornell and Yale alumnus and has done stints at the Brookings
Institute and the Senate Office of Hillary Clinton, how the restaurant always
manages to get its seekh kebabs right. He gave the credit entirely to the success
of his chefs in not deviating from the age-old recipe followed at the
restaurant. Kwality’s Master Chef
Bernard Mandal, a man of few words and a welcoming smile, nodded in
approval. Beyond learning that the main ingredients were love and care, I
couldn’t gather more from the Kwality team, which included the company’s CEO, Prashant Narula.
ITC Maurya’s
General Manager, Anil Chadha, asked
us who the members of the jury were and how they were chosen. Well, Rocky
Mohan, who being the author of four acclaimed cookbooks knows his seekh kebabs
better than most, put together the jury comprising a mix of food enthusiasts who
had eaten around the world and professionals who took the trouble of visiting
each of the 15 restaurants unannounced and assessing the seekh kebabs, at their
own expense, on four criteria: quality of the meat; taste; add-ons;
presentation.
The judges
were Mohit Balachandran, AD Singh’s
national business head who’s also famous as Chowder Singh on blogosphere; inveterate travelling gourmand Rajeev Gulati, who’s in the pharmaceuticals
distribution business; corporate lawyer Sanhita
Dasgupta-Sensarma; restaurateur (Angrezee Dhaba) Rajat Pahwa; young hospitality professional Nikhil Alung; self-employed businessman and hobby cook Vikram Bali; and Yogesh Magon, who’s in the liquor business.
They knew
their seekh kebabs well and though they had generally good things to say about
most of the places they went to (their big surprise was Kebabs and Curries at Greater Kailash-I, but sadly, it was at No.
8, below the Connaught Place restaurant, Embassy,
which is better known for its Dal Meat and Chicken Pakodas), they were
unanimous in their expressing their shock at the decline in the standards of two
Defence Colony institutions, Colonel’s
Kababz and Moets, which rubbed
shoulders at the bottom of the heap.
Such
exercises are important because they give followers of groups like the Delhi
Gourmet Club a user’s guide to the delicacies they all crave for. As the dining
world is moving towards giving greater credence to peer reviews, the Delhi
Gourmet Club’s hunt for the best seekh kebabs in Delhi/NCR is the right step in
the direction of giving these reviews a prejudice-free structure.
yummy food..
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