This review first appeared in Mail Today, Delhi/NCR. Copyright: Mail Today
http://epaper.mailtoday.in/epaperhome.aspx?issue=11102013
http://epaper.mailtoday.in/epaperhome.aspx?issue=11102013
By Sourish Bhattacharyya
The grandeur of Kiyan’s
architecture, the beauty of the manicured greenery around it and the novelty of
the menu make eating here a complete treat for the senses
INFOBOX
WHAT: Kiyan @ Dusit Devarana New Delhi
WHERE: Samalkha, NH-8 (Take a U-turn from
under the Rajokri flyover)
DIAL: 011-33552211
PRICE PER PERSON (MINUS
ALCOHOL): Rs 1,800
(veg) / Rs 2,300 (non-veg) +++
Check whether the resort hotel has got its alcohol licence
WHERE in this teeming city of ours can you have a meal
watching a family of ducks waddle past you, the mother leading the way with
Nazi steps, on a placid pool of crystal clear water amid acres of trees and
shimmering green grass?
Nishant Choubey, formerly of Olive Beach and Cibo, has crafted a plated menu that brings into play the best of contemporary techniques and international ingredients |
The world’s first Dusit Devarana, the spa resort brand
created by Thailand’s Dusit Thani group of luxury hotels, has opened on one of
Delhi’s busiest roads, the one leading to the Gurgaon toll plaza, flanked by
Rajokri and Samalkha. But once you step inside, away from the bustle of traffic
and the drone of landing aeroplanes, you are transported into a world of
meditative silence and eye-warming greenery. It’s like being in a showpiece
farmhouse.
Kiyan thrives in the heart of this oasis. The all-day
restaurant, guarded by three monumental pillars inspired by ancient Sumerian
architecture, is special because it will be the first to serve only
individually plated, four-course meals — three options: European, Pan Asian and
Indian — priced between Rs 1,800 and Rs 2,300 per person plus taxes. It’s the
kind of restaurant where you don’t have to spend ten minutes pondering over the
menu and then order just what you had asked for the last time you went there.
It takes the tedium out of ordering and creates room for pleasant surprises.
The chef steering the restaurant, which I see becoming a
major magnet after this Durga Puja-Navratra season winds down, is the young and
creative Nishant Choubey, who earned his spurs at Olive Beach and then Cibo,
when it was still a restaurant worth visiting. Choubey and his younger team (I
was particularly impressed by bakery chef Anand Panwar’s 11-grain breads and
baguettes) have created a multi-layered dining experience where each dish
stands out for its combination of tastes and textures.
They surprise us with the care they take to choose their
ingredients — artisan whole wheat flour from Germany for the breads, Ponni rice
for the idlis, 65-day-old chickens (poussin) whose meat with skin on melts
in the mouth, Spanish black pork sausages (sobrassada),
home-made ricotta cheese pasta (gnudi)
and even clementine (a variety of mandarin oranges) that grows only in May and
June at the resort’s organic farm in Rajokri. There’s a sense of refreshing
newness in this roster of ingredients.
I knew I would come back to Kiyan when I had its Andaman
lobster wok-tossed with Madras shallots and served on a bed of ‘samundri bhaat’ (a memorable seafood khichdi). The novelty of the preparation
combined with its deceptive simplicity just blew my mind. Likewise, the
combination of foie gras (100 per
cent goose liver — thank God for it!), Himalayan red salt and wine-poached
prunes was so delicately balanced that the muscular robustness of the foie gras (I wish, though, it was
sautéed a little gently) wasn’t overpowered by the sweetness of the prunes.
My personal wow moment, though, was the tomato soup, imbued
with the power of fleshy confit tomatoes, their gentle tartness complemented by
the bitter-sweet citrusy notes of the clementine foam. The other must-haves are
the black cod with miso glaze and baby bok choy (a no-brainer if the fish is
right and is just gently seared), zesty mushrooms (shimeji and enoki) and feta
cheese wrapped in wafer-thin phyllo pastry sheets, and the gnudi that comes with a delectable spinach cream. And yes, whether
it’s on the menu or not, you must ask for (no, demand, even threaten the
management with dire consequences) the toffee pudding. It beats every other
toffee pudding I have had in my life. Writing about it makes me hungry and
makes me want to set off for Kiyan at once.
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