By Sourish
Bhattacharyya
DIYA at The Leela Gurgaon is one of Delhi-NCR's few finer Inventive
Indian restaurants that can be counted on your fingertips, but it has never got
its due, maybe because the chef who was responsible for its outstanding menu, Kunal Kapur, is more famous as the
genial host and judge of Masterchef India,
and not for his tawa parantha stuffed
with feta cheese, spring onions and onion seeds (kalonji).
Kapur has risen steadily up the hotel's corporate ladder --
he's now the executive sous chef -- so Diya will soon have a new chef and he's Angshuman Adhikari, who has been
running Michelin-starred Atul Kochhar's
Simply India restaurant at the year-old St
Regis in the scenic Le Morne
peninsula, an old hideout of runaway slaves on the south-western tip of Mauritius.
Angshuman was sous chef at Kochhar's Dubai restaurant, Zafran, before he moved
to the Indian Ocean island nation.
The St Regis at Le Morne stands in the shadow of a 556m-high
basaltic monolith that looms over the palm-fringed resort thriving in glorious
isolation on a beach in pristine condition. It is here that Kochhar, who opened
London's Tamarind restaurant and now
presides over Benaras,
conceptualised Simply India, where
the Samundri Do Pyaza, a treat for seafood lovers, competes for your attention
with Karara Kekda Aur Salad (soft-shell crab paired with apple and peanut salad
and apple chutney); Batak Chettinad served with cabbage and vermicelli foogath (which gets its name because of
coconut and curry leaves); Tandoori Machhi teamed with crispy bok choy and
Kochhar's signature smoked tomato chutney; and Citrus Rice Pudding with Blood
Orange Ice Cream.
I can see Diya becoming the talk of the town, which Angshuman
knows very well, having worked at Set'z with the formidable Master Chef Arif Ahmed, but it is not the only
restaurant that'll see the infusion of pedigreed talent. The ever-popular Olive
Bar & Kitchen at Mehrauli has got itself a prized import -- the young Sujan Sarkar, who's fresh off the boat
from London (and all set to get married). I was reading up about Sujan when I stumbled
upon a tweet by Heston Blumenthal of Fat
Duck fame informing his followers about how this talented dynamo was "preparing
[a] dazzling display" for TreatFest 2012. It's not often that Blumenthal
tweets as enthusiastically about a young chef.
Described as a "gastronomic genius", Sujan was crowned
London Chef of the Year and was National Chef of the Year finalist in 2012. The
rising star of 'molecular ingenuity' who uses liquid nitrogen like a magician, left
Mumbai's JW Marriott, where he
launched his career, in 2004 to join the Hilton hotels in the UK. Soon, he
found himself working at Jamie Oliver's
Fifteen, from where he moved under the wings of the Relais & Chateaux grand chef Peter Tempelhoff, and then on to the Michelin-starred Galvin at Windows on the 28th floor of
the London Hilton at Park Lane, where he got to work with Andre Garrett and Chris
Galvin.
Sujan Sarkar, seen at the TreatFest 2012 in the UK, has joined Olive Bar & Kitchen, Mehrauli. His appointment has been a casting coup for the restaurant's charismatic owner, AD Singh. |
Moving fast, Sujan changed gears and went on to be the
opening chef of the Automat American
Brasserie on Dover Street, Mayfair, whose popular menu is as famous for its
macaroni and cheese with truffle as for its chicken liver and foie gras mousse served with plum
chutney. From Automat, Sujan also ran the affairs of the private members' club,
Almada, which opened beneath the brasserie
and attracted the likes of George Clooney because of its classic decor, good
food and discreet setting.
Alex Marks is the other debutant from London
who is opening his innings at the Orient Express with a dinner on Tuesday,
November 12. He's replacing D.N. Sarma,
the Taj veteran who learnt his craft from the legendary Arvind Saraswat and became synonymous with OE. Well, OE needed more
than just Sarma's reassuring presence to shore up its jaded reputation and
Marks, who earned his spurs at Gordon
Ramsay's Maze at the Marriott on Grosvenor Square, may just be the oxygen
that the chic restaurant badly needs.
Marks got noticed because he did a pretty competent job of stepping
into Ramsay's star protégé Jason Atherton's shoes at Maze -- a gushing review
of the restaurant had lauded it for its "attention to infinitesimal
details and a commitment to exactingly high standards". He was previously the
head chef at the Michelin-starred Foliage,
the Modern British restaurant at the Mandarin Oriental in Knightsbridge that
has been replaced by Heston Blumenthal's
Dinner.
With such talented chefs with impeccable track records
arriving in the city (apart from of course the incredible Rahul Akerkar), we seem to have a great gastronomic season ahead. I
can't wait to see how it unfolds.
No comments:
Post a Comment