Restaurants & Food
The year in food: Vir Sanghvi lists the world’s best Indian restaurants

First things first: This is a list that rather conveniently uses two different definitions when selecting the best Indian restaurants of the year.
I have included some of the best ones serving Indian food around the world. But when it comes to establishments in India, I have included restaurants that serve other cuisines too (on the grounds that if they are located here, they are Indian restaurants by definition?).
Here they are, in no particular order.
Its sibling Semma now gets more attention, but this is the mothership. Chef Chintan Pandya cooks Indian food that is resolutely “not modern” but bursts with flavour. Pandya and his business partner Roni Mazumdar run a collection of restaurants that have transformed perceptions of Indian food in America.
Don’t miss: Pandya’s reimagining of Champaran meat. It comes to the table full of dark chilli flavours and hot gravy. It used to freak Americans out but is now a signature dish.
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* Gymkhana, London
The most successful Indian restaurant in the UK, Karam Sethi’s flagship has long been a favourite of Indians, Brits and chefs from around the world. It now has two Michelin stars, making it the only Indian restaurant in London with this distinction.
Do try: The local game. The food at Gymkhana is classic Indian, but dishes such as a biryani made with muntjac, a small wild deer, have become legendary.
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* Gaggan, Bangkok
No change here: Gaggan Anand is still the world’s best Indian chef, and his food is still as dazzlingly inventive.
If you’re lucky: He will be there in person and will talk guests through the meal; a performance worthy of Mick Jagger.
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* Tresind Studio, Dubai
Himanshu Saini was the youngest Indian chef to earn two Michelin stars, in 2023. If any restaurant in Dubai was ever to get three, his modern-Indian set-menu establishment would certainly be a contender.
Don’t miss: The pani puri. A Tresind Studio tradition is that Saini invents a new version to kick off every menu.
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* Bungalow, New York
Need I say more? Vikas Khanna and Jimmy Rizvi’s new establishment (it opened in March) is among the city’s hardest to get into. It’s made The New York Times food critic drool. It proves that India’s best-known chef is even more impressive outside the TV studios than he is on the screen.
Don’t miss: The excitement in the dining room when Vikas is spotted. He goes to every table and enjoys talking to guests.
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* Lupa, Bengaluru
Only Manu Chandra could have pulled this off. This is a vast restaurant with several different vibes. One can just relax over a beer and pizza. Large groups can drink cocktails and party. Or you can have a complicated gourmet meal of the sort that only Manu can cook. A triumph.
Do try: To get the restaurant to set up a table in the spectacular wine cellar. If it’s a special occasion, they may agree. It’s the ultimate romantic Bengaluru experience.
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* Avartana, Chennai
No Indian restaurant since Indian Accent has been so universally acclaimed. Avartana serves a modern take on South Indian food and has been so successful that branches have opened at ITC hotels in four other cities: Kolkata, Mumbai, Delhi and Colombo.
Do try: And customise your meal. Avartana offers a selection of tasting menus, but if you ask nicely, the chef will move dishes around to create a menu tailored to your tastes.
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* Papa’s, Mumbai
I don’t think Hussain Shahzad expected this small counter-seating-only restaurant, launched in February, to become the phenomenon it now is. But Shahzad is a uniquely gifted chef and the food here is intensely personal. It reflects his classical Western training adapted to Mumbai. The menu includes a lamb Wellington, and a char siu pork made into a kind of modak.
Don’t miss: The cocktails. It’s a strange thing to say about a restaurant run by a great chef, but the drinks, specially invented for Papa’s, are among the most memorable parts of the experience.
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* Farmlore, Bengaluru
Forget all the farm-to-table hype. The food here is memorable because chef Johnson Ebenezer brings skill and imagination to his cuisine-neutral dishes. The restaurant would still be as good if he bought all his ingredients from a supplier. As it happens, he gets some of them from the farm on which the restaurant is located.
Do try: To sit at the counter. The restaurant has tables, but to get the full Farmlore experience, you should watch Johnson and his team create the dishes.
(To reach Vir Sanghvi with feedback, email vrsanghvi7@gmail.com)
Restaurants & Food
28 new restaurants in India you should grab a meal at this August – Vogue India
Restaurants & Food
The Taste by Vir Sanghvi: Indian restaurants shine globally with Michelin stars and authentic flavours

You have probably heard of Semma, the only Indian restaurant in New York to win a Michelin star. And of Gymkhana, the only Indian restaurant with two Michelin stars in London. Of Jamavar, the only Indian restaurant in the world to have won Michelin stars in three different avatars in three different cities: London, Doha and Dubai.
What, you may well ask, do these restaurants have in common?
There are two answers to this question. The first is the obvious one: they are all Indian restaurants run by chefs who have worked or trained in India. Vijaya Kumar of Semma is very proud of cooking the authentic cuisine of Tamil Nadu’s not-so-elevated castes and makes it hot and spicy. (He started out at the Taj Connemara in Chennai.) His boss, and one of the founders of Unapologetic Foods, which owns Semma, Chef Chintan Pandya, says that the group gets its name from its determination to refuse to apologise for the flavours and oil that characterise Indian food. (Chintan is ex-Oberoi.)
In London, one of the first things that Karam Sethi, the chef-founder of Gymkhana, said to me when I called to congratulate him on Gymkhana’s two stars was “it’s real Indian food, not ‘modern’ Indian.” Gymkhana serves the sort of food Indians actually eat, not a poncy, spice-deprived version. Gymkhana’s Executive Chef Sid Ahuja is ex-Oberoi and Sethi himself trained with ITC.
The most recognisable Indian of the top global restaurants is Jamavar. It was founded by Dinesh Nair, whose family used to own Leela Hotels, and is run by his whiz-kid daughter, Samyukta. The London Jamavar is international in clientele but you will nearly always see a top Indian movie star or cricketer there. This may have something to do with the fact that its chef, Surender Mohan, commands after his years working with the Leela group in India.
Samyukta and Surender took Jamavar to Doha where it became just one of two restaurants to win a Michelin star. (The other restaurant with a star is run by Alain Ducasse.) Next, they opened in Dubai and within a few months of opening, they had a star there too.
I met Surender at the Michelin ceremony in Dubai and was pleased to see that he was one of the few chefs not to be intimidated by the occasion and he gave the longest and best speech of the evening. But then I guess he is now used to attending these events in city after city.
Clearly something new and unusual is happening with Indian food abroad even if we don’t fully understand it here in India. There have been, broadly, four phases with Indian food in the West. The first was the ‘ethnic food’ phase when Indian food became the browner equivalent of chop suey and restaurants served mostly made-up Indian dishes at inexpensive prices.
The second was when Indian food went upmarket but was also Frenchified and plated. In the UK, restaurants serving this kind of food were celebrated and some got Michelin stars. In New York, Floyd Cardoz served two kinds of cuisine. At Tabla, he served a nouvelle take on Indian food and got three stars from the New York Times. But downstairs, at the Bread Bar, the food was more basic and less nouvelle. Even so, the general rule was that if you wanted rave reviews and high-profile rich guests, then you moved away from traditional Indian.
The third phase coincided with a global change in food preferences when French food ceased to be as admired as much. As El Bulli and later, Noma, set the trend, this was reflected in Indian food too. Gaggan Anand worked with the Adria brothers of El Bulli and opened a restaurant in Bangkok that served the kind of Indian food nobody had imagined could exist. Also, in Bangkok, Garima Arora opened Gaa which went on to win two Michelin stars. There was a fair amount of cross-fertilisation. Garima had worked with Rene Redzepi at Noma and with Gaggan. Redzepi himself had worked at El Bulli.
Almost simultaneously, Manish Mehrotra, whose resume included no great restaurants, invented his own version of modern Indian cuisine at Delhi’s Indian Accent. Mehrotra’s background was oriental cuisine so he had no interest in Frenchifying his food. Mehrotra and Gaggan ended up being the most influential Indian chefs of this century with their dishes being copied all over the world.
Himanshu Saini, the only Indian chef with a restaurant that has three Michelin stars (Dubai’s Tresind Studio) worked with Manish and is candid about his debt to the master.
But now I think we are into a third phase. People want Indian food without the frills. They want to eat like Indians eat in India. Vikas Khanna, India’s most famous chef, opened Bungalow in New York, serving food that was no different to the food he would serve in India and got three stars from the New York Times, and there’s usually a queue for tables outside his restaurant. At the less expensive end of the market Dhishoom which claims to be inspired by Mumbai’s Irani restaurants is so successful across the UK that it has now set its sights on America.
Of course, no change is absolute. There are still Bangladeshi curry houses calling themselves Indian restaurants. The Frenchified expensive Indian restaurants survive. The Gaggan-style modern Indian is still a rage.
But the trend is clear: Keep it simple and keep it spicy.
Restaurants & Food
Food Picks: Modern Indian with a Western twist at Firangi Superstar

SINGAPORE – Do not be fooled by Firangi Superstar’s plain terracotta exterior. There is nothing minimalist about the experience here.
It overwhelms before the first bite even hits the table, spinning you through rooms crammed with memorabilia. Think American film-maker Wes Anderson on a trip through Delhi, a kind of kitschy fantasyland for colonial nostalgists wrapped in ornate wallpaper and studded with vintage firearms.
Thankfully, this meeting of worlds is far more amicable when confined to the kitchen of this modern Indian restaurant, which opened in 2021.
Firangi Superstar’s decor is as bold as its menu.
PHOTO: FIRANGI SUPERSTAR
Have a seat. Red? Blue? Cushion? Chair? Oh, here comes the menu, recently revamped and folded into a newspaper – with actual clippings, by the way, just in case you were done gawking at the mounted moose heads on the wall and wanted something else to look at.
Open it up. Today’s big story is a list of dishes, both old and new, Indian and international, all with characteristically eyebrow-waggling names.
Some riff off old iterations – This Is Also Not Aloo Gobi ($18++) still holds the traditional curry at arm’s length, even as it borrows its taste. Others squeeze in a winky pun – We’re Goan-Ing To Porto! ($96) beckons to diners with grilled Iberico pork and sorpotel chilli sauce.
Big personalities work only if backed up with big flavours, and Firangi Superstar’s bite is as good as its bark. Starters like Papi’s Jammed Gun ($29++), wagyu beef tartare with caviar, grated egg and gunpowder spice, and Big Baller Peperoner ($28++), its version of paneer Manchurian, with fried burrata and Manchurian chilli sauce, expertly fuse Western ideas with south Asian flair.
The Bengal Bake-Off from Firangi Superstar.
PHOTO: FIRANGI SUPERSTAR
Off to a riotous start, I move on to mains. The Bengal Bake-Off ($108++) is trotted out in show-stopping fashion: a salt-baked seabass emerges from its crust, tender and steaming, and is robed in Kasundi cream.
Back In The Saddle ($21++ for 100g) triumphantly rides in on tandoori-spiced lamb, crowned with confit garlic and chilli leaf. All these dishes also come in vegetarian form, should you so desire.
In the middle of this lip-smacking extravagance, a few humble sides quietly sneak their way onto the table. Turn your attention immediately to the black garlic naan ($14++). Look how pillowy the bread is, breathe in its nutty fragrance. You already know it is going to be a knockout.
End the night with some banoffee fritters ($14++) or Rasmalai “tres leches” ($16++). Recline back on your throne of pillows, cocktail or royal melon lassi ($20++) in hand.
Firangi – Hindi slang for foreigner – or no, one really does feel like a superstar here.
Where: 01-03, 20 Craig Road
MRT: Maxwell/Tanjong Pagar
Open: Noon to 2.30pm, 5.30 to 10pm (Mondays to Saturdays)
Info:
www.firangisuperstar.com
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