India (Frommer's, 4th Edition) (201 page)

Read India (Frommer's, 4th Edition) Online

Authors: Keith Bain

Tags: #Travel.Travel Guides

BOOK: India (Frommer's, 4th Edition)
6.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

WHERE TO DINE

With Bengaluru’s IT boom, the number of professionals with disposable cash keeps rising exponentially—leading in turn to a perpetual explosion of options on the dining scene. We’ve reviewed a combination of upmarket eateries with excellent and very atmospheric budget alternatives.

As in Tamil Nadu, you can get a good, clean, wholesome vegetarian tiffin (“light meal”) all over Bengaluru. Most famous of all is
MTR
(reviewed below); but equally good for its Tamil Iyengar food, especially the must-have
puliyogere
(a kind of tamarind rice), is
Kadambam
(112 C South Block, Manipal Centre, Dickenson Rd.; other branches as well). Gold-framed pictures of deities line the wall, the simple open kitchen is spotless, the food is cheap and delicious, and the filter coffee—if, that is, you’ve developed a taste for sweetened South Indian filter coffee—extraordinary.
Vidyarthi Bhavan
(32, Gandhi Bazaar;
080/2667-7588
) is where you head for the best
masala dosas
in town, while for authentic Karnataka cuisine,
Halli Mane
(no. 14, 3rd Cross Rd., off Sampige Rd., Malleswaram;
080/4127-9754
) is Bengaluru’s busiest restaurant, serving pure vegetarian, dirt-cheap thalis, or buffet meals (Rs 75). For affordable, nonvegetarian coastal Karnataka cuisine,
Unicorn
(94/3 Infantry Rd.;
080/2559-1670
) is great. The menu changes every week, but expect fish, coconut milk, and lots of flavor—ask for the signature Unicorn Special Prawns. And if you aren’t hopping across to Hyderabad, have a taste of excellent Andhra cuisine at
Bheema’s
(No. 31 Asha Bldg., Church St.;
080/2558-7389
)—almost everything is great and super spicy so bring a few tissues! There are a couple of rooftop restaurants with eclectic menus that are very popular as well:
Ebony
(13th Floor, Ivory Tower Hotel, Barton Centre, 84 M.G. Rd.;
080/2558-9333
) more for its open-air views, and
Paparazzi
(reviewed below) for its innovative cuisine—both have great ambience and music and an excellent bar attached.

The most delicious ice creams and sundaes are available at
Corner House
(44/1 Residency Rd.;
080/2521-6312
), which, owing to its popularity, is arguably the narrowest space with the biggest vibe in Bengaluru. The Death By Chocolate (Rs 115) is just that—no trip to Bengaluru is complete without at least one shot at surviving it. And given that caffeine runs in the blood here, you’ll have no problems getting your fix—great coffee options available with eats at Café Coffee Day, Barrista and Nilgiri Café outlets all over the city. But if you really want the best of the lot, make an effort and head for
Brahmin’s Café
(daily 8am–10pm), a hole-in-he-wall tucked into the crowded lanes of Chamrajpet, close to Ramakrishna Ashram—straightforward and simple, this is the best place to sample south Indian filter coffee. (
Note:
In Karnataka, you may overhear the person sitting next to you order coffee and say “by two”—this seems to be the norm at most budget restaurants or roadside stalls, which means one coffee into two glasses. It’s not so much an economic factor that has brought this about as one of sharing—after all, too much caffeine is never a good thing.)

In the big hotels, besides those reviewed below, the following are worth a mention: For North and South Indian cuisine,
Jamavar
at Leela Palace
Kempinski (
080/2521-1234
)
is one of Bengaluru’s class acts, with arguably the best tandoor dishes in town. For specialty South Indian cuisine, there’s no better place than
Dakshin
(
080/2226-9898
), the upmarket restaurant at the Hotel Windsor Sheraton, with a menu that represents the best of all four southern states. It’s hard to know what to order from their extensive menu, so go with the maitre d’s recommendation or get a thali (the seafood thali, Rs 1,050, is fab). Staying with Indian,
Masala Klub
(
080/6660-5660
), with tables set alongside a 100-year-old tamarind tree in the gardens of Taj West End, attempts to prove that Indian cuisine doesn’t always mean an overdose of oil and spices—die-hard enthusiasts may disagree, but in this health conscious day and age, the concept certainly seems to be working. The ambience in this stylish indoor-outdoor restaurant is great, especially in the evenings, and other than the extensive wine and food menus, you can do your own grills, marinated in herbs and spices, on imported Matterhorn stones. A recent phenomena, but one which the local hoi polloi haven taken to like the proverbial ducks to water, is the
Sunday Champagne Brunch
which almost all five-star hotels now offer, allowing you an afternoon of conscience-free decadence as you wine, dine and float in refreshing pools—reserve ahead.

Other books

Blood and Stone by C. E. Martin
Now You See It by Richard Matheson
La hora de la verdad by Glenn Cooper
Brain Trust by Garth Sundem
The Vault by Peter Lovesey
Getting Stoned with Savages by J. Maarten Troost