Friday, 27 March 2015

Barbeque Nation opens 3rd outlet for Chennai Foodies


Barbeque Nation, one of the most successful casual dining restaurant chains in India, launched its newest outlet at Ramaniyam Isha, Block 1, No 11, OMR, Thoraipakkam in Chennai amid much fun and fanfare.

The outlet was launched by the Mahabalipuram Movie fame Actress Angana Roy & Ms. Kaviya Shetty.

The guests for the evening comprised members of Tamil film fraternity and corporate honchos from around the city. The guests were also treated to a memorable a show by a live band, followed by the scrumptious dinner and trademark grills that Barbeque Nation has perfected over the years.

Barbeque Nation is a pioneer in India to promote ‘DIY’ (do-it-yourself) cuisine with a concept of live on-the-table grill in India and is today the largest casual dining brand in the country. The restaurant offers a pre-fixed menu with a fixed price. The menu is drawn from Mediterranean, American, Oriental, Asian and the Indian subcontinent.

The new outlet, 3rd in Chennai, accommodates 120 covers and boasts of a delectable buffet. The look and feel of the restaurant follows the basic theme of Barbeque Nation which is rustic and casual with wood and open-brick wall surface. The sizzle of the grills livens up the whole atmosphere and gives diners a comfortable and cosy experience.

Buffet at Barbeque Nation showcases an array of vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes. Starters like Paneer Tikka Lazawaab, Tanganaiya mushroom and Cajun Spice Baby Potatoes, Mutton Gillafi Seek and Chili Garlic Prawnsdeserve a special mention.

The main course has a number of mouth-watering dishes ranging from SeharagiLucknowidumBiriyani to the Dum ke Ghost in non-vegetarian dishes, and the usual suspects such as Dal e dum , NargisiKofta and KadaiPanneer in vegetarian dishes. For dessert, the chefs serve up popular dishes like Dates and Coconut Pie, KesariPhirnee and Chocolate Brownies.

Mr. Vijay Bakshi -Head Culinary Operations, Barbeque Nation said, “OMR is an important pocket in the city for us. We are very pleased to bring the Barbeque Nation dining experience to Chennai’s IT corridor. We now look forward to catering to the needs of the corporate crowd in this suburb.”

An average meal for two costs Rs. 1600 and hours of operation are lunch and dinner hours.

Thursday, 26 March 2015

Lavash (Mediterranean)

Lavash. The very name conjured up images of a very large, soft flatbread. I love its Persian wholesomeness, and couldn't wait to get my teeth into the Chennai version.

Decor
The blue stenciled motifs against a sand coloured background somewhat reminds one of the clear blue Mediterranean sea. The place is crowded with corporate lunchers. A large space, with well-appointed tables, Lavash has sofas against walls making the seating comfortable. The lanterns on the tables and the wall decor add authenticity and reflect detail.

Lavash: Oyster Building, 9, 3rd Floor, Khader Nawaz Khan Road, Nungam-bakkam
Meal For Two: 1,000
Timings: From 12 noon to 3.30 pm, and 7 pm to 11 pm
Home Delivery: Soon
Veg/Non-Veg: Both
Parking: Valet
Credit Card: Yes
Reservations: Yes
Wi-Fi: Yes

Rating: 
Food: 3.50
Service: 3.00
Decor: 3.50

Source : timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Monday, 23 March 2015

In India, one bad tweet can shut down restaurants


In the pre-Masterchef and foodgramming generation of restaurant regulars, a bad experience could be solved, before the night was over, just by screaming at the manager and peace was achievable with a complimentary dessert or a 20% discount. Whether this hassled consumer returned or not, the restaurant went ahead with business as usual.


But in 2015, no issue, whether a minor one like the ambience or a serious one like the denial of entry, stays within the walls of the restaurant.


Nothing happens without the world knowing about it. In times of live tweeting and follower count, an opinion doesn't count unless it's online and it is these online reviews, discussions and analysis that often have the power to make or break a restaurant in NCR today.


A week back, a differently-abled customer had alleged that Keya, a restaurant in the city, had denied him entry. This charge triggered an online campaign against the restaurant and also a protest at the establishment. But Keya is just the latest to bear the brunt of the anger of socialmedia savvy consumers, who, in the past, managed to bring down Lemp brewery in Gurgaon in June 2013.


The incident, which is now a case study for everyone in the hospitality industry, saw an anonymous blog post wreck the reputation of a commercial establishment overnight, forcing the shocked management to shut shop. 


As the latest online casualty struggles to gain back its lost rapport and reputation, we speak to Delhi's hospitality industry on the impact of the digitally connected customer. Social media managers are expected to differentiate between the online fakers and the followers, especially when years of positive publicity can come down with one trend-worthy hashtag.


DT scrutinizes the changing power roles in the hospitality industry which have led to everyone going into overdrive to keep a check on what's being said about their restaurant and brand online.


What started as means of sharing feedback, is being used as a means of vendetta or self-promotion: Timescity
According to Sidharth Jalan, business head, Timescity, "The online space has gradually developed into a very dangerous space because anyone can go on to a website like Timescity or use their social media profiles like Facebook, Twitter, etc to write anything they want to and once the review is out here, it has a life of its own.



What started out as a means of sharing feedback, both positive and negative, about your food experience, is being used as a means of vendetta or self-promotion. The online space in the food reviewing industry is a double-edged sword.


At Timescity, we have seen that negative comments are more and get more attention too. Through Dineout, our new service, we're trying to tackle the problem of the fake reviewers because only people who've booked tables through Dineout, can review that place after they've been verified as customers."


We could never go back to same footfalls after that one post
Ex-manager of Lemp Dipak Sharma, who was a part of the management at Lemp when crisis hit them in June 2013, is now the general manager of the new property, The Liquor Warehouse, running from the same location. The brewery, which at that time was one of the most popular names in Gurgaon, could not recover from the damage caused by a blog post written by angry consumers that went viral. 
The property has since then been sold off and a new management is hard at work to convince consumers that the place is not Lemp anymore.



Dipak says, "Our business was very badly affected with that one post and we could never go back to the same footfalls. We did some major events at that time, the Chennai Express team had visited us, Arif Lohar performed, but nothing helped in bringing up sales. Lemp was an international name and we couldn't afford the royalty anymore and finally closed operations. The place was bought by a new management and we're now slowly getting back to our feet. Social media is being tracked well now and every minute detail is looked into."


You can't ignore what's being said about you online: Hospitality industry reps
The first time a group of wronged consumers decided to share their experience online, the place had to shut shop and disappear from the online world altogether. The threat, industry reps say, is larger today with every comment having the power to go viral and cause permanent digital damage.



If you're angry, at least 5,000 people should know about it
Chef Manu Chandra, partner at the Monkey Bar franchise, tells us, "The fact is that there is still no clarity about what happened at the Keya incident, yet people have passed their judgments on it. It's the customer's word against the owners', but sadly nobody wants to listen to what the latter has to say. We used to spend crores on promotions and advertisements and now all of that can be reversed in just 140 characters."



"Consumers have become outrage experts. These days, if you're angry, then you have to share it with 5,000 people at least and since people can do that from the comfort of their homes, they do without any thought on the repercussions and the impact on a property and the livelihood of its many employees."


We get threats from people, it's our job to be prepared
Joy Singh from the management at Raasta, Delhi and Gurgaon, tells us, "We're at a stage when every user knows they have the power to damage the reputation of every restaurant they walk in to, while we can only just hope to provide consumers with a good experience. We have a very strict profiling policy at the gate and people who're denied entry sometimes threaten us by saying they'll write a bad review for us."



"It's unbelievable but it's true. We take every bad review personally and the management responds to them and takes necessary action. Sadly, these online portals have been reduced to being complaint centres instead of complete experience sharing portals which they were initially promoted as."


Social media engaing is an asset, but you have to be prepared for consequencesAccording to Rahul Singh, CEO of The Beer Cafe, social media profiles should be treated like assets, but with attached risks. He says, "There was a time when we would outsource our digital media profiles, but now it has become so important that we have an in-house expert handling our pages with the top management looking in all the time. I feel all our social media pages are an asset to the company because all the likes there, the positive reviews, the picture comments, they're helping you build a good name."


"But like any other asset, you have to approach it warily because it can go horrible wrong also. You can't hide online, you cannot not have a Facebook page and you cannot not reply to a bad review that has the potential of going viral. In recent times, we have social media posts leading to online mobs of sorts and the only way we can deal with them is by being prepared to accept faults when those happen and keeping a close check on what is being said about you online."


Restaurant owner Priyank Sukhija adds, "The online mechanism is quite powerful, but instead of fearing it, we try to use it to our advantage. Appreciation and criticism both go hand in hand. Going online is right now the strongest way to get your voice heard. Sadly, people don't understand the power they have and upload things in a fit of rage or on a whim. I feel people should check all the facts before posting anything online because every review and tweet has an impact on someone's livelihood."


"We, for all our restaurants, make sure that all posts, positive and negative, get a reply. You can't put it all under a blanket bad umbrella because this is a great way for engaging with consumers, putting your word out there and keeping us on our toes." 


Damage is done while you're coming up with a response
Umang Tiwari, who owns The Vault Cafe in Connaught Place, says, "Even with a social media management team in place, you can't really monitor all that is being said about you on all the different digital platforms every day. Nobody can keep a track of all that. These posts are made in a rush, shared within minutes without any process of verification. So while the restaurants go back to their staff, verify the claim and come up with a suitable response, the damage is already done."



"Even in the current case, people retweeted, shared, websites picked up the story and shared it even more but nobody went back to the restaurant to hear their side. This is really damaging for the property owner because then we will have to bend down to every demand of the customer or he will post a bad review. The industry can't work like this." 


Riyaaz Amlani from Hauz Khas Social, who is also the president of National Restaurant Association of India (NRAI), says, "There is a difference between customer feedback and smear campaigns. The current incident turned into a feeding frenzy with hundreds of people retweeting the story without any clarification. I saw people retweeting "oh so shameful etc etc" and I asked them were you even there?"


"In a situation like this, every person whose ever been denied entry and not made to feel welcome joins the bandwagon and makes a huge deal over a conversation between two people. Dil ki bhadaas nikaalne wali baat ho jaati hai. No restaurateur will ever take a step that is detrimental to the image like what is being said here."


"When there's sensible feedback coming in from a source, we do take them seriously and respond. But in a smear campaign of these levels, I think it's advisable to stay quiet because every comment by you will get 10 other comments by these enthusiasts and there's no end to this." 

Source : timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Saturday, 21 March 2015

Dindigul Thalappakattu Biriyani: The best biryani in Toronto


An out-of-the-ordinary new biryani shop opened quietly last November in the rear of an office complex at Finch Avenue East and Kennedy Road, in Scarborough. Its marketing budget, if you can call it that, was just big enough for a stack of business cards and a yellow vinyl banner reading “Dindigul Thalappakattu Biriyani,” which the little shop’s management draped beneath the previous tenant’s sign.

The restaurant didn’t bother to serve the usual range of sweets, curries and “short eats” snacks that are a fixture of most South Indian and Sri Lankan restaurants around the GTA. Chef Anbu Panbarasan, who is a partner in the business, does just one thing, and he does it brilliantly: He makes biryani, the one-pot, special-occasions dish of layered, slow-cooked rice, spice and meat that is often called Indian cooking’s highest achievement. Even today, he still gets would-be customers who come looking for samosas or roti and leave in a huff.

The chef makes Dindigul-style biryani, which originated in a mountain village in Southeastern India’s Tamil Nadu state. Nearly every region on the subcontinent has its own biryani variations and ingredients; close culinary relatives of the dish, which blends Persian Mughlai and Indian influences, are also popular throughout the Middle East and as far away as South Africa. But the Dindigul style is one of the most revered; it is typically far more moist and its flavours more exuberant than the average, closer in a way to great Spanish paella than to the wan, dry biryanis that are commonplace elsewhere around town.

Mr. Panbarasan’s mutton biryani blends torrents of tart Indian yogurt, grass-fed mutton (its Tamil name translates roughly to “country sheep;” it’s got a distinct and pleasant gaminess), whole spearmint and coriander sprigs, long green chillies and cashews. He adds scrolls of cinnamon and aromatic pandan leaves, which soften the meat, as well as a bogglingly complex spice mix that includes ginger, garlic, mace and cardamom pods. Crucially, the chef cooks all these together with the rice in the same giant pot, rather than adding the cooked meat at the end, as many other places do.

The flavours soak deep into the meat and the rice – he uses a short-grained, neutral-flavoured variety called seeraga samba, instead of the more common basmati; this is another Dindigul hallmark. They mellow and intermingle through low, covered cooking. The biryani emerges lustrous, moist, the flavour dark and round from the meat and warm spices, but thrumming too from the fresh herbs and ginger, the yogurt’s tartness, the chillies’ heat.
Mr. Panbarasan tops every serving with a boiled egg and a piece of tandoori chicken, which he makes from scratch, marinating it in spice and yogurt overnight, before trips through the tandoor and then a deep fryer. The raitahere – the yogurt-based sauce that’s commonly served with biryani – is so chunky with red onions, carrot, black pepper and green chiles that it’s as much a salad as a condiment.
After the first bite, eating becomes an involuntary act, like blinking and breathing, because to stop eating seems inconceivable. The chicken biryani has fewer chillies in it, but is just as moist. Its flavour impact is just as much of a dropkick. When you look around the room at other first-timers, you see stunned faces, mostly. The soundtrack of the place is disbelieving chatter. That’s all the more impressive when you realize a plate of the main event costs $10.50.
Mr. Panbarasan, who is 40, grew up in Tamil Nadu, in a town halfway between Dindigul and Chennai, the major coastal centre to the north. In his early 20s he left for Dubai, where he took a job as a cook and learned to make biryani. He came to Canada in July of 2014. He couldn’t find another Dindigul biryani specialist around town.
Source : theglobeandmail

Friday, 20 March 2015

The maplai from Madurai


Just along the Sterling Road bend outside Loyola College now stands a swanky, week-old restaurant dressed in fairy lights, with its name proudly proclaimed in bold red: Maplai. It is the brainchild of Vinod Rajan (fondly called maplai), a Chennai man, mad enough about food to drive down to his hometown, Madurai, every other day just to savour its signature street food. Until he met restaurant consultant, ‘Mad Chef’ Koushik, that is. Koushik recreated Madurai for Vinod right here in Chennai, over three months and 250-odd dishes that drew from the four South Indian states’ cuisines as well. Maplai (a term used to address a son-in-law or brother-in-law), today, is the product born of these two friends’ penchant for good food and a full stomach.
A quick glance at the restaurant's menu will tell you they’ve respected the traditional staples and spun their own fine-dining take on others, often fusing cuisines, cooking styles and methods. Our meal opens with the simple and wholesome nandu rasam, good health oozing from its peppery broth, followed by the naatu kozhi egg drop soup, which is far more oil-heavy and spicy in comparison. It’s with the starters though, that Koushik lets his imagination roam free. For instance, continental meets South Indian cuisine, with his Chettinad ‘bashed potatoes’: mouthfuls of the softest baby potatoes, tawa-tossed with a glitter of Chettinad masala on their brown skins, served with a garlic dip that counterbalances the spice burst. He springs a similar trick in the grilled prawns and curry butter sauce, the conventional lemon sauce accompaniment modified here with basic curry masalas.  
For the less adventurous, Maplai offers the fairly straightforward kaigari vepudu, vegetables batter-fried with extra jeera, fennel and curry leaf, and the kozhi ka thakali, fiery-looking chicken juliennes that surprise you with their mild, sweet flavour. The winner here, hands down, is the mutton gaadi chops — plain and simple mutton ribs fried with red chilli and garam masala, the meat crispy on the outside and silky-soft inside courtesy a good boil before the frying pan. Just for the experience, though, try the Thanjavur kair katti gola, made by Amma, a lady from Thanjavur said to have cooked for Sivaji Ganesan. Amma spends her days at Maplai, hand-plucking meat off boiled mutton legs and grinding it with heaps of small onions. A dash of masala later, the mix is rolled into balls, tied with banana strands and deep fried. Try it for the sheer drama of unpacking the gola before you bite into its coarse texture.
In its beaten brass cutlery, photographs of Thrissur Pooram elephants, copper-plated interiors and Kollywood background scores, Maplai breathes a generically South-Indian atmosphere, but its heart is clearly lost to Madurai, as our main course reveals.
The city’s classic curry dosai arrives, sliced into pizza-like triangles topped with generous meat and eggs, and for company, there’s thick mutton thokku gravy. It’s with the sundakkai nethili kozhambu, though, that one may as well be seated cross-legged on the floor of a Madurai home scooping handfuls of boiled white rice with the slender, minimally-fleshy fish curry. Dinner closes with the three-way vattalappam, essentially three blobs of caramel custard in deepening shades of brown thanks to the sugar, jaggery or palm jaggery that flavours it.
As a parting shot, there’s a mighty glass of rich jigarthanda that leaves us with that sweet lingering taste of Madurai’s greatest claim to food fame.
A meal for two is priced at Rs. 800. Maplai is at 14, Sterling Avenue, Nungambakkam

Source : thehindu.com

Thursday, 19 March 2015

Social media, a boon or bane for restaurant business?

As the increasingly demanding and tech-savvy consumer reaches out for his phone each time he's irked and trips reputations overnight, the hassled hospitality industry is working overtime to understand and handle the phenomenon...

In the pre-Masterchef and food-gramming generation of restaurant regulars, a bad experience could be solved, before the night was over, just by screaming at the manager and peace was achievable with a complimentary dessert or a 20% discount. Whether this hassled consumer returned or not, the restaurant went ahead with business as usual. But in 2015, no issue, whether a minor one like the ambience or a serious one like the denial of entry , stays within the walls of the restaurant. Nothing happens without the world knowing about it. In times of live tweeting and follower count, an opinion doesn't count unless it's online and it is these online reviews, discussions and analysis that often have the power to make or break a restaurant in NCR today .

A week back, a differently-abled customer had alleged that Keya, a restaurant in the city, had denied him entry.This charge triggered an online campaign against the restaurant and also a protest at the establishment. But Keya is just the latest to bear the brunt of the anger of social-media savvy consumers, who, in the past, managed to bring down Lemp brewery in Gurgaon in June 2013. The incident, which is now a case study for everyone in the hospitality industry, saw an anonymous blog post wreck the reputation of a commercial establishment overnight, forcing the shocked management to shut shop.

As the latest online casualty struggles to gain back its lost rapport and reputation, we speak to Delhi's hospitality industry on the impact of the digitally connected customer. Social media managers are expected to differentiate between the online fakers and the followers, especially when years of positive publicity can come down with one trend-worthy hashtag. We scrutinise the changing power roles in the hospitality industry which have led to everyone going into overdrive to keep a check on what's being said about their restaurant and brand online.

WHAT STARTED AS MEANS OF SHARING FEEDBACK, IS BEING USED AS A MEANS OF VENDETTA OR SELF-PROMOTION: TIMESCITY

According to Sidharth Jalan, business head, Timescity, "The online space has gradually developed into a very dangerous space because anyone can go on to a website like Timescity or use their social media profiles like Facebook, Twitter, etc to write anything they want to and once the review is out here, it has a life of its own. What started out as a means of sharing feedback, both positive and negative, about your food experience, is being used as a means of vendetta or self-promotion. The online space in the food reviewing industry is a double-edged sword. At Timescity, we have seen that negative comments are more and get more attention too. Through Dineout, our new service, we're trying to tackle the problem of the fake reviewers because only people who've booked tables through Dineout, can review that place after they've been verified as customers."

WE COULD NEVER GO BACK TO SAME FOOTFALLS AFTER THAT ONE POST:

Ex-manager of Lemp, Dipak Sharma, who was a part of the management at Lemp when crisis hit them in June 2013, is now the general manager of the new property , The Liquor Warehouse, running from the same location. The brewery , which at that time was one of the most popular names in Gurgaon, could not recover from the damage caused by a blog post written by angry consumers that went viral. The property has since then been sold off and a new management is hard at work to convince consumers that the place is not Lemp anymore. Dipak says, "Our business was very badly affected with that one post and we could never go back to the same footfalls. We did some major events at that time, the Chennai Express team had visited us, Arif Lohar performed, but nothing helped in bringing up sales.Lemp was an international name and we couldn't afford the royalty anymore and finally closed operations. The place was bought by a new management and we're now slowly getting back to our feet. Social media is being tracked well now and every minute detail is looked into."

YOU CAN'T IGNORE WHAT'S BEING SAID ABOUT YOU ONLINE: HOSPITALITY INDUSTRY REPS
The first time a group of wronged consumers decided to share their experience online, the place had to shut shop and disappear from the online world altogether.The threat, industry reps say, is larger today with every comment having the power to go viral and cause permanent digital damage.

IF YOU'RE ANGRY, AT LEAST 5000 PEOPLE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT IT

Chef Manu Chandra, partner at the Monkey Bar franchise, tells us, "The fact is that there is still no clarity about what happened at the Keya incident, yet people have passed their judgments on it. It's the customer's word against the owners', but sadly nobody wants to listen to what the latter has to say. We used to spend crores on promotions and advertisements and now all of that can be reversed in just 140 characters. Consumers have become outrage experts.These days,if you're angry , then you have to share it with 5000 pe ople at least and since people can do that from the comfort of their homes, they do without any thought on the repercussions and the impact on a property and the livelihood of its many employees."

WE GET THREATS FROM PEOPLE, IT'S OUR JOB TO BE PREPARED

Joy Singh from the management at Raasta, Delhi and Gurgaon, tells us, "We're at a stage when every user knows they have the pow er to damage the reputation of every restaurant they walk in to, while we can only just hope to provide consumers with a good experience. We have a very strict profiling policy at the gate and people who're denied entry sometimes threaten us by saying they'll write a bad review for us. It's unbelievable but it's true. We take every bad review personally and the management responds to them and takes necessary action. Sadly , these online portals have been reduced to being complaint centres instead of complete experience sharing portals which they were initially promoted as."

SOCIAL MEDIA ENGAGING IS AN ASSET, BUT YOU HAVE TO BE PREPARED FOR CONSEQUENCES

According to Rahul Singh, CEO of The Beer Cafe, social media profiles should be treated like assets, but with attached risks.He says, "There was a time when we would outsource our digital media profiles, but now it has become so important that we have an in-house expert handling our pages with the top management looking in all the time. I feel all our social media pages are an asset to the company because all the likes there, the positive reviews, the picture comments, they're helping you build a good name. But like any other asset, you have to approach it warily because it can go horrible wrong also. You can't hide online, you cannot not have a Facebook page and you cannot not reply to a bad review that has the potential of going viral. In recent times, we have social media posts leading to online mobs of sorts and the only way we can deal with them is by being prepared to accept faults when those happen and keeping a close check on what is being said about you online." Restaurant owner Priyank Sukhija adds, "The online mechanism is quite powerful, but instead of fearing it, we try to use it to our advantage. Appreciation and criticism both go hand in hand. Going online is right now the strongest way to get your voice heard. Sadly , people don't understand the power they have and upload things in a fit of rage or on a whim. I feel people should check all the facts before posting anything online because every rev iew and tweet has an impact on someone's livelihood.We,for all our restaurants,make sure that all posts, positive and negative, get a reply.You can't put it all under a blanket bad umbrella because this is a great way for engaging with consumers, putting your word out there and keeping us on our toes."

DAMAGE IS DONE WHILE YOU'RE COMING UP WITH A RESPONSE

Umang Tiwari, who owns The Vault Cafe in Connaught Place, says, "Even with a social media management team in place, you can't really monitor all that is being said about you on all the different digital platforms every day . Nobody can keep a track of all that. These posts are made in a rush, shared within minutes without any process of verification. So while the restaurants go back to their staff, verify the claim and come up with a suitable response, the damage is already done. Even in the current case, people retweeted, shared, websites picked up the story and shared it even more but nobody went back to the restaurant to hear their side. This is really damaging for the property owner because then we will have to bend down to every demand of the customer or he will post a bad review. The industry can't work like this."

Riyaaz Amlani from Hauz Khas Social, who is also the president of National Restaurant Association of India (NRAI), says, "There is a difference between customer feedback and smear campaigns. The current incident turned into a feeding frenzy with hundreds of people retweeting the story without any clarification. I saw people retweeting `oh so shameful etc etc' and I asked them were you even there? In a situation like this, every person whose ever been denied entry and not made to feel welcome joins the bandwagon and makes a huge deal over a conversation between two people. Dil ki bhadaas nikaalne wali baat ho jaati hai. No restaurateur will ever take a step that is detrimental to the image like what is being said here. When there's sensible feedback coming in from a source, we do take them seriously and respond. But in a smear campaign of these levels, I think it's advisable to stay quiet because every comment by you will get 10 other comments by these enthusiasts and there's no end to this."


Source : timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Sunday, 15 March 2015

Chennai's best Late-Night eats

20 best Late-Night eats in Chennai

Ambika Empire
1.Ambika Empire
Famous for - Midnight briyani
Open 24Hrs
044 2362 1818, #79, 100 Feet Road Vadapalani, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600026
  
Arafa
2. Anna arch ARAFA
Open till 12 am
044-43063342, 9444171475, No 382/1, P H Road, Arumbakkam, Chennai - 600106, Opp Anna arch 
Buhari
3. Buhari Mount Road
Open till - 2 am
044 42028892, 044 42663632, 83, Anna Salai, Mount Road, Triplicane, Chennai
clarion
4. Ginger Hotel
Open 24hrs
61, Jawaharlal Nehru Road, Thiru Nagar Colony, Vadapalani, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600026
044 6666 6333
ginger
4. Hotchips
3am - 1 am 
1, Platform 3, Jawaharlal Nehru Salai, Koyambedu, Chennai
044 24792888

hot chips
5. Hotel Sangam, Mount road
Open till 1 am
No 1, Platform 3, Jawaharlal Nehru Salai, Koyambedu, Chennai
044 24792888

IMG 7847

6. Karthick Tiffin Centre
Open till 2 am
91 9444082453, C 44, 2nd Avenue, 12th Main Road, Anna Nagar West, Chennai.
karthik-tiffen-center

7. Moonlight - Take away
Open - 11am to 5 am
No.1/7, Gopala Krishnan Street,, Pondy Bazaar, T.Nagar,, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600017
044 4350 6660
Moonlight 1

8. Rookys
Open - 11am - 5 am
NO - 1, Indranagar Complex, 3rd Avenue, Adyar, Chennai
044 30853871
rookyz 1

9. Shaack Restaurant
Open till-3 am
044 30853683, F-36, KG Galaxy, 2nd Avenue, Above Fab India, Anna Nagar East, Chennai

Shaack1

10. Thalapakatti , Mount Road
Open - 11AM TO 3 AM
(91) 44 66423153, No 87/3 Varna Towers, Anna Salai, Mount Road, Chennai  600002, Opposite To Dharga
Thalappakatti
11. Woodfired Nungambakkam

(91) 44 42626260, No-11, Mahalingapuram Main Road, Nungambakkam, Chennai - 600034, Near IGLOO-Chills and Yumms
IMG 7916

12. Midnight Express
Open till 1 am
No: 115, Opposite Narada Gana Sabha, TTKrishnamachari Road, Alwarpet, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600018
 

PC: THE HINDU

13. Twilight Takeaway
 044 4308 1222, 1, Park Side Street, Lake Area, Nungambakkam, Near Tennis Stadium, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600034
 Twilight Take out

14. Dawn and Dusk
Open: 07-07am 
919786655877, 04428330808, No.7/11, Khader Nawaz Khan Road, Nungambakkam, Chennai
IMG 8100

15. Midnight masala, Kodambakkam
Open : 11pm to 2am
044 6457 4633, 47/81, Sundaram Building, Arcot Road, Kodambakkam, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600024
Midnight Masala Chennai

16. The Residency
Open : 24hrs
044 2815 6363, 115, Sir Thyagaraya Road, T. Nagar, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600017
The Residency

17. Mathsya
Open 7 pm to 2 am

044 2819 1900, 1, Halls Road, Egmore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600008
Mathsya
18. Taj Anise
Open 24hrs
044 6600 2827, 37, Mahatma Gandhi Road,, Nungambakkam, Tamil Nadu 600034
 IMG 7888
19. Clarion
 Open Till - 
098840 22382, 25, Radhakrishnan Salai, Mylapore, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600004
clarion
20. Copper Kitchen
Open - 11am- 11pm
044 2476 0804,  No:6/133, Near Porur Signal, Arcot Road, Devi Nagar, Porur, Chennai, Tamil Nadu 600116
 IMG 8091