c8w wrote:(BTW, did you go acrss the street at all? There is this spot called Al-Rashid -
I had just eaten so didnt try anything there, but picked up a menu. They seem
to have Ghareeb Nawaz style prices, and vary from biryani to some veggie
items on the menu etc. Wonder what its like. This is bang across the street
from Ambala - would be interested in your opinion on Ambala too, BTW,
if you have one yet

)
sorry, haven't tried Al-rashid as yet, in fact didn't even notice it. I'll keep a look out for it
Its bang across from Ambala - havent tried it yet either, but have a menu on
me somewhere I think. That area of Devon seems to be changing from
Russian to expanded-Indian over the past few months (a chap who knows
Devon told me that he thought Ambala was paying perhaps half the rent
that most Devon shops were, by having their store where it is).
next time. I posted a little about amabala at
here. been back since and they no longer ply me with free tastes, unfortunately. I 'd be curious as to folks who have gone recently (and kind of wonder when the reader reviewer visited) - are you still getting lots of little tastes? they're a little more expensive than the other sweet shops - $7 a pound as opposed to $6. they're also more likely to be out of things , since some of them are flown in. I haven't tried their pickles, and wasn't all that impressed by the savories, but the sweets were clear winner
Huh. Havent read the Reader review of it - must check it out. Were they not
complimentary? Anyone know a date for their review?
Ive gotten a little taste only once or twice - not very often. They *are* more
expensive than any other spot, as you say by about a dollar a pound or maybe
a touch more for a couple items. But their sweets are very very good - some
of the best around overall I think (the odd item may be better elsewhere, but
in general they are the best at the moment I think).
BTW, they dont fly in some of their sweets - they fly in pretty much *all* of their
sweets! I was there one afternoonish (maybe a Monday I think?) and they
had basically *nothing* available. They offered me a samosa, and I think a
couple of their savouries in packets, but nothing else (was looking, as usual,
for kaju katri- their kaju katri is the best on Devon I think). So I chatted with
the guy, and he said their shipment was sitting at Ohare, not come thru
customs yet - they were expecting it maybe after 3pm! It hadnt even
crossed my mind that they were not making things on premises, so I talked
to the guy for a bit. He said they made samosas etc on the spot, but that was
about it - pretty much *everything* else was flown in. They have a place in
England, he said, where they have something like 170 workers. That is
where everything is made - for their 17 or so stores in England, and now
also for their only store in the USA, on Devon. Made all night, he said, and
flown in early morning in Chicago. They are busy enough that everything
sells out in 2 or 3 days at most, and so everything they sell is pretty fresh
he said, cos there is lots of turnover.
I must have looked shocked at this, so the girl behind the counter talked to
me some more about it - she said she used to work at another spot on
Devon (which shall remain nameless), and they sometimes kept their items
for a week to 10 days before it was all sold out

I must say, I would never
have guessed they flew in their sweets based on taste - not until they
told me. They taste quite easily the best (and freshest) of any Devon sweet
shop. Kaju katri can get dryer/harder when its not fresh - and theirs has
invariably been the freshest and tastiest on Devon IMHO (and Kaju Katri Ive
tried from everywhere, repeatedly). Their ras-malai was also very good -
and that would certainly not be good when not fresh, but it invariably has
been. I liked their sohan-halwa quite a bit too - though that, of course,
can stay for 2 months without losing flavour.
All of which makes me wonder - if, sometimes, I must have had an Ambala
kaju-katri that was 2 days old, and still thought it very good and fresh compared
to anything else on Devon... given that, how non-fresh must the kaju katri
in other stores on Devon be? Sheesh

c8w wrote: The only chicken dish I have there regularly, coincidentally,
*is* the chili chicken

And I think its excellent, one of the better ones around.
(My usual order, if only one, is the combo #3 I think it is - chili chicken and
lamb kababs, with paratha and rice, with the chinese chicken corn soup to
begin). Like their fresh paratha's, and their rice as well.Overall that combo
is one of my faves on Devon (but thats probably why I have a good opinion
of them - since I never really experience the other dryer chicken kabab dishes at
all. BTW, they also have a couple of okish specials, though I havent had a
chance to try their biryani special on weekends in a while)..
The proprietor too is fond of the chili chicken (told us we "had to try it") but too be honest, the dish just doesnt do too much for me in general, maybe its the fact that the chicken isn't in little boneless strips. I thought the falvor pretty decent thought. And you aright the paranthas were good.
Hmm. It is sort of boneless, though more chunks than strips I suppose. But yes,
I think its the flavour that I like the most - not may spots on Devon with such
good flavour to their chicken I think. I suppose I just like JK in general -
decent enough spot, sweet-corn-chicken-soup to start (supposedly
Chinese, but such a Bombay-Indian thing to do IMHO), good parathas, IMHO
decent rice etc. I could do without the salad stuff, but in general its a nice
little meal IMHO. Not sure there is another as good kabab spot on Devon
to me - I dont care for Kababish (though with very little exposure admittedly)
or Ravi nearly as much.
c8w