I have not seen any Parsi dishes represented in any of the restaurants I have visited on Devon.
While Parsi cuisine has certainly been influenced by Indian spices etc., it remains, in my opinion, a fairly distinctive cuisine. I have not seen the book you reference. However,
I'll second this - there are IMHO almost *no* Parsi dishes available at any
restaurant on Devon - Parsi cuisine is very distinctive, and fairly unlikely
to show up at any normal Indian restaurant. (One exception may be
"dhansak", which was queried here a while ago.. a couple of restaurants
apparently carry it, surprisingly - though Iam sure they are probably
pale imitations, probably a bit like daal).
more comprehensive Indian cookbooks do include some Parsi dishes - just yesterday, I was at the library looking at the Bombay Brasserie cookbook and this had a section on Parsi cooking.
The NPR segment that Germuska cites was interesting and referenced a number of foods.
Only partly agree with this - I do agree that increasingly a lot of Indian
cookbooks are listing some Parsi recipes, but Iam not sure the NPR
segment was great with their references

In particular Iam thinking of
the "Parsi New Year menu at Chez Panisse".. which sounded, to me,
to be the usual West-Coast-pretention without too many items that
were genuinely hard-core Navroz-worthy
Seared spring peas? Lime ice? Lemongrass tisane? Sri Lankan
cucumber pickles? Bah. An honest-to-goodness Navroz-bhonu without
dhansak, without saas-ni-macchi, without sali-boti, without custard?
Impossible.
At least they seemed to try and have the fantastic patra-ni-macchi on their
menu...but their version is "green chutney fried fish", very different from the
green-chutney-stuffed steamed-fish that the wonderful patra-ni-macchi
actually is.
Quoting "weddin pomfret, stuffed with green chutney, wrapped in plantain
leaf, and steamed. What the Parsis call patra ni machhi. Ask them to give you
the head, it has the maximum chutney inside, though a lot of people prefer
the tail. It comes wrapped on the table. Carefully, with your fingers, you
unwrap it, releasing the steam and filling the place with the aroma of the
chutneyed fish." One of my favourite Parsi dishes, there isnt anything
else quite like it.
I think Cathy is correct that with the dwindling Parsi population, in India and elsewhere, it is difficult to find restaurants dedicated to this cuisine. Interestingly, the last time I was in Toronto there was a just-opened Parsi restaurant - I will check on this the next time I am there.
Jyoti
If this is true Id be very interested to know as well... there are (and have
always been) relatively few Parsi restaurants *anywhere*, sadly. Even
Bombay, home of the largest Parsi population in the world, has really
not historically had Parsi restaurants - I believe there may be only
one purely Parsi place, actually. But there are a lot of "clubs" or
special "Parsi hang-out" places that serve a lot of authentic Parsi food
(along with the usual items on an Indian menu), so its always possible
to get some of this style of cuisine if youre in Bombay.
The *best* way to do it, however, is to know Parsis and get invited to
an event - which I always make it a point of doing when in Bombay
(my favourite "aunt" is Parsi). This would be to either a Navjote, a
celebration of attaining adulthood and rite of initiation into religion - the
Parsi version of a bar mitzvah would be the closest explanation. This
usually involves a big party at a hotel or a club, a hired band, dancing
(sometimes even to "Hava Nagila"

, and lots of food. Or else cadge an
invite to a Parsi wedding. Both these events involve major-league spreads
- a lagan-nu-bhonu (literally wedding-dinner), a variety of foods served on
plantain leaf. If you want a list of the best and most authentic Parsi dishes,
thats the menu you ought to consider.
If you want to know more about this kind of cuisine, Id suggest a quick read
of the following article:
http://www.busybeeforever.com/viewartic ... =eatingout
It is only a restaurant review - but one by my favourite restaurant-critic
He was reviewing "Jimmy Boy Cafe", the lone Parsi restaurant in
Bombay that attempts to do a "lagan-nu-bhonu menu" for the general public
every day, with all the usual Parsi food suspects - saas-ni-macchi,
patra-ni-macchi, chicken farcha, khichri, jardaloo sali boti, dhansak,
custard et al. The review includes brief descriptions of what all
these foods actually are too, which may prove useful if you havent
tried it before. Add akuri-on-toast for breakfast, and you might pretty
much have a compendium of all the great Parsi dishes ever made
c8w