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Bhabhi's Kitchen - a mini review

Bhabhi's Kitchen - a mini review
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  • Bhabhi's Kitchen - a mini review

    Post #1 - January 9th, 2006, 2:34 pm
    Post #1 - January 9th, 2006, 2:34 pm Post #1 - January 9th, 2006, 2:34 pm
    My wife and I went there this wknd after reading all the good thigs about it here. here are my impressions

    ---The owner makes a fetish of insisting that he makes everything 'fresh'. Turns out he may be right. The pakoras we ordered came fluffy, hot and crispy and tasted like freshly made and not reheated. The breads and the dishes tasted the same.

    -- My wife ordered the Lamb Qorma and was pleasantly surprised by the spicing. It was not the generic sauce that you get in most restaurants on Devon. It was cinnamony as befits good lamb dishes and spicy. I ordered Bagharey Bhindi. It was quite authentic; although I make my sauce with more fennel rather than the cumin used here. But it was the pleasant Hyderabadi dish it is. A good Indian version of the salty-sweet-sour-hot all-in-one version of the SE Asian sauces.

    ---We ordered a regular paratha, onion naan and a pistachio naan. The paratha was nice and flaky and not dripping of oil/fat as it sometimes can be. But the naans were a disappointment. Looks like the owner has decided to save some labor by using pizza dough; although cooked in a tandoor. Next time in we should order the sorghum or millet bread and avoid this monstrosity. Has this been a recent phenomenon? I am not making this allegation lightly. It was NOT a naan. It looked and tasted like pizza dough.

    Other than tha Naans, everything else was as advertised. It was essentially home cooking; if you have a bhabhi that you can visit often! :D There are dishes here for vegetarians that I was quite pleasantly surprised by. The Sarson-ka-saag (which I will try the next time) and dishes like that are not quite common in restaurants here. So if you go, avoid the naan.


    PS: The masala tea was incredible. Very Very tasty.
  • Post #2 - January 10th, 2006, 7:11 pm
    Post #2 - January 10th, 2006, 7:11 pm Post #2 - January 10th, 2006, 7:11 pm
    Thanks for sharing your experience, Indianbadger. Your comments on the interesting spicing of various dishes are particularly valuable to me. Also, I appreciate your caveats on the naan. I will happily try the paratha and millet bread, but, unwarned, would most likely have fallen into my "MUST -HAVE-NAAN" rut. Keep posting!
    Man : I can't understand how a poet like you can eat that stuff.
    T. S. Eliot: Ah, but you're not a poet.
  • Post #3 - January 18th, 2006, 10:32 am
    Post #3 - January 18th, 2006, 10:32 am Post #3 - January 18th, 2006, 10:32 am
    Indianbadger wrote:The Sarson-ka-saag (which I will try the next time) and dishes like that are not quite common in restaurants here. So if you go, avoid the naan.


    IB,

    though I can't say my experiences at Bhabi's conform to yours (I found it just average, with the price above average) I would really really suggest that if you want sarson - ka -saag that you go across the street to chopal. In my mom's words "zaberdas!". I know that bhabi's uses primarily rapini rather than sarson for their version which i think gives it too bitter a flavor
  • Post #4 - January 18th, 2006, 5:49 pm
    Post #4 - January 18th, 2006, 5:49 pm Post #4 - January 18th, 2006, 5:49 pm
    zim wrote:
    Indianbadger wrote:The Sarson-ka-saag (which I will try the next time) and dishes like that are not quite common in restaurants here. So if you go, avoid the naan.


    IB,

    though I can't say my experiences at Bhabi's conform to yours (I found it just average, with the price above average) I would really really suggest that if you want sarson - ka -saag that you go across the street to chopal. In my mom's words "zaberdas!". I know that bhabi's uses primarily rapini rather than sarson for their version which i think gives it too bitter a flavor


    Definitely true about the sarson-ka-saag IMHO - went with a veggie
    friend a few weeks ago, and the owner insisted we have it as it was
    "the best in town", as usual :-) It still wasnt as good as Chopal's (but
    the reason I didnt go to Chopal instead was that I figured the veggie
    choices would be much smaller there).

    The prices are definitely high for the area and the kind of restaurant
    IMHO - you can get far better food IMHO at Chopal or Usmaniya
    or Khan's down the street (though fewer veggie options), and they
    are all far cheaper as well.

    However the prices arent high in general, just comparatively - one of
    my friends from NJ thought they were relatively reasonable. However,
    the owner *did* mention that he was thinking of raising the prices
    again :-)

    Overall its not a bad place to go, if youre with veggies IMHO - it was
    about 10pm that day, and I had 2 strict veggies with me. In that
    situation there are not many choices - Usmaniya and Chopal are
    both cheaper and much much better IMHO, but both have only
    about 3 veggie dishes each I think. All the cabbie joints (which
    Id rather go to often as well) have *no* veggie options whatsoever.
    In those circumstances it wasnt a bad choice, but in general there
    at at least 4 or 5 restaurants within a couple hundred yards that
    IMHO serve better and cheaper food.

    c8w

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