London For The
Modern Indian
A new
generation of Indians is conquering London. Meet the Sethis with their six
Michelin stars across five restaurants and many cuisines
As you
probably know, if you are a reader of Rude Food, I am not necessarily a huge fan of most London Indian restaurants.
While there are outstanding chefs in London, the upmarket London restaurant
scene strikes me as being hollow, rootless and smug.
It is
dominated by chefs from Indian five-star hotels who have brought the
sensibility of the overdecorated, soulless hotel restaurants with them. They
want people to order wine (which helps pay the rent) so they Frenchify the
presentation of their food, muck around with Indian flavours and create
restaurants for people who don’t really like restaurants: cold spaces with no
laughter and no sense of place.
Too
many of them are now located within a square mile of each other in Mayfair and
you have the sense that they want to go absurdly upmarket to show that they are
not embarrassed about serving curry.
As
more and more upmarket places open, I often wonder about the new generation of
British-Indians. The best Italian-American restaurants in the US were
originally opened by the children of Italian immigrants to America. (And now by
their grandchildren.) These were restaurateurs who had been brought up in
America, understood the country and yet, had never lost touch with their
Italian roots.
There
must, surely, be Indians who have grown up in the UK, understand the country
and know what would work in London. I wondered: where were these people? And
why weren’t they opening modern Indian restaurants?
Five
years ago, I went to Gymkhana and I thought I had my answer. The restaurant was
opened by a family called the Sethis (two brothers, one sister) and looked as
though the inspiration came from the Delhi Gymkhana or the Delhi Golf Club, and
yet seemed completely suited to London. It had none of the overdesigned
coldness of other upmarket Indian restaurants and the food was much much better
than anything you could find nearby, in Curzon Street or Berkeley Square.
The
critics lavished Gymkhana with praise (Fay Maschler, Giles Coren and many
others give it their top ratings) and it was almost impossible to get a table.
(I got one after three tries and wrote about it here.)
I knew
a little about the Sethis. I knew that they had opened Trishna in London (at
first in collaboration with the tourist haunt in Mumbai and then, as an
independent operation) and that they ran Bubbledogs, an unusual restaurant that
served champagne with hot dogs (not hamburgers, even though burgers were the
boom food of the time) with a small place at the back called Kitchen Table,
which did Michelin-starred European food.
I
watched open-mouthed as they went from success to success. They opened the
Taiwanese-inspired Bao, which had queues around the block. Then came Hoppers, a
runaway success for Sri Lankan-inspired food. Then, a second Bao and a second
Hoppers. They invested in great chefs and backed their restaurants. James Lowe
is their partner in the Michelin-starred Lyle’s. (I wrote about the restaurant
a couple of years ago.) The team behind Bao opened Xu. The Sethis backed the
Spanish chef Nieves Barragan to open the highly-rated Sabor. Then came Brigadiers,
an upmarket but casual Indian restaurant in the new Bloomberg building in the
City of London.
Along
the way, the Sethis have picked up many awards. Their restaurants have more
Michelin stars than any other restaurant group in London: two stars for Kitchen
Table and one each for Lyle’s, Sabor, Trishna and Gymkhana. Lyle’s is 38 on the
list of the World’s 50 Best Restaurants (it is the second highest British
restaurant on the list).
There must surely be Indians who have grown up in the UK
and know what would work in London
Over the years, many people have told me about Karam Sethi, the chef-partner of
the team. His uncle, Chetan Seth the Delhi-based bon vivant, who is a friend of
mine, offered to introduce us when Karam had just opened Trishna and
Bubbledogs. But somehow, it never worked out. When we did finally connect, it
was on Twitter of all places and we agreed to meet for lunch at Brigadiers.
The
night before that, I went to Hoppers, his Sri Lankan restaurant and was blown
away. The original Hoppers is a tiny place in Soho and does not take bookings
so I went to the larger version on Wigmore Street, which is spread over two
floors.
Karam
later told me that he had got the idea for Hoppers from a Sri Lankan friend.
But what struck me about the menu was that it explored the continuum between
the food of Kerala and the food of Sri Lanka. (With a few Tamil influences from
North Sri Lanka thrown in.) The chef Renjith Sarathchandran is a Malayali and
his grasp of the food of Kerala is impressive. A prawn curry (packed with
prawns at £9: a steal for that area) was outstanding. There were masala beef
fry, chilli squid and other terrific dishes, but the star of the show was what
must be one of the all-time great dishes of modern Indian cooking, a bone marrow
varuval. It is a made-up dish but it was so good that I would go back to
Hoppers just to eat that one dish. There were two of us, we ate half the menu
and it came to the equivalent of ₹7,000. I
couldn’t have eaten this much food with these ingredients in Delhi at those
prices.
I met
Karam for lunch the next day at Brigadiers, a large jam-packed restaurant with
one of the more unusual Indian menus I have seen. We nibbled on chicken chaat
served on a slice of crisp chicken skin, went on to try a sensational Wagyu
Kathi Roll, a beef chuck and bone marrow keema with a chilli cheese kulcha, a
kid goat shoulder with lachcha paratha, and what was for me the standout dish,
simple chaat masala aloos with a chilli-garlic ketchup.
He had
grown up in Finchley, Karam said, the son of an accountant, and went to school
at Haberdashers’, a public school near North London. The family had no catering
background but they went to a lot of good restaurants and travelled. Every
year, Karan would spend time in Delhi with his relatives, in Defence Colony and
Greater Kailash.
He
decided to get into the food business early on, spent a year training at
Delhi’s ITC Maurya and then worked with Zuma in London. A friend put him in
touch with the owner of Mumbai’s Trishna and that was how the first Indian
restaurant happened. After some experimentation with chefs, he ended up taking
over the kitchen himself and developed his own style of approaching Indian
food.
He
also had a sense, having grown up in the UK, of what a new generation of diners
(millennial is the usual term but many of Karam’s guests were older) wanted:
unusual places, unusual flavours, no rip-offs with the wine and no overfancy,
poncy presentations. Almost everything he has done in the Indian food space
since then, flows from that basic understanding.
Many
of his restaurants (the first Hoppers, the first Bao) don’t take bookings but
once you are in, you are never uncomfortable or feel rushed. There is always a
sense of hospitality. I can’t judge Brigadiers because I went with Karam but at
Hoppers, the manager, Savio from Mumbai, ran the room expertly, making every
guest feel welcome.
Karam
says that the group’s success has a lot to do with his siblings: Jyotin, a
former investment banker who actually runs the business, and his sister
Sunaina, who is an expert sommelier. It is the combination, he says, that makes
it all work.
He
attributes many of the Sethi family’s triumphs to the chefs they have backed
and says they are always looking for talented chefs across cuisines. I told him
that I liked his Indian restaurants because they did not have the cold
blandness of five star hotel restaurants. He responded that the group has tried
to create rooms that have a character of their own and seem warm and
comfortable.
It is
hard now to think of the Sethis as outsiders, given that they are the most
admired restaurant group in London today. But that is what they were when they
started out: people with no catering background who opened restaurants that
they believed captured the spirit of times they lived in; places they would
want to go to themselves.
I hope
that the Sethis are not a flash in the pan. Perhaps there will now be more
British Indians who will enter the restaurant business and show the world that
when we have the guts to think out of the box, Indians can be great
restaurateurs.
HTBR 14OCT18
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