Moneycontrol
HomeNewsTrendsTravelIndian restaurants have been stealing a march on London
Trending Topics

Indian restaurants have been stealing a march on London

House of Ming opened at St James Court, London this week. London’s West End has Chutney Mary, Benares, Jamavar, Gymkhana and Veeraswamy. And then there are restaurants like Dishoom...

May 28, 2023 / 20:57 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
House of Ming opened in London on May 25, 2023. (Photo via Instagram/Atelier Wren - the studio that designed the restaurant at St James' Court)

A dragon outside a marquee Indian hotel on the streets of London! That’s what happened on the evening of May 23, 2023 (Tuesday), at St James’ Court. The dragon made an appearance with some music and fanfare, signalling the 50-odd invited guests to enter the tastefully decorated House of Ming. It joins four other restaurants that serve St James’ Court, including the Michelin-starred Quilon, but Taj regulars know that House of Ming has been operating in Delhi for over four decades.

The guests were served 17 (or did it cross 20? It was difficult to keep track!) dishes that were accompanied by two expensive teas made available by the London Tea Exchange. The Da Hong Pao, grown in the Wuyi Mountains, which costs $1.2 million per kg, and Sea of Blossoms, made from 100 types of blossoms from 22 different countries, humbly priced at £1500 a kilo!

Story continues below Advertisement

As I sat negotiating the signature Flaming Duck on my plate, having just emptied it of prawns and stir-fried Chinese greens, I asked Mehrnavaz Avari, area director, UK, and general manager, St James’ Court, how difficult or easy it was to choose the menu. “Forty to forty-five percent consists of our popular HoM (House of Ming) dishes from India. The rest have been worked out by our chefs here,” she answers. “We have kept in mind our sense of place, as we are located in the Royal quarter (the hotel is walking distance from Buckingham Palace) and the imperatives of Indian hospitality.”

House of Ming joins what is appearing to be a crowded space of high-end Indian restaurants; though every critic agrees there is scope for more. Gaylord shut in 2019 after being in business for half a century and so did Red Fort in 2018, after building a loyal clientele for over 35 years. London’s West End still has Chutney Mary, Benares, Jamavar, Gymkhana and Veeraswamy, to name just a few of the high end Indian restaurants.