Tag: Indian cuisine

  • Curry Up! and Kabobs

    I seem to have gotten on an Indian cuisine kick lately – not
    just Indian restaurants, but also grocery stores, where I can buy those
    colorful Indian sweets, made with condensed milk or lentil flour or sesame
    seeds, and flavored with pistachio, coconut and mango and all sorts of spices.
    Patel Brothers Groceries and Video, 1835 Central Ave. N.E., Minneapolis, has one of the best selections in town, but you can also find
    them across the street at Asia Imports, or at South Asian Foods in Fridley.

    My other Indian food habit is Indian vegetarian entrees,
    like paneer makhani (curried cheese in tomato sauce) and bhindi do piazza okra
    in a spicy onion sauce), packaged in shelf-stable foil retort pouches and sold
    under a whole variety of brand names, like Priya and Ashoka, for about $2 per
    10-ounce package. I gather they are the Indian Army’s equivalent of MRIs – some
    of them carry the label, “Technology Developed by Defence Food Research
    Laboratory, Ministry of Defence, Mysore, INDIA.” (Insert joke about gas warfare
    here.)

    The latest trend on the local Indian food scene seems to be grocery store-restaurant combos: Patel Brothers has the Hyderabad House right next door, Asia Imports has a little snack counter called the Bombay2Deli, and South Asian Foods has a little cafe hidden inside the grocery.

    My latest discovery on the Indian restaurant and
    grocery front is Curry Up! in Maple Grove, a big new grocery store offering
    fresh produce, lots of packaged goods, a little sweets and chaat (snack)
    counter, and a counter-service café in the back. The menu offers staple North
    Indian and South Indian dishes, vegetarian and with meat, plus some regional
    dishes that you don’t usually find in the US, like peppery Chettinad chicken
    from Tamil Nadu, or a famous Gujarati specialty called Undhiyu.

    I have only sampled a few dishes so far, but I have enjoyed
    everything I tried, including the massive masala dosas, crisp lentil flour
    pancakes stuffed with a spiced mixture of potatoes and peas; the spicy sambar
    soup, and the spicy Hyderabadi eggplant. The selection of dishes offered on the
    $6.95 lunch buffet is limited in variety, but above-average in quality. I am
    eager to go back sometime soon and try some of the other items on the menu,
    including the chaat, a bunch of different kinds of street food snacks made with
    crunchy lentil flour wafers and noodles, yogurt, chick peas, onions, cilantro
    and spices. When I was there, the owner mentioned that they can also cater
    chaat for parties – a couple of their employees bring all the ingredients, and
    make the snacks to order.

    I also had a chance to stop by last weekend at another old
    favorite – Kabobs, a little strip-mall storefront at 7814 Portland Ave. S. in
    Bloomington. The place is tiny, and nearly every table was taken, so I ordered
    take-out. I have had the kabobs before (beef, lamb and chicken, $7.99-$10.99),
    and they are terrific, but this time I decided to concentrate on the vegetarian
    side of the menu. The aloo baigan, a potato and eggplant curry, was extremely
    hot and spicy, but the bhindi masala, baby okra in a tomatoey sauce was
    pungently flavorful without being overwhelming. At $4.99 for a big serving,
    these dishes are an incredible bargain – and much tastier than the versions
    that come in retort pouches.

    Apparently, Chinese cuisine is in vogue in India –
    many of the grocery stores carry Indian versions of Chinese noodle dishes,
    packaged ramen-style, and Kabobs has a whole section of its menu devoted to
    Indo-Chinese dishes, including Szechuan beef and chicken ($6.99) , but I opted
    for the chili gobi, ($5.99) a dish of breaded deep-fried cauliflower florets in a spicy
    tomato sauce – delicious.

  • Chindian Cafe

    The new sign hasn’t gone up yet outside the little cafe at 15th and E. Hennepin, but the former East River Market has been renamed the Chindian Cafe. The grocery shelves are gone, and the seating has expanded, from 12 seats to 20+. Chef-owner Nina Wong, who is ethnically Chinese, but born in Vietnam and raised in the US, has a new partner: her husband, Thomas Gnanpragasam, who is of Indian ancestry, but born and raised in Malaysia. "He’s a foodie," reports Wong. "He loves to cook, and I trained him to be a chef." (Wong got her training at AI International in downtown Minneapolis.)

    Wong plans to add some Indian and Malaysian dishes to her menu, and already features daily specials like Nasi Lemak, a Malaysian dish of coconut rice with peanuts, fresh cucumber and anchovy sambal, alongside her Chinese stir-fries, Asian noodle salads, Asian hoagies and Vietnamese spring rolls.

    The cafe is open Monday to Friday for lunch from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and for dinner from 4:30 to 8 p.m. Closed weekends, but most Saturdays, you can find Nina at the Mill City Market in downtown Minneapolis.

    Chindian Cafe, 1500 E. Hennepin, Minneapolis, (612) 676-1818.