Namit Satara Namit Satara

Food Discovery: The Hungry Turban Approach

So you’re traveling to a new city, are only there for a few days, and have to plan out a dozen or so meals. Where do you eat? This post isn’t for you if you’re the type of person to go with the flow, stop at a local deli on the way to see some tourist attraction. This is for those of you for whom the restaurant is the attraction. For those who don’t have a meal to waste, are super intentional about where you’re going to eat, and don’t mind parting ways with your friends to get in an extra dining experience. Do people like this exist? It can’t just be me…Anyway, this is my process, how I choose where I’m going to eat. It’s intense but bear with me.

Infatuation

The Infatuation is where I start my search. If you haven’t heard of the Infatuation, this blog post really isn’t for you. I trust you can find one of 2109 McDonald’s locations in your city. But seriously, the Infatuation is an incredible food discovery site, filled with guides for 40+ cities, with really specific recommendations like “Where To Go in NYC When You're Not Sure If It's A Date” (a personal favorite of mine) or “Where To Go When You Just Got A New Haircut” (this one…not so much). In an effort to support the hospitality industry at large in the wake of COVID, the Infatuation got rid of its popular rating system, where it graded each restaurant on a scale of 1-10. Not to worry, it still has The Greatest Hits list for every major city, and that’s where I begin.

Eater

After I’ve spent some time on the Infatuation, I move on to Eater. Specifically, I read through the “Top 38 Best Restaurants in XYZ City Right Now”, which Eater offers for ~25 cities. I’ll cross-reference the Infatuation Greatest Hits with this list, and I’ll flag the ones that overlap. What’s cool about Eater is that it has an interactive map that points out where the 38 restaurants are located in your city, making it easy to plan certain meals and activities together. I think the Infatuation might do this too, but I’m pretty sure Eater hit it first.

Trip Advisor

Now I swear I don’t have trust issues, but AFTER all that research, I’ll take the intersection of the two lists (Infatuation Eater for you math nerds) and quickly look them up on TripAdvisor. Why might you ask? Cause a man only can only visit so many restaurants, and there’s no time for an underwhelming meal. Tripadvisor is by the people, for the people - it’s hardly wrong! Tripadvisor also has an algorithm to rank each restaurant in a city. Like 1-10,000. I’m not sure what it takes to be #1 in a city, so I’ll generally look at percentiles, like if a restaurant is in the top 10% in its city. Beware though, because these rankings aren’t foolproof. I’ve seen a restaurant ranked as #1 in a city with only 10 reviews. Huge red flag. If it’s that popular, you’re looking for something with 100s or 1000s of reviews, depending on the city. Tripadvisor also categorizes restaurants into buckets like Fine Dining, Moderately Priced, or Cheap Eats, so you know exactly what you’re getting yourself into.

Instagram

As The Hungry Turban following has grown and I’ve connected with foodies around the country and world, a lot of my recs have come from you guys. I’ll usually throw a story up on Instagram to collect recommendations, and you guys sure as hell don’t disappoint! I will, however, still run your recs through TripAdvisor :)

Yelp

Lastly, I’ll check Yelp to see a picture of the most up-to-date menu. Since COVID, restaurants have changed their menu time and time again, and a lot of them don’t always update their website with each iteration. One of my biggest pet peeves is when restaurants don’t include prices in their online menus. I don’t mind spending money on a meal, but I’d like to plan and budget accordingly. Since information on Yelp is crowd-sourced, the menus and prices are pretty up-to-date. The menus also really easy to find since Yelp categorizes pictures by Food, Drinks, Menu, Inside, and Outside. What I won’t do on Yelp is check reviews, as that part of the process is over. I’ve read enough.

Would love to hear your own process, however simple or complicated it may be. Comment, email, or DM!

Read More
Namit Satara Namit Satara

Indian Flatbreads

As someone who’s grown up in an Indian household eating subzis and curries all my life, I to this day have a hard time explaining the differences between Indian flatbreads. I know the pairings: aloo (potato) puri, chole (chickpeas) bhature, anda (egg) parantha, but what differentiates these flatbreads, and more importantly, why are these pairings so concrete? What confuses me most is why do all my non-Indian friends only know what naan is, even though I probably only have naan at home once or twice a year? Lets find out…

1. Roti

Roti.jpg

Roti is your staple Indian flatbread, something I’ll eat 3-4 times a week at home. This unleavened bread, meaning made without yeast, is as common as Indian flatbreads get: curries, meat, vegetables, you know it, roti can hold it. It’s an everyday bread, healthier than the rest given that it’s made with whole wheat flour. The prominence my non-Indian friends give to naan should really be given to roti - while virtually nobody makes naan at home, roti is ubiquitous in all Indian households. For comparison, roti is your everyday sandwich bread, and naan is your indulgent ciabatta or brioche.

2. Paratha

My favorite. There’s no better feeling than waking up on a Sunday morning to the smell of parantha and anda, or Indian flatbread #2 and egg. Paratha, which literally means cooked dough, is an upgraded roti. Also unleavened, it’s the most diverse bread in Indian cuisine. Parathas can be stuffed, most commonly with potatoes, cauliflower, or radish. However, more and more you’ll find paneer, or cheese stuffed parathas, which are definitely seen as more of a fusion between Indian cuisine and American taste. They can also be layered, folded, and rolled over and over again as if preparing a croissant, creating a buttery, flaky exterior, perfect as a standalone meal. One thing to note - if there’s an Indian flatbread at breakfast, 99.9% of the time it’ll be a paratha, unless eating chole bhature (see below). And 100% of the time, if done right, there’ll be a solid helping of butter coating this delicious, chewy flatbread.

3. Puri

Poori-.jpg

Puri is another flatbread that starts off as a roti. Also unleavened, also whole wheat flour. The difference? Deep-fry that dough until it puffs up into a golden, crispy, delicate flatbread. Paired often with thari aloo, or potatoes with curry, puri’s can hold the heaviest of ingredients given that they’re deep-fried. Dipping fresh puris, made one after another from my grandmother that loves to spoil me, into spicy curry with oily hands - that’s a childhood memory I’ll never forget.

4. Naan

Ah, the moment you’ve all been waiting for. Naan. Naan is similar to roti, in the sense that it’s the base off of which other flatbreads are built. However, the main difference between naan and the previous 3 breads mentioned is that naan is leavened, meaning yeast is added to the flour. Traditionally, naan is made in a clay oven, or a tandoor, which is why it isn’t a common flatbread found at home. These days, you can find all types of naan at your local bazaar I mean Trader Joes: garlic, chili cheese, mint naan, paneer naan, the list goes on and on. It’s typically thicker and chewier than other flatbreads given the yeast, making it the perfect bread to pair with your heavy curry-based dishes like butter chicken, dhal makhani, etc.

5. Bhatura

Bhatura.jpg

A bhatura is mash-up between naan and puri. Like naan, bhatura is leavened bread. But much like a puri, it’s deep-fried. What differentiates a bhatura and a puri is the flour used: where puris use whole wheat flour, bhatura uses a more refined all-purpose flour. Yogurt is often added to the dough of bhature (plural) to get a sweet/tangy taste. However, what’s most unique about bhatura is that it is almost always paired with chole (chickpeas), often for a very heavy breakfast, one that puts you right back to sleep. No other meats, curries, or vegetables. However, the converse doesn’t hold - you can definitely find chole without bhature.

It’s a pretty one-sided relationship…

6. Kulcha

Last on our list is the less popular but equally delicious kulcha. Like naan, kulcha is cooked in a tandoor and is also leavened, typically with baking powder. Like bhatura, it’s made from all-purpose white flour, not whole wheat. However, for me, I often draw parallels between kulchas and parathas, primarily because they’re both typically stuffed. Fill your kulcha dough with potatoes and throw it into the oven, or bake it plain, and enjoy it with ghee (clarified butter), dahi (yogurt), and achaar (spiced pickled vegetables).

I hope you all enjoyed and learned something from this post, desi and non-desi friends alike. Feel free to share your thoughts and feedback! I’d love to hear them.

Read More