Something's cooking, chefs are bonding
Mint Mumbai
|July 12, 2025
Gone are the days of the solitary chef. Some of India's top names are now cooking, learning and growing together
Chefs have long been cast as aloof and brooding. Sometimes explosive like Gordon Ramsay in Hell's Kitchen, or haunted like Jeremy Allen White's Carmy in The Bear. Popular culture paints them as tortured artists running kitchens with military precision behind swinging doors.
But across India's culinary landscape, the stereotype is fading. Kitchens are slowly turning into places of camaraderie, learning and support. Much of this shift is also driven by survival. Rising costs, staffing challenges and demanding diners have made chefs more willing to share knowledge rather than trademark secrets.
"If I want to figure out shoyu ramen, I call Kavan (of Naru Noodle Bar, Bengaluru). If I'm stuck with pizza dough, I call Alex (of Americano and Otra, Mumbai)," says chef Gresham Fernandes of Bandra Born, Mumbai. Prateek Sadhu, chef-owner of NAAR, in Kasauli, agrees. "People barely met earlier. Now we're talking at 4am about life and food," he says, though he adds that "the friendships that exist are real, but not with everyone". He calls Fernandes "the most talented chef of our generation", while Fernandes often turns to Sadhu for help with his storytelling.
For Seefah Ketchaiyo, chef and co-owner of Seefah in Mumbai, these connections are lifelines. "Initially everything was unfamiliar, but once people saw my work ethic, they opened up." She also leans on a close bunch of chef friends like private chef Harsh Dixit, Divesh Aswani of Commis Station and Bhakti Mehta from Little Food Co.
This story is from the July 12, 2025 edition of Mint Mumbai.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Grok kicks off liability debate
Grok, the foundational AI model by Elon Musk, has kicked off a storm in India as users complained about its 'spicy mode' being used to morph photos into sexually explicit images.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
New milestone awaits India's data centre bet
Investments in data centres in India, which are said to be the factories and storage houses of digital data and artificial intelligence (AI) models, are set to grow by up to 20% next year, following a record 2025.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Russia oil discount doubles for Indian refiners since Oct
Russian crude suppliers are now offering Indian refiners a higher discount of up to $8 a barrel, doubling since October after sanctions were announced on Rosneft and Lukoil, according to three people aware of the development.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Add a punch of flavour with 'sarson'
My gardening hobby has its ebbs and flows.
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Perils pets face at home
Anything from incense to floor cleaner can pose a threat. Here's how to create a safe space for your pet
2 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
The real diary is the black box of your life
Unlike social media, which holds curated snippets of the life you want others to think you lead, a good, old paper diary, to be opened by others after you are gone, records the mundane moments that give life meaning
5 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
'Ikkis' is a war film on a peace mission
Sriram Raghavan's film about an eager young soldier in the 1971 war argues for shared values and humanity
4 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
LUCKY'S
Lucky Dhamija, cocky in bell bottoms and shiny shirt, couldn't stop honking his brand new Maruti 800 a
8 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
MARUTI
Chest exposed, gold chain nestling among manly hairs, at the neighbours—until he met his match in Nani
8 mins
January 03, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Tata, Motherson, Foxconn anchor mobile parts push
To invest more than half of ₹41,863 cr committed under components scheme
3 mins
January 03, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
