Intentar ORO - Gratis
Chefs are being offaly nice on their menus
Mint Ahmedabad
|June 28, 2025
Inspired by personal memories and research trips, restaurants are bringing offal into the mainstream
Bengali mothers are adept at coaxing their children into eating every part of the fish. "Chew the heads, they're good for you", "eat the tel (innards), they are delicious", "don't discard the skins, they have good fats", and so on. "My mother cooks macher tel like a mishmash with vegetables, and it's something I cannot have enough of even today," says head chef Avinandan Kundu, who reimagines his mother's recipe in the form of dolma, the stuffed leaf parcels believed to have originated during the Ottoman times, at Sienna in Kolkata. The restaurant, known for its playful approach to Bengal's diverse food culture, offers small plates and bar bites featuring fish and meat offal.
Borne out of necessity, nose-to-tail eating as a culinary practice traces its roots to ancient civilizations. In India, it is prevalent across various communities with home cooks displaying their ingenuity via recipes passed down through generations. While offal is treated as a delicacy among many cultures, it often gets a bad rap here, primarily because of taste, texture and cultural stigma. The dishes and their fascinating stories are now inspiring chefs to reinterpret them for the modern diner, be it from memory or research trips across the country.
In Mumbai, chef Varun Totlani makes a bone marrow dish spiced with fiery thecha at the cocktail bar Paradox. The theatrics involve guests scooping the marrow out of a buff shank bone that has been cut length-wise. "While bheja is more acceptable because of its creamy texture, offal or organ meats as a category require a fair amount of work in fine dining," he says.
Esta historia es de la edición June 28, 2025 de Mint Ahmedabad.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Mint Ahmedabad

Mint Ahmedabad
INDUSIND BANK RATED INDIA INVOLVED BY SKOCH FOR EXCELLENCE IN MSME BANKING
Once upon a spreadsheet, India's MSMEs were drowning in paperwork, late payments and queues that snaked through branch corridors like endless fiscal serpents.
2 mins
October 10, 2025

Mint Ahmedabad
Microsoft tries to catch up in AI with healthcare push, Harvard deal
Microsoft has a lofty goal: to become an artificial-intelligence chatbot powerhouse in its own right rather than leaning on its partnership with the ChatGPT maker, OpenAI.
3 mins
October 10, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Go First files plea against Air Works
Bankrupt airline Go First has filed a fresh plea before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), Delhi, seeking the release and disclosure of several aircraft components, primarily small tyres and wheels, that it claims are being withheld by maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) firm Air Works India (Engineering) Pvt. Ltd, a subsidiary of the Adani Group.
1 min
October 10, 2025

Mint Ahmedabad
The dollar is far from dead and the yuan is not staging a coup
Greenback doomsayers got it wrong. The dollar's reign is not over
3 mins
October 10, 2025

Mint Ahmedabad
Corporate governance needs to go well beyond mere compliance
Shareholders now demand more than mere regulatory compliance to monitor the governance of companies they partly own
3 mins
October 10, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Lodha faces execution test as H2 turns crucial for sales goal
The first half of fiscal year 2026 (FY26) was modest for realty firm Lodha Developers Ltd, with pre-sales or bookings up 8% year-on-year (yo-y) to ₹9,020 crore.
1 mins
October 10, 2025

Mint Ahmedabad
Govt, IBBI eye checks on shady pre-bankruptcy business deals
The Union government is looking to tighten the noose around shady transactions at companies undergoing bankruptcy proceedings committed by previous managements, two people aware of the plans said.
1 mins
October 10, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Shipbuilding stocks are likely to stay anchored
India's shipbuilding stocks are trading well above their 200-day moving average, a sign of rising investor confidence.
3 mins
October 10, 2025

Mint Ahmedabad
Razorpay to enter four new markets in South-East Asia
Initial public offering (IPO)-bound fintech major Razorpay is planning to expand into three to four new South-East Asian markets by the end of 2026, the firm's top executive told Mint in an interaction.
1 mins
October 10, 2025
Mint Ahmedabad
Art, cinema and food of the hills
A Mint guide to what's happening in and around your city
1 min
October 10, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size