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BEYOND BANANA LEAVES
The New Indian Express
|October 10, 2025
We trace how Tamil cuisine is being reimagined over the past two decades by chefs who balance flavour with form and roots with reinvention
HARD TO BELIEVE that a cuisine as ancient and layered as Tamil food, long rooted in ritual, memory and home kitchens, is now at the centre of some of the most daring experiments in the country.
What once stayed on banana leaves or in steel tiffins has found its way into fine dining menus, speakeasies, and global conversations.
The question of essence
From reimagined rasams to fried idiyappams, chefs in Chennai and beyond are rethinking what it means to cook Tamil food today. At the heart of this reinvention is a question: how much can you transform a dish without losing its essence?
Chef Nikhil Nagpal of Avartana approaches this by stripping down to essence. His distilled tomato rasam arrives at tables as a clear broth, but the first sip reassures the diners that it is still rasam, only more intense, he says. “We try to keep the essence of the dish intact but present it in a form that people haven't seen before,” he says. “For me, Tamil food has always been about flavour, about soul. That cannot be lost. The presentation, the theatre, that can change." South Indian cuisine expert and Master Chef participant Harish Rao takes a similar stance, but his emphasis is on restraint. "There's always a thin line," he explains. "You can distill a rasam, but it has to taste like rasam. You can create a ghee candle, but it has to evoke the same comfort. Otherwise it's just novelty on a plate." When he designed Cracked potatoes with cauliflower mousse, it was a playful nod to kurma, but the taste had to remain recognisable. His Shimeji mushroom varuval paired with mushroom pâté worked the same way: bold in appearance, rooted in flavour. For him, surprise is welcome only if it deepens familiarity.
Memory as anchor
Memory guides Sowmiya Venkatesan, the founder of Kechil Kitchen and a Master Chef Singapore participant.
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