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Indian Restaurants in Jakarta

By Mehru Jaffer


Those who eat alone choke alone is something I often heard my grandmother repeat. But sometimes I like to defy that truth to queue up all by myself for a sizzling leg of chicken browned in a clay oven or tandoor and dipped in green coriander sauce at Akbar, the Indian stall tucked away in a corner of Plaza Senayan's sprawling food court. The next order is for one plain naan or the fresh bread pulled out before my very eyes from a similar oven, along with a cup of masala and milk tea . 

The added request to those kind souls behind the counter is to make it, a take away please! And once armed with the goodies I am unable to wait any longer to sneak into one of the adjoining cinemas for an afternoon show of an Indian film. The bliss that is experienced for the next two hours, or more, is quite impossible to describe in words. 

Like most Indians I too perhaps live to eat but consider eating by itself incomplete without a festive atmosphere and much song and dance. Therefore I let Akbar provide the feast while the Indian film so full of melodrama and festivities is just what is needed for a short break from all the heat and dust, power and politics played out routinely in the world outside. 

Akbar actually offers a lengthy menu to choose from but the favourite remains the above combination. In fact sensibility has often been scandalised to see the uninitiated pile up the plate with everything that is available on the table even though the art of enjoying Indian food remains in eating the right mix. Like rice and bread are never consumed together and neither is mutton biryani topped with mutton curry or lentils. The flavour of each curry comes out best when eaten with either plain, boiled rice, or with bread. For the same reason food from north India is not allowed to share its sauces with delicacies from the south. Pieces of mutton or chicken marinated and simmered in a tandoor or a clay oven is part of north Indian cuisine but has become synonymous today with Indian food in general. In a country as large and diverse as India, tandoori food is initially from a tiny area in the northwestern plains of the sub continent. Over a period of just half a century the name and fame of tandoori food has managed to capture the imagination of the whole world as it is the humble folk from this region who flanked out into different corners of the globe in search of a better income. Many of them started to earn a living by opening Indian restaurants. 

To Jakarta it is the ethnic group called the Sindis from India's Bombay area that first came here in large numbers mostly to participate in the textile business. At first they concentrated on working hard and making money. Over the years after a little money was left over from having taken care of the essentials, the desire to spend on luxuries like eating out also followed. Today more than a dozen Indian restaurants are scattered all over the city, some of them equipped with excellent kitchens. 

However eating outside the home is a very recent activity amongst Indians. Even today getting together to eat primarily means keeping in touch with the community and family. That is why many restaurants here offer generous accommodation for private parties as well, including Queen's Tandoor and the up market Jewel of India at Hotel Ambhara. 

Jewel of India is also one where the food is spicy but not hot. "This is a place I take my friends who are not used to the taste of chilli powder," says Poonam Sagar of indoindians, a website that lists many a recipe also in Bahasa Indonesia. 

Haveli, at the Graha Indorama is visited by all those looking for a sumptuous meal as well as an elegant ambience. The mouth watering varieties are served here in traditional copper pots that are scrubbed till they glisten and polished inside in silver at the lunch time buffet are worth one's money and sense of aesthetics. Hazara is voted by regulars as unnecessarily expensive where the portions are small even though the atmosphere is dreamy. But it is also the only Indian restaurant perhaps to offer the most succulent sea food delights like tandoori prawns and shrimp curry. 

Despite its prime location and breathtaking view Shah Jahan at Hotel Sahid Jaya remained a drain on the pocket for a long time. The chef is obviously changed as in recent times the reputation of the restaurant is again on the rise. It is recommended that the thali or large plate with an assortment of dishes chosen by the chef, be tried. 

For similar tasting dishes, at a much more reasonable price available in clean but unpretentious surroundings visit the Pakistan Restaurant on Jalan Fatmawati . Away from the chic business district there are plenty of other Indian restaurants in the northern part of the city providing an informal atmosphere but excellent food at almost throw away prices. 

It is not at all essential that each Indian meal should include bread, rice and meats. Often it is fun to tickle the palate and make an entire meal out of street food alone like chaat, snacks called samosas or the south Indian vadas and idlis that are invariably accompanied by cheeky chutneys and provocative pickles. Quisine Restaurant on Jalan Veteran has the usual fare but feast yourself just on the kebabs for a change. Noble, in Sunter includes different kinds of sea food and Chinese dishes too. And apart from Rasa Sayang's Indian menu, it also has a good choice of local food in Block K. 

A stuffed paratha, (bread filled with potatoes and lightly fried in oil) for example is a meal in itself. And the best ones are found at the Taj Mahal in Pasar Baru just like Sahara Restaurant also on Jalan Veteran fries up the most mouth watering dosa or the fluffy rice and lentil pancakes in town. 

Dawat in north Jakarta is the latest addition to the string of restaurants already offering Indian food here and Kenny, the owner swears that the tandoori chicken he puts on your plate is special, all because of a single secret spice that he has dug out from the family archives back home.

-----Mehru Jaffer

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Last modified:
October 31, 2001