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Restaurant<br />
<strong>2018</strong><br />
AWARD<br />
GUIDE<br />
<strong>www</strong>.<strong>thawards</strong>.<strong>com</strong>
TEAM<br />
CEO<br />
Dennis Mayhew<br />
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF<br />
Katherine Lozell<br />
Contents<br />
ART DIRECTOR<br />
Marcs Bacera<br />
DIRECTOR OF SALES<br />
Stanley Lucas<br />
AWARDS DIRECTOR<br />
Brian Anson<br />
DIRECTOR OF MARKETING<br />
Zoe Watkins<br />
SENIOR WRITERS<br />
Tasmai Dave<br />
Jacqui Irvine<br />
Joseph Wilton<br />
SENIOR DESIGNERS<br />
Antoine Jackson<br />
Dave Chen<br />
AWARDS MANAGERS<br />
Adam Cole<br />
Joseph Malabanan<br />
Zach Ford<br />
Peter Clement<br />
RESEARCH MANAGERS<br />
Costin Marcel<br />
Sarah Patel<br />
CONTIBUTING WRITERS<br />
Tracy Morgan<br />
Kim Feldmann de Britto<br />
Joseph Malabanan<br />
Aisha Ahmed<br />
Team 2<br />
Contents 3<br />
Criteria 4<br />
Features 8<br />
Flavours Of The Carribean 8<br />
Steak In Argentina 14<br />
3 Traditional British Dishes 18<br />
The Mediterranean Diet 26<br />
History of Hummus 30<br />
Exotic Meat in Southern Africa 32<br />
The 8 Cuisines of China36<br />
Food in Penang42<br />
Seafood in Australia44<br />
Award <strong>Winners</strong> Profiles 48<br />
Argentina 50<br />
Australia 51<br />
Bangladesh 52<br />
Canada 53<br />
China 55<br />
Colombia 56<br />
France 57<br />
Germany 59<br />
Greece 60<br />
Hong Kong 62<br />
India 63<br />
Israel 65<br />
Italy 66<br />
Japan 68<br />
Kenya 71<br />
Malaysia 72<br />
Netherlands 73<br />
Spain 74<br />
Turkey 75<br />
USA 76<br />
Award <strong>Winners</strong> Directory 80<br />
2 3
CRITERIA<br />
Excellence in Service is an important category, as customer<br />
service can often be responsible for having guests return<br />
year after year. We look for the hotels and tour operators<br />
that go out of their way to please their guests, those that<br />
provide a personal level of service and take the time to<br />
get to know each visitor so that they might anticipate their<br />
every need. This can be something as simple as a 24-hour<br />
concierge desk, a hotel manager who offers a personal<br />
greeting or a tour guide who is happy to create bespoke<br />
private tours – but whatever it is, we are always pleased<br />
when we encounter staff that have been trained in the art<br />
of customer satisfaction.<br />
SERVICES<br />
It is no question that style and design plays a big part in<br />
selecting our awards shortlist. A guest will form an opinion<br />
about a hotel as soon as they arrive so it is important<br />
to us that all our winners make those first impressions<br />
count. We’re certainly not partial to a particular period of<br />
architecture – but whether we’re judging a gothic castle or<br />
an environmentally friendly lodge, the criteria remains the<br />
same. We consider factors such as architectural features,<br />
use of materials, creation of spaces, décor and the overall<br />
feel. We love it when we find a hotel that tells a story<br />
though its design and construction, or offers a design that<br />
is sympathetic to the natural surroundings of its location.<br />
STYLE & DESIGN<br />
Knowledge of the local area is essential for any<br />
organization, be it a hotel or a tour operator. The quality<br />
of services takes a great hit when the quality of this<br />
element is not up to the mark. Quite a few of our winners<br />
in this category are because they have displayed excellent<br />
knowledge about the surrounding areas. The criteria for a<br />
hotel is slightly lenient <strong>com</strong>pared to a tour operator, as the<br />
latter is expected to have thorough knowledge of the area<br />
in order to provide good services.<br />
Image by: Monika Grabkowska<br />
LOCAL KNOWLEGE<br />
4 5
FACILITIES<br />
Award-winning guest rooms <strong>com</strong>e in all shapes and sizes,<br />
but they all have one thing in <strong>com</strong>mon – a home-awayfrom-home<br />
feel. The <strong>com</strong>fort of the facilities on offer are<br />
of vital importance; we look for luxurious linens, stylish<br />
bathrooms and a coordinated colour scheme that work<br />
together to create a cohesive sense of relaxation. Additional<br />
touches, such as <strong>com</strong>plimentary toiletries, free wi-fi or tea<br />
and coffee making facilities are always a bonus in making<br />
us feel wel<strong>com</strong>e. We’re always impressed to find hotel<br />
rooms that embrace technology and offer amenities like<br />
tablets or smart thermostat systems, but this does not<br />
always necessarily trump the traditional – four poster beds,<br />
ornate fireplaces or antique furniture can add a touch of<br />
decadence to a hotel stay.<br />
LOCATION<br />
Location is one of the most important factors, but also one of<br />
the most subjective, as the ‘ideal’ is very much determined<br />
by the type of visitor and the type of hotel itself. However,<br />
there a few factors we take into consideration when<br />
determining the winners of location-based awards. The<br />
first is convenience; that is, hotels that are easy to travel<br />
to. Many of our winners in this category are in convenient<br />
locations, such as adjacent to airports, close to beaches or<br />
found in the heart of easy-to-navigate cities. We are always<br />
impressed when hotels go the extra mile to take the hassle<br />
out of traveling and offer such additional services as airport<br />
shuttles or car hire services. However, we’re always excited<br />
to <strong>com</strong>e across a hotel that is, to use a familiar phrase, offthe-beaten-track.<br />
A hotel that can offer something a little<br />
different, in terms of natural surroundings, can make the<br />
difference between a good holiday and an incredible one.<br />
In today’s modern age, a hotel or tour operator cannot rely<br />
on word of mouth to get their message out into the world.<br />
As social media has be<strong>com</strong>e a vital part of everyday life,<br />
we like to see <strong>com</strong>panies that go the extra mile to engage<br />
with their guests, both past and future. Attractive and<br />
informative websites and engaging and honest content<br />
and what we look for when judging a <strong>com</strong>pany’s use of<br />
marketing; how well they display their services, how upto-date<br />
their content is, how well they get their brand<br />
message across, and, most importantly, how well their<br />
marketing can tempt us to go and see what they have to<br />
offer for ourselves.<br />
What better way is there to know about an organization<br />
than by getting first hand reviews? Customers are the best<br />
judges of any service out there as they are the ones who<br />
experience them and can assess whether they were up to<br />
the mark or not. Considering reviews from hundreds of<br />
customers gives us a fair idea about the general pros and<br />
cons of any organization and also gives us valuable inputs<br />
for the other criteria as well.<br />
MARKETING<br />
CUSTOMER REVIEWS<br />
Diversity is one important aspect that needs to be taken<br />
into consideration when in the travel and hospitality<br />
industry. It is essential to have staff that has varying diversity<br />
to ensure that the organization can properly connect with<br />
their guests. Diversity is taken into account in terms of<br />
gender, nationality as well as languages spoken among<br />
other factors. Not only do we take the diversity of the staff<br />
into account but even that of the facilities and services<br />
offered; a hotel or tour operator providing a better range<br />
of services is preferred over those that do not.<br />
It is of prime importance that an organization has thorough<br />
industry knowledge. Without knowing the nit-bits of the<br />
in , it is difficult to flourish and provide services which are<br />
a class apart. Before any organization ventures into the<br />
industry, it is essential that they know how the industry<br />
is moving and how they should make changes to their<br />
methodologies in order to remain relevant and also be a<br />
top-performing organization.<br />
DIVERSITY<br />
INDUSTRY<br />
KNOWLEDGE<br />
6 7
FLAVOURS OF THE<br />
CARIBBEAN<br />
The Caribbean has long been considered a<br />
holiday hotspot where you can shed all your<br />
stress and have a great time. It’s not really a<br />
hard sell. White sandy beaches, azure waters,<br />
pleasant weather and lively culture, all add to<br />
its appeal. But there’s more to the place than<br />
all of that, specifically speaking, the culinary<br />
scene here makes it more alluring.<br />
Multi-faceted in nature, it boasts<br />
of an incredible mix of tropical<br />
flavours and multicultural influences<br />
which have been polished over the years.<br />
The food is a celebration of sweet, tarty,<br />
aromatic, tangy, and citrusy flavours. You<br />
must be able to understand the history<br />
behind the diverse cuisine here, to truly<br />
appreciate and understand it.<br />
Discovered by Christopher Columbus in<br />
1492, the Caribbean en<strong>com</strong>passes more<br />
than seven thousand islands. While many<br />
islands are now self-governed, they were<br />
part of European dominions for more<br />
than four centuries. Needless to say, this<br />
played a major role in shaping the cultures,<br />
traditions, and food from these parts.<br />
A mélange of cultural influences have<br />
resulted in a diverse and rich cuisine.<br />
Regardless of their colonial past, there<br />
is a <strong>com</strong>mon cuisine that belongs to<br />
the multitude of islands. A cuisine that<br />
has evolved due to the influx of culinary<br />
techniques, ingredients, and seasonings<br />
of the Asian, African, European, and Indian<br />
slave cultures. This is not to discount the<br />
original tribal cuisine of these parts that<br />
form the bedrock of the multi-national<br />
cuisine of the islands.<br />
Two Native American tribes – the Arawaks<br />
and Caribs – occupied the islands prior to<br />
Columbus finding these lands. The Caribs<br />
are credited for adding spice to the food,<br />
specifically a lot of chilli peppers, a tradition<br />
that is still prevalent. They are said to have<br />
invented the pepper pot stew, a light<br />
summery dish, popular among foodies<br />
who visit the Caribbean.<br />
The Arawaks, on the other hand, began<br />
the institution of barbecuing foods by<br />
fashioning grills out of native green sticks<br />
called barbacoa. They would use slow<br />
wood fires to cook the meat and imbibe<br />
in it the smoky, murky flavors of the wood.<br />
Authentic Arawak barbeques are still an<br />
increasingly sought-after affair.<br />
These tribes were known for their use of<br />
healthy ingredients, often termed as ‘soul<br />
foods’. A perfect name, given the fact that<br />
aroma and taste of all Caribbean dishes<br />
cooked with such ingredients delight your<br />
soul. The likes of okra, plantain, yams,<br />
mangoes and sweet potatoes fall under<br />
the range of soul food. Additionally, the<br />
dishes would incorporate meat, fish and<br />
other seafood into their soul food meals.<br />
With the European invasion came a<br />
major turning point in the region’s food<br />
and culture. There were English, French,<br />
Spanish, African, Asian and Oriental<br />
influences that had lasting impressions on<br />
the cuisine. When talking about the French<br />
influences, we can look at St. Martin,<br />
Martinique and Guadeloupe, islands where<br />
the French cooking styles dominate.<br />
One of the more popular French cooking<br />
styles prevalent here is Creole. It’s known<br />
for its use of local ingredients, including<br />
herbs, meats, and seafood, which are<br />
cooked with a variety of tropical vegetables<br />
and fruits. Exotic seasonings enhance the<br />
flavours while chilli and peppers add heat<br />
to the dishes. Try the bokit, a popular street<br />
food item which is sort of meat, cheese,<br />
and sauce stuffed sandwich.<br />
To get yourself started, have the accras –<br />
a fried fritter filled with lobster or shrimp<br />
– served with a spicy sauce that hits the<br />
spot. If you like to sing to the tune of a<br />
spicy curry, try the Colombo. A sort of stew<br />
rather than a typical curry, it makes use<br />
of Colombo powder, a mix of turmeric,<br />
coriander, cumin, and cloves. It’s tossed<br />
and prepared with vegetables and meat or<br />
seafood. Packing a ton of heat, try some<br />
at Le Ti Maki, which serves the dish over a<br />
bed of rice with sweet plantains.<br />
Wash all of this down some Ti’ Punch a<br />
rum-based specialty drink on the French<br />
Antilles. Besides some smooth rum, the<br />
drink only uses cane sugar and lime juice.<br />
Even if rum isn’t your poison, this drink will<br />
make you reconsider it. For those with a<br />
sweet tooth, the sorbet coco <strong>com</strong>es highly<br />
8 9
e<strong>com</strong>mended. Almost like a gelato, it’s<br />
made with coconut paste, condensed milk<br />
and a hint of cinnamon and nutmeg.<br />
Then there are the obvious English<br />
influences on the cuisine. The English<br />
imported and grew a wide variety of herbs,<br />
fruits and vegetables like rosemary, thyme,<br />
tarragon, lime, tamarind, pomegranates,<br />
and garlic. They can be credited for<br />
introducing many classic British dishes into<br />
Caribbean dishes. Think bacon and eggs,<br />
rice pudding, Irish stew, Yorkshire pudding,<br />
smoked herrings and hot cross buns.<br />
The English influence, though, isn’t limited<br />
to just the introduction of such dishes,<br />
ingredients, and cooking techniques. The<br />
upper class brought their servants and<br />
workers with them to the islands. And<br />
the employment of additional labour<br />
resulted in a sharing of ideas, recipes, and<br />
remedies. Sometime in the 1600s, the<br />
English plantations replaced tobacco with<br />
cane sugar which led to a period of great<br />
economic and culinary prosperity.<br />
Visit the Bliss Café in Barbados for a<br />
traditional English breakfast with some<br />
strong Caribbean coffee. Bacon and eggs<br />
are particularly exquisite. Then there’s the<br />
Charlies Bar and Grill for some Sunday<br />
roast <strong>com</strong>prising of scrumptious roasted<br />
meat, potatoes, stuffing, gravy and the<br />
best Yorkshire pudding in these parts.<br />
Then there’s the Spanish heritage which<br />
is evident in the food preparations used<br />
in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, and the<br />
Dominican Republic. They were great<br />
contributors of fruits and trees like the<br />
Seville and Valencia oranges, dates, figs,<br />
grapes, and bananas. Typical Spanish<br />
dishes like Paella and Zarzuela have found<br />
their way into Caribbean cuisine.<br />
Many Spanish dishes on the islands<br />
include rice and shellfish as well. There are<br />
variations of barbequed chicken, pork and<br />
fish roasted over barbacoa fires. Another<br />
popular method of cooking meats – jerk –<br />
thrives in the fast-food industry of Jamaica.<br />
Jamaican cuisine is also known for its use of<br />
fresh produce, strong flavours and spices.<br />
The roast pork on these islands is a very<br />
succulent delicacy, often served with<br />
rice and beans. The juicy and tender<br />
pork drippings add a very rich taste to<br />
everything on the plate. Street-food stands<br />
in Puerto Rico are known for their Lechon<br />
asado – delicious spit-roasted suckling<br />
pig. And how can one leave out the classic<br />
Cubanos? Hearty sandwiches layered with<br />
ham, pork, cheese and dill pickles.<br />
There are also strong African ties in<br />
Caribbean cuisine brought on by the<br />
exchange of ideas between natives and<br />
African slaves brought here by their<br />
European masters. The Africa slave<br />
developed a style of cooking that was<br />
basic to native Caribbean dishes. Soups<br />
and other one-pot hearty meals formed<br />
the mainstay of the slaves who relied on<br />
them for their daily nutrition.<br />
Afro-Caribbean dishes center around<br />
earthy, humble ingredients like okra,<br />
callaloo, taro and pungent seasonings and<br />
spices. These vegetables are boiled into a<br />
thick stew and include peppers, coconut<br />
milk and all manners of meats and seafood.<br />
When it <strong>com</strong>es to jerk chicken, they use<br />
a very spicy rub that is applied to the<br />
meats which are grilled to fiery perfection.<br />
Another simple African dish would be coucou,<br />
a cornmeal-based dish cooked with<br />
okra.<br />
After the liberation of the slaves, several<br />
more were imported from Asia and India.<br />
Much like the African slaves, they too<br />
widened the scope of cooking techniques<br />
and dishes in the Caribbean. Indonesian<br />
food, Indian curries and rotis, Chinese<br />
vegetables and many spices, previously<br />
absent, were introduced.<br />
Typical dishes included spicy curries,<br />
cooked vegetables, and Indian flatbreads.<br />
For instance, take Trinidadian cuisine where<br />
cooks serve up stuffed parathas four ways.<br />
A favorite is the dhal puri roti which has<br />
ground peas folded into the bread dough<br />
for a unique texture and taste. Another<br />
sought-after dish is the pelau, a rice dish<br />
inspired by the Indian pilaf. A bed of rice<br />
cooked with vegetables and topped with<br />
caramelized meat, it is a must-have.<br />
Speaking of Chinese influences, the<br />
most obvious one must be Chow Mein.<br />
It has stood the test of time and remains<br />
popular with the locals because it’s two<br />
basic ingredients – noodles and stock – are<br />
readily available. Add to that some pow, a<br />
dumpling made with pork fillings which is a<br />
dish reserved for special occasions.<br />
10 11
Enough about the influences though, what<br />
you really want to know is what to sample<br />
when you go Caribbean island hopping.<br />
Jamaica is renowned for its meat patties,<br />
jerk chicken, and succulent pork dishes. For<br />
the most authentic version of jerk chicken,<br />
visit the Boston Beach in Portland parish.<br />
They are also known for their blend of<br />
coffee grown in the Blue Mountains.<br />
When in Trinidad and Tobago, sample the<br />
various curries and rotis served with them.<br />
A local specialty is the shark sandwich best<br />
had at Richard’s Shark and Bake. Found<br />
in the Maracas beach, they serve up fresh<br />
shark that is battered and inserted into a<br />
kind of fried bread. A side of exotic shadon<br />
benny and scotch bonnet sauces make the<br />
sandwich more delectable.<br />
The Bahamas are famous for their conch<br />
dishes like fritters, salads, and chowders<br />
while the goat stew dish from Montserrat,<br />
St. Kittis and Nevis are beloved by tourists<br />
and locals alike. Then there is the Callaloo<br />
dish that has many renditions across the<br />
Caribbean countries. The English-speaking<br />
islands are known for their pelau, made<br />
with pigeon peas, fish, and vegetables.<br />
In Antigua, you must try their national dish<br />
– funji. Funji is a lot like Italian polenta,<br />
it’s made primarily using cornmeal, and<br />
accentuated with spices. The bars across<br />
the Caribbean are always well stocked<br />
with rum seeing as they are one of the<br />
few main producers of the spirit. It forms<br />
a significant part of the West Indies culture<br />
and depending on its potency is used in a<br />
myriad of fruity drinks.<br />
It’s difficult, as you see, to talk about<br />
Caribbean cuisine as a singular entity.<br />
Across the numerous islands and countries,<br />
the ingredients, cooking styles, and flavours<br />
vary. Even the most ubiquitous dishes from<br />
these parts will have unique flavours and<br />
distinguishing characteristics about them.<br />
Yet none will be any less delightful or<br />
mouthwatering.<br />
Caribbean cuisine is exquisite in its own<br />
unique, multi-cultural way. So, whether it’s<br />
simply eating a passion fruit off a tree or<br />
jerk chicken in Jamaica, or even dining on<br />
conch in the Cayman Islands or a Callaloo in<br />
Trinidad, you’ll know that it’s food befitting<br />
a God’s palate.<br />
12 13
STEAK IN ARGENTINA<br />
If there are two things that Argentina takes very<br />
seriously, then it’s their football and steaks.<br />
Argentine steaks are largely considered the<br />
best not just because of the high quality of<br />
beef used or how they prepare them but it’s<br />
got much to do with how much the people<br />
like to cook the various cuts of meat when<br />
they consume them.<br />
A<br />
distinguishing factor about the<br />
steaks here is the Argentines’<br />
expertise in using and cooking the various<br />
unique cuts of the animal. They like to<br />
separate different types of cow meat by<br />
texture and shape. Typically, there are at<br />
least 14 different cuts that the natives cook,<br />
in various styles, to serve some delicious<br />
dishes. Take the T-Bone for instance, usually<br />
served as a single cut around the world,<br />
here it’s divided into two – the boneless<br />
Lomo and the small steak Costeleta.<br />
Since we’re already on the subject, let’s take<br />
a few moments to savor each one of these<br />
cuts. There is, of course, the roast beef,<br />
the frugal cut from the neck, best enjoyed<br />
with a delightful sauce and often used for<br />
mince. Then there’s the Ojo de Bife or the<br />
rib eye – a succulent and chunky steak from<br />
the rib section which gets much of its flavor<br />
from the marbling fat. Bife Ancho/Prime rib<br />
is a tender and marbled cut from the ribeye<br />
roll.<br />
Then there are the Angosto(New York<br />
strip) – pure carnivorous bliss, the Cuadril<br />
or rump steak used for everyday home<br />
cooking, the Asado – barbecued short<br />
ribs which are crispy yet tender and the<br />
Vacio, delicious but overlooked, the flank<br />
from around the belly is seldom used<br />
outside Argentina. Slow cooked, this strip<br />
packs tons of flavour and sports a crispy<br />
exterior. How can we forget the Colita de<br />
Cuadril, the sirloin steak, often smothered<br />
in marinade and another staple for home<br />
cooks?!<br />
If you’re keen on trying some relatively<br />
obscure cuts, try the Tapa de Asado (rib<br />
cap), Peceto (eye of round), Entrana (skirt<br />
steak), Matandre (flank steak) or Tapa de<br />
Nalga (Topside cap). Each of these cuts<br />
have their own unique taste and texture.<br />
This is not to discount the scrumptious<br />
chorizo, blood sausages, intestines or even<br />
the thymus glands that are used to serve up<br />
delicious appetizers. Trust the Argentines<br />
to know the best way to make the most<br />
of each cut and cook them in fashions that<br />
best enhance their individual flavour.<br />
But surely that’s not all that makes<br />
the steaks here the best in the world<br />
(allegedly)? And it’s not. The secret lies<br />
with how they cook their meats. Across the<br />
globe, where people usually prefer their<br />
steaks done medium rare, Argentines balk<br />
at how anyone can consume a steak that’s<br />
pink or even slightly bloodied. The steaks<br />
here are almost always served well-done<br />
and cooked through. While you might<br />
think if a steak cooked anything more than<br />
a medium rare would be dry and wasted,<br />
this country defies that logic as the meat<br />
turns out rather tender and succulent and<br />
always delicious.<br />
Quite frankly, if you think you’ve had the<br />
best when you apply heat to some cow<br />
meat, think again. Till you’ve visited the<br />
parrillas (steakhouses) of Argentina, you’ve<br />
not even <strong>com</strong>e close. It’s taken decades,<br />
but these guys have elevated steaks from a<br />
simple meat dish to something between an<br />
art form and science. They don’t simply grill<br />
their more precise cuts to ‘seal’ the meat<br />
surface, they prefer to slow cook them over<br />
briquettes, adding a smoky flavor.<br />
The meat is roasted in thick pieces over<br />
open coal or wood flames by obsessive<br />
meat cooks, who consider cooking beef<br />
using propane fuel, almost a blasphemy.<br />
The servings are ridiculous, as the thick<br />
pieces overhang the plate. What the<br />
14 15
Argentines have mastered is flavor. A<br />
testament to this are the strange cuts of<br />
meat that would be ground into a flavorless<br />
paste anywhere else, are brought to your<br />
table infused with delectable texture and<br />
taste. That is if they are cooked right, and<br />
in Argentina, the meat is invariably cooked<br />
to perfection.<br />
The plethora of Parrillas, all vary in style,<br />
price, and ambiance, but in menu and<br />
method barely do they deviate from<br />
tradition. Unlike global traditions where<br />
you’re asked how cooked you want your<br />
meat, the default setting in steakhouses<br />
here is well done. If you want it rare, insist<br />
on jugoso which literally translates to juicy.<br />
It’s strongly advised to up your ‘Argentine<br />
steak lingo’ game before a visit to the<br />
country.<br />
If you’re in the steak capital of South<br />
America, Buenos Aires, be sure to visit ‘La<br />
Cabrera’. As a popular saying here goes,<br />
“There are steakhouses and then there is<br />
La Cabrera”. The crème de la crème of<br />
Argentine steak, they serve 25 different<br />
beef cuts with various sides. Each dish<br />
exquisite and delicious, you’ll be in steak<br />
heaven. Or if you’re looking for a more<br />
down to earth experience, try ‘Parrilla Pena’,<br />
an old-school steakhouse frequented by<br />
the locals. No fancy tablecloths or mood<br />
lighting, this place is as lively as it gets,<br />
jostling with people. Sample the Parrilla<br />
Completa, a platter of different grilled<br />
meats with several sides.<br />
The best steak eating experience, though,<br />
can only be had at an asado (open-air<br />
barbeque). In a friend’s backyard, a hotel<br />
or an estancia, it’s like a <strong>com</strong>munity feast,<br />
celebrating friendships and family. If you’re<br />
invited for one, be prepared for hours of<br />
gorging amazing food. And not just beefcentric<br />
dishes, there’s a cornucopia of<br />
various scrumptious dishes. The meal starts<br />
with a round of appetizers like Choripanes<br />
which are grilled sausage sandwiches<br />
served with Chimichurri (a sauce made<br />
from dried herbs, chili flakes, and oil).<br />
Whet your appetite with Achuras, various<br />
offal cuts and interior organs that are<br />
grilled and subsequently passed around<br />
on a wooden platter. So, you can either<br />
snag a piece or pass it on as you save some<br />
room for the main cuts. Bread and salads<br />
are also served with these, paired with<br />
copious amounts of red wine with soda.<br />
The main course is up next. The meat is<br />
seldom marinated, with chefs only rubbing<br />
some salt on them to enhance the flavors.<br />
The real <strong>com</strong>plexity of cooking the steaks<br />
<strong>com</strong>es from the actual cooking of the meat.<br />
Good asadors know how much space to<br />
leave between the meat and the coals.<br />
They use special grills in which you can<br />
adjust the distance between the embers<br />
and the steak. They are designed to<br />
prevent grease and juices from dripping<br />
on the coals thus avoiding any smoke that<br />
could adversely affect the flavour of the<br />
steak. Seeing as each cut requires different<br />
cooking times, whenever the asador brings<br />
out a platter, the guests thank the cook by<br />
shouting “un aplauso para el asador!”.<br />
The Argentine steak obsession is<br />
democratic, as it’s not just a staple here, it’s<br />
their lifestyle. By every measure, the steaks<br />
here are simply divine. From the variety of<br />
cuts used to the different methods used<br />
to cook them, it’s no surprise then that the<br />
country is called the ‘King of Steaks’.<br />
16 17
3 TRADITIONAL<br />
BRITISH DISHES<br />
For as long as one can remember, Britain<br />
has been considered that simple cousin in<br />
the European culinary family, that the other<br />
members tend to poke fun at. They laugh<br />
at their poor culinary relation internationally<br />
for not having a proper food culture. Their<br />
culinary history is tangled with international<br />
influences, severe rationing, and a lack<br />
of ingredients due to prevalent weather<br />
conditions.<br />
French food is famous for being<br />
sophisticated and delectable and<br />
Italian food is considered as the ultimate<br />
indulgent and <strong>com</strong>fort food across the<br />
world. In contrast, British food is known to<br />
be synonymous with the English weather,<br />
boring, dull and perhaps even grey. But the<br />
truth is far from it!<br />
Indeed, mealtimes in the country<br />
traditionally involved stewing, roasting, or<br />
battering ingredients but this was more<br />
out of a necessity than anything else. Their<br />
food culture reflected the tumultuous times<br />
they have seen, but it’s here that the beauty<br />
of British cuisine lies. In the simplicity of the<br />
ingredients, techniques, dishes, and flavors<br />
born from the great British ingenuity.<br />
Given England’s <strong>com</strong>plex history (read<br />
widespread colonialism) and its status of<br />
being a major global player, it has been<br />
a hub for people all over. People from a<br />
multitude of cultures have settled down<br />
here and brought with them their culinary<br />
traditions. Over time, these foreign<br />
influences seeped into British cuisine,<br />
resulting in a multifaceted culinary culture.<br />
Skeptics often argue that British cuisine is<br />
defined by things imported or borrowed.<br />
It’s true that it boasts tremendously diverse<br />
offerings and numerous international<br />
influences, but it can hold its own as well.<br />
Britain boasts some of the finest beef in the<br />
world, excellent game, world-class sea salt,<br />
and a superior bounty from its seas.<br />
But let’s say we wanted to appease even<br />
the naysayers and do away with the layers<br />
and frills, what would we find at the heart<br />
of British cuisine? You’d find a plethora of<br />
classic dishes which the country has <strong>com</strong>e<br />
to be known for. From the fish and chips<br />
served at every corner, to the Sunday<br />
roast every family enjoys, from the humble<br />
shepherd’s pie to the exquisite sticky toffee<br />
pudding and custard. And oh, so many<br />
more!<br />
There’s the hearty proper English breakfast<br />
of beans, sausages, bacon, eggs,<br />
mushrooms, and toast with a cup of tea<br />
to keep you going through the day. The<br />
staggering number of snacks and finger<br />
foods to munch on throughout the day –<br />
cucumber sandwiches, crumpet, scotch<br />
eggs, and sausage rolls. Let’s not forget<br />
the gob-smacking desserts such as apple<br />
crumble, rhubarb and custard, bread and<br />
butter pudding, and Eccles cakes.<br />
What’s more is behind almost every dish<br />
there’s a story to tell. For instance, take<br />
the controversial chicken tikka – chunks<br />
of chicken marinated in yogurt and spices<br />
baked and served in a thick tomato gravy. It<br />
has long been debated whether it’s British<br />
or Indian? Several people and ethnicities<br />
have claimed credit for its creation. A<br />
renowned Indian food critic claims it hails<br />
from the Punjab region of India.<br />
Yet a version of the British explanation talks<br />
about a Pakistani chef of an establishment<br />
in Glasgow who invented the dish. It’s said<br />
that a bus driver <strong>com</strong>ing off his shift had<br />
ordered a chicken curry, but on finding it<br />
too dry, sent it back. The chef, in a moment<br />
of ingenuity, added a can of Campbell’s<br />
soup with some herbs and spices to the<br />
dish, and returned it to the customer who<br />
loved it! So much so that the dish became<br />
a proper item on menus and a country<br />
favorite!<br />
But let’s steer clear of controversy for<br />
now and talk about three dishes that are<br />
synonymous with British cuisine. The first<br />
of which must be fish and chips, a dish so<br />
popular you might as well treat it as their<br />
national dish. The British have a fondness<br />
for fried food and this is no different. Take<br />
some battered cod and chunky chips (or<br />
fries) served wrapped in newspaper and<br />
there you have it, Britain’s biggest staple.<br />
This is a dish that Winston Churchill himself<br />
called ‘the good <strong>com</strong>panion’. While<br />
Beatles legend John Lennon preferred his<br />
smothered in ketchup, the iconic Michael<br />
Jackson loved his with some mushy peas.<br />
Fish and chips are a British institution, one<br />
that sustained the morale of the country<br />
through two world wars and fueled their<br />
industrial prime.<br />
For well over a century, this meal has fed<br />
millions of memories and are symbolic of all<br />
fond memories. Eaten with greasy fingers<br />
by the seaside on a holiday or cheering<br />
your favorite football team as you down<br />
some beer at the pub with the lads. Not<br />
many can resist the tantalizing <strong>com</strong>bination<br />
of moist white fish encases in a crisp golden<br />
batter, served with a generous helping of<br />
hot and fluffy chips.<br />
18 19
While cod and haddock are the most<br />
frequently used fish, vendors do sell other<br />
kinds too such as pollock, plaice, and ray.<br />
The batter is usually made using water<br />
and flour with some baking soda and little<br />
amounts of vinegar. Some vendors even<br />
use a milk or beer batter which adds a<br />
different dimension to the dish. Where<br />
traditionally beef dripping was used as a<br />
frying oil, many vendors have shifted to<br />
vegetable oils in recent years.<br />
Even the kind of condiments and<br />
ac<strong>com</strong>paniments served with it vary from<br />
vendor to vendor. If some serve mushy<br />
peas, then others serve coleslaw or pickled<br />
onions. Quite frankly, there is no <strong>com</strong>mon<br />
recipe or standard when it <strong>com</strong>es to this<br />
meal. The only constant about this dish is<br />
that it is the epitome of greasy, indulgent,<br />
and utterly-delicious <strong>com</strong>fort food.<br />
But where did this delicacy <strong>com</strong>e originate<br />
from? Some ardent lovers argue that it<br />
was a northern entrepreneur by the name<br />
of John Lees. It’s believed that all the way<br />
back in 1863 he was selling the dish out<br />
of his hut in Mossley Market in Lancashire.<br />
Others tout a Jewish immigrant, Joseph<br />
Malin, to have been the first to open a fish<br />
and chips shop, in East London.<br />
Regardless of its true origins, this marriage<br />
caught on quickly. Fish and chips were<br />
an appetizing break from the unvarying<br />
working-class diets then. And soon<br />
thereafter outlets were springing up on<br />
every corner, pubs, eateries and even<br />
fancy restaurants started serving their own<br />
interpretations of this classic beloved dish.<br />
And while other fast foods may have sprung<br />
up and taken over the takeout business,<br />
fish and chips remain the archetypal British<br />
<strong>com</strong>fort food. Interestingly, <strong>com</strong>pared to its<br />
<strong>com</strong>petitors – burgers, pizza, fried chicken,<br />
Chinese – it contains fewer calories and<br />
less fat. Its historic value further cements its<br />
place on this list. Fish and chips, the dish<br />
that kept the masses happy and saw them<br />
through the toughest of times – wars and<br />
recessions alike.<br />
There is no dish older or more celebrated in<br />
Britain than the Sunday roast dinner. Done<br />
right, it’s capable of <strong>com</strong>peting with the<br />
most beloved national dishes around the<br />
world. The centerpiece of this extravagant<br />
affair is the roasted meat. Be it beef with<br />
Yorkshire pudding, lamb with mint sauce,<br />
pork with applesauce and crackling or<br />
chicken and redcurrant jelly with bread<br />
sauce.<br />
Partnering the succulent, juicy meats are<br />
roasted potatoes, a thick gravy, and various<br />
cooked vegetables. Quintessentially<br />
British, roast dinners are a family tradition<br />
where everyone gathers around to gorge<br />
on the plate stacked with delicious items.<br />
So great is the love for this meal in the<br />
country, that any deviations from tradition<br />
are severely frowned upon.<br />
It’s widely believed that the country’s<br />
love for this meal began in 1485 during<br />
the reign of King Henry the VII. His royal<br />
guard would feast on fresh roast beef on<br />
Sundays post-church and this went on to<br />
be<strong>com</strong>e a ritual. During the Industrial Age,<br />
for instance, most families would put on a<br />
roast before visiting the church on Sunday.<br />
This imparted an almost religious and<br />
social importance to the meal.<br />
20 21
While the noblemen would hang and<br />
slow roast entire animals in front of huge<br />
fireplaces, villagers who couldn’t afford big<br />
cuts or a fireplace would drop off a humble<br />
cut with their local baker on the way to<br />
church. The baker would use their empty<br />
ovens to cook the villagers’ meat for them<br />
and would hand it back to them in time<br />
for lunch. This, of course, fostered good<br />
<strong>com</strong>munity relations.<br />
The first thing that pops into your mind<br />
when you think about roast beef is the<br />
Yorkshire pudding that goes hand in hand<br />
with it. It’s a versatile food that can be<br />
served in any number of ways, be it with<br />
gravy to <strong>com</strong>plement the roast meat or<br />
with jam and sugar to act as a dessert. It’s<br />
so revered that the Brits even celebrate a<br />
Yorkshire Pudding day on the first Sunday<br />
in February.<br />
So, what does it take to make the perfect<br />
traditional Sunday roast? Apart from the<br />
food itself (which we’ll get to in just a<br />
moment), it’s the presence of friends and<br />
family as you get together to enjoy the<br />
feast. First and foremost, it’s important to<br />
get a good, tender cut of meat with a good<br />
amount of fat marbled throughout it; prefer<br />
cuts from the rib, the rump or the loin.<br />
The most daunting task of a roast dinner<br />
is getting the meat done right. It’s best<br />
to let the layer of fat be on top when<br />
roasting it so that it can baste itself. You<br />
want a crispy brown skin outside with a<br />
juicy and pink interior. The next task, of<br />
course, is choosing your sides. Yorkshire<br />
pudding and gravy are a must, along with<br />
roasted potatoes, carrots, and other root<br />
vegetables with blanched greens like peas<br />
or beans.<br />
Clearly, it’s a feast to behold. So, if you’re<br />
ever invited to a Sunday roast, be sure to<br />
bring your appetite. There are brownie<br />
points for anyone who can stack their<br />
plate and not spill any on themselves while<br />
making their way to the table. Albeit family<br />
roast meals have died down in recent years<br />
due to the time and effort it requires, they<br />
are still the very heart of traditional British<br />
cooking and food.<br />
The youngest and sweetest member on<br />
this list is another British classic which<br />
didn’t see the limelight of British culinary<br />
glory till the 1970’s. Sticky Toffee Pudding<br />
is a consistent favourite across the UK<br />
and by far the most indulgent dessert you<br />
can have here. As the name suggests, it’s<br />
a moist sponge cake drenched in liquid<br />
toffee, frequently served with a side of<br />
custard or ice cream.<br />
Sticky toffee pudding is a staple dessert<br />
on pub and restaurant menus throughout<br />
Britain. The pudding itself is a dark, treaclelike<br />
moist sponge which is studded with<br />
dates. Over this, a generous helping of<br />
thick, hot, and delightful butterscotch<br />
sauce is poured. To say that it will leave you<br />
euphoric is an understatement. But as they<br />
say, where there is a success, there’s scrap<br />
too.<br />
There are three <strong>com</strong>peting claims to the<br />
origin and invention of this tantalizing<br />
dessert. The first claimants to its creation<br />
are the Scots who love their sugar better<br />
than anyone else. They insist it was first<br />
served in 1967 at the Udny Arms Hotel in<br />
Newburgh-on-Ythan, Aberdeen. A crowd<br />
favourite, it’s served with clotted ice-cream<br />
and they even give out the recipe to ardent<br />
lovers who request it.<br />
The next party that stakes claim to the<br />
credit is Yorkshire. Never known to back<br />
22 23
down from a scuffle, they boldly state that<br />
it was invented all the way back in 1907<br />
by Gait Inn’s landlady. While the current<br />
landlord of the establishment likes to steer<br />
clear of the origin controversy, they do still<br />
serve a particularly delectable rendition of<br />
the beloved dessert.<br />
The vast majorities, however, credit<br />
Cumbria for the dish’s invention. Francis<br />
Coulson at the Sharrow Bay Hotel is said to<br />
have had the idea from a recipe by a Mrs.<br />
Martin of the Old Rectory in Lancashire. His<br />
recipe for the ‘Icky Sticky Toffee Pudding’<br />
is the stuff of culinary legend. The Hotel<br />
is so secretive about their recipe that the<br />
staff are required to sign confidentiality<br />
agreements!<br />
The important thing to remember isn’t<br />
who should you thank for the creation of<br />
this divine dessert, rather to lose yourself<br />
in its sticky, warm and sweet indulgence.<br />
You might even go as far as saying it’s the<br />
perfect dessert that balances itself out. The<br />
sweet countered by the nuts and spices.<br />
A stalwart on British menus, this dish will<br />
make a place for itself in your hearts and<br />
your stomachs.<br />
So, then where best to sample and<br />
inevitably fall in love with these classic<br />
British dishes you may ask? Fish and chips<br />
are best enjoyed while strolling along<br />
the seaside, greasy delicacy in hand. The<br />
most famous spot in the country is the<br />
Anstruther Fish Bar in the East Neuk of<br />
Fife, in Scotland. The place has won several<br />
accolades over the years and is frequented<br />
by celebrities too. Dine in or take in the<br />
astounding bayside views as you treat your<br />
taste buds.<br />
While there’s nothing like a familial Sunday<br />
roast; if it’s a fancy or gourmet experience<br />
you’re seeking, try Hispi in Manchester.<br />
A part of Gary Usher’s acclaimed chain of<br />
Bistros, it’s a stylish place that over-delivers<br />
when it <strong>com</strong>es to the flavors. There’s no<br />
better way to describe the perfectly cooked<br />
meal that attracts dedicated foodies from<br />
all over.<br />
If you wish to try out a wide range of<br />
sticky toffee puddings, then hop on over<br />
to the Village Shop in Cartmel – the home<br />
of sticky toffee. Often proclaimed as the<br />
best sticky toffee pudding, they have won<br />
several awards for it. What makes this place<br />
more special is the variety of delectable<br />
sticky puddings they serve here like the<br />
banana or chocolate flavoured ones.<br />
Further, each is made using <strong>com</strong>pletely<br />
natural ingredients.<br />
Yes, British cuisine tends to get a bad rap<br />
sometimes, but the truth is it’s a cuisine to<br />
marvel and revel in. It reflects the grit and<br />
mettle of a nation that has been through<br />
trials and survived. It speaks to their<br />
centuries-old customs and rituals. Indeed<br />
it’s not the fanciest of cuisines, but their<br />
traditional dishes do reflect what it means<br />
to be British. And what is a cuisine if not a<br />
reflection of what the country stands for?<br />
24 25
THE MEDITERRANEAN DIET<br />
What <strong>com</strong>es to your mind when you think about<br />
Mediterranean food? At the risk of sounding foodculturally<br />
insensitive, you might picture pita bread,<br />
hummus or maybe falafel. But Mediterranean food<br />
is so much more than that. It <strong>com</strong>prises of staple<br />
dishes from the European, North African and Middle<br />
Eastern countries surrounding the Mediterranean<br />
Sea. Extremely diverse, it has influences and<br />
inspirations from all the way in Greece to Morocco,<br />
from Algeria to Lebanon and from Italy to Syria.<br />
The entire region is rich in the<br />
astonishing variety of ingredients<br />
and spices that make even simplest of<br />
dishes <strong>com</strong>e alive with flavor. Not only<br />
that, a huge emphasis is given to the use<br />
of fresh and healthy ingredients that are<br />
good for you. One can go so far as to say<br />
that Mediterranean cuisine is the perfect<br />
blend of taste and nutrition. Yet, it’s one of<br />
the most underrated meals in many places,<br />
often overshadowed by Chinese, Italian or<br />
Mexican food.<br />
In a culture where fast food reigns<br />
supreme, there’s something unique<br />
about meals that can’t be whipped up<br />
so easily and quickly. Akin to an art form,<br />
preparing Mediterranean food is all about<br />
expressing love and passion for the food<br />
and the person for whom you’re cooking.<br />
The freshness of the colorful ingredients<br />
with their bold flavours makes the recipes<br />
nutritious, delectable and aesthetically<br />
appealing.<br />
Not governed by a single culture, the<br />
cuisine is a result of cultural exchanges and<br />
influences. Traders exchanged spices and<br />
other foodstuffs which resulted in a wide<br />
dissemination of ingredients throughout<br />
the cuisines. Another factor in shaping up<br />
these cuisines were the empire building<br />
conquests of various countries. As societies<br />
merged together, culinary practices<br />
blended and morphed within the empire<br />
resulting in what we identify as a unique<br />
cuisine originating from the region.<br />
This, of course, means there are a lot<br />
of <strong>com</strong>mon elements in Mediterranean<br />
cuisine despite the origins from varied<br />
countries. Olive oil is a universal ingredient<br />
as it has worked its way into a variety of<br />
dishes, with its bitter taste, used in cooking<br />
as well as a dressing agent throughout<br />
the region. Olives, too, are regulars in the<br />
cuisine owing to the punchy acidity they<br />
add to dishes. Also dominant in the cuisine<br />
are fresh vegetables such as eggplant,<br />
tomatoes, legumes, okra, artichokes and<br />
several greens – roasted, grilled, sautéed,<br />
baked or simply in salads.<br />
The rough terrains aren’t ideal for herding<br />
cattle, meat is restricted to smaller animals<br />
like goat and chicken, and as a result,<br />
meat is sparingly used, and when it is, it’s<br />
usually grilled. The main source of yogurt<br />
and cheese is milk from goats and sheep.<br />
Seafood serves as the primary source of<br />
protein owing to proximity to the sea and<br />
it features in several dishes. Given that<br />
the climate here is viable for herbaceous<br />
plants, herbs play a key role in enhancing<br />
the flavors of the cuisine. The likes of<br />
oregano, basil, thyme, parsley, tarragon,<br />
cilantro, rosemary, dill, mint, and saffron are<br />
main players in this field.<br />
When we talk about Eastern Mediterranean<br />
cuisine, it includes Middle Eastern culinary<br />
traditions from Turkey, Greece, Lebanon,<br />
Israel, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt. Yogurt,<br />
feta, halloumi, and labneh are prominent in<br />
the cuisine. While cheese can be cooked or<br />
raw, yogurt is used in various sauces or as a<br />
condiment. Grains assume the form of rice<br />
or flatbreads like pita and lavash. Meats –<br />
lamb, poultry, mutton, and goat – are used<br />
as protein sources while chickpeas act as a<br />
meat substitute.<br />
In the form of skewered and slow-grilled<br />
chunks of meats, these countries have<br />
gifted us with a plethora of juicy and<br />
mouth-watering kebab dishes such as<br />
doner kebabs, gyros, and shawarmas.<br />
Other characteristic dishes include<br />
tabbouleh, the evergreen hummus, and<br />
the oh so delicious baba ganoush. There’s<br />
really a host of popular dishes from these<br />
parts that also include moussaka, tzatziki,<br />
and Turkish borek.<br />
Enjoy some tasty kibbeh or maybe some<br />
kofta and rice pilaf from Lebanon or some<br />
falafel or shakshuka from Israel. Then there’s<br />
the Greek souvlaki and spanakopita which<br />
will leave you licking your fingers. From<br />
the Turkish lands, we have the delightfully<br />
sweet baklava and spicy korma. While their<br />
grilled meat dishes unite them, they also<br />
distinguishes them; they take the form of<br />
doner kebab in Turkey, gyro-roll in Greece<br />
and shawarma in the Levantine countries.<br />
Speaking about Southern European<br />
(or Northern Mediterranean) cuisine, it<br />
includes dishes from the likes of Italy,<br />
South of France and Spain. The specific<br />
ingredients and cooking techniques from<br />
these parts distinguish it not only from<br />
other Mediterranean countries but the<br />
rest of Europe too. Wine is a prominent<br />
<strong>com</strong>ponent of dining in the Southern parts<br />
of Europe – both as a flavor enhancer and<br />
26 27
individually. In <strong>com</strong>parison to the other<br />
Mediterranean countries, they prefer using<br />
pork over other meats.<br />
Anchovies, mustard, capers, tomatoes,<br />
garlic and pine nuts, in various<br />
<strong>com</strong>binations, are used to flavor the<br />
dishes. Amongst the three countries too,<br />
the dishes vary greatly. The Italians would<br />
have us gorge on Sicilian and Neapolitan<br />
pizzas, risottos and pasta. Just the thought<br />
of a wood fire baked thin crust topped with<br />
fresh tomatoes, basil and buffalo mozzarella<br />
leaves the best of us salivating. Or maybe<br />
you’d rather fancy some fettuccine alfredo<br />
or some Bolognese spaghetti?<br />
The French woo you with their numerous<br />
bread and pastries – baguettes to<br />
croissants, crème brûlées to fruity tarts.<br />
Then there are dishes like ratatouille, beef<br />
bourguignon, and bouillabaisse. And let’s<br />
not get started on their desserts! French<br />
food will have you falling in love all over<br />
again. In sharp contrast to the delicate fine<br />
dining of France and Italy, Spanish cuisine<br />
packs strong punches of rustic flavors.<br />
Popular Spanish dishes include the likes of<br />
tapas, paella, gazpacho, and empanadas.<br />
Then, of course, there are the North African<br />
(or Southern Mediterranean) cuisines of<br />
Morocco, Algeria, and Libya. Distinguished<br />
by their strong use of spices like cumin,<br />
coriander, paprika, saffron, cinnamon, and<br />
cloves. Dry fruits like dates, apricots, and<br />
raisins also feature heavily in a lot of dishes.<br />
Their stews and sauces are known for<br />
having a characteristic heat and spiciness<br />
to them.<br />
Lamb, mutton and goat meat is used<br />
predominantly as a protein while beef<br />
and chicken also make numerous culinary<br />
appearances. Aromatic, hearty and wellbalanced,<br />
the Moroccan tagine, a slowcooked<br />
meat stew along with a sauce is<br />
the most recognized North African dish<br />
there is. Also, very popular is couscous, a<br />
steamed wheat semolina dish served with<br />
a stew.<br />
Furthermore, the cuisine is increasingly<br />
appealing to health and diet conscious<br />
people as it’s considered one of the<br />
healthiest cuisines in the world owing to its<br />
focus on using fresh fruits, vegetables, and<br />
herbs. Researchers have noted that people<br />
who follow a Mediterranean diet are<br />
generally healthier than others and at lower<br />
risks of suffering from several diseases. It<br />
also helps with weight loss, prevents heart<br />
attacks, diabetes and strokes.<br />
At the heart of Mediterranean cuisine is the<br />
<strong>com</strong>bination of all these delectable dishes<br />
and the multiple cooking techniques<br />
specific to the individual regions. This<br />
is what makes the Mediterranean food<br />
unique and palatable. And as a bonus,<br />
they’re just as good for your health as they<br />
are tasty to gorge on!<br />
28 29
HISTORY OF HUMMUS<br />
Hummus is that healthy and delicious dip that pairs<br />
well with just about anything. The word ‘hummus’<br />
itself means “chickpea” in Arabic. Essentially, it’s a<br />
Levantine Arab dip or spread made from cooked<br />
chickpeas which are mashed and blended with<br />
sesame seed paste, lemon juice, garlic, and salt;<br />
with a drizzle of olive oil mixed into the fold as well.<br />
But where does this universally liked omnipotent<br />
(culinarily) <strong>com</strong>e from and how did it be<strong>com</strong>e a<br />
staple of Mediterranean cuisine?<br />
The debate over its origin is probably<br />
as old as hummus itself! The Greeks,<br />
Arabs and even Israelis have staked their<br />
claim to the dip’s creation. Unfortunately,<br />
it’s nigh impossible to figure out who’s right<br />
because no one knows for sure. It has been<br />
around for so long, in so many cultures,<br />
made from several different recipes, that its<br />
exact origin is lost in antiquity.<br />
Despite the ambiguity over the origins of<br />
the spread, what we know for certain is that<br />
chickpeas, the main ingredient, have been<br />
cultivated since the ancient Mediterranean<br />
and Middle Eastern eras. Add to that the<br />
trade relations between the two regions<br />
and you realize several recipes would have<br />
been exchanged too. This could have been<br />
the case with hummus too!<br />
The earliest known recipe for hummus<br />
can be traced back to some cookbooks<br />
written in Cairo all the way back in the 13 th<br />
century. Unlike the hummus we’re used<br />
to savouring today, this recipe made use<br />
of a cold puree of chickpeas with pickled<br />
lemons, vinegar, spices, herbs, and oil.<br />
Another exceptionally old recipe that is<br />
more akin to the hummus of today makes<br />
use of tahini and nuts in the fold as well.<br />
This spread would then be rolled out<br />
and left overnight, presumably to add a<br />
different texture.<br />
Medieval cookbooks are far from<br />
<strong>com</strong>prehensive and with the slow means<br />
of transport and lack of advanced<br />
<strong>com</strong>munication systems, it was an<br />
impossible task to gather all the hummus<br />
recipes from the region. Those were the<br />
times when regional food varied incredibly,<br />
and recipes relied on the availability and<br />
affordability of ingredients.<br />
Hummus bi tahini as we know and love<br />
today very well could have existed all<br />
those centuries ago, but the recipe was<br />
never written down. For all, we know it<br />
could have been created, forgotten and<br />
then reinvented! One look at how old its<br />
ingredients are, and you realize hummus<br />
has an unwritten history we shall never be<br />
able to <strong>com</strong>prehend.<br />
While some ingredients like lemon and<br />
garlic may have made their way to these<br />
parts much later, thanks to trade, chickpeas<br />
and sesame seeds (for tahini) had been<br />
around for a few hundred centuries. Some<br />
archaeological digs suggest chickpeas<br />
predate pottery and even writing!<br />
The implication is that while hummus<br />
may have been around for aeons, but<br />
hummus bi tahini (the version popular<br />
today) is unlikely to have been cooked<br />
up till ingredients like lemon and garlic<br />
arrived in these parts.<br />
Goes without saying, the many regions<br />
in the Mediterranean area have their<br />
own different versions of the popular<br />
spread. The tale of hummus could very<br />
well be one of a culinary crossover. It’s<br />
noteworthy that despite murky origins<br />
and massive cultural shifts, hummus has<br />
not only stood the test of time, it has<br />
thrived.<br />
To this day, it remains similar to the<br />
spread people from centuries ago would<br />
recognize as a delicious treat. So, the<br />
next time you dip some warm pita bread<br />
in a bowl of fresh hummus, recognize<br />
that you’re slipping back through the<br />
sands of time to savour the Stone Age.<br />
30 31
EXOTIC MEAT IN<br />
SOUTHERN AFRICA<br />
Meat aficionados who seek out exotic flavours<br />
and game will tell you that meat is a man’s real<br />
best friend. And for those people, South Africa<br />
is a paradise offering some of the most exclusive<br />
meats, cooked to perfection, at affordable prices.<br />
Not just your typical chicken, pork, and beef mind<br />
you, think all the different animals you’d see from a<br />
safari vehicle!<br />
If you belong to that niche group of<br />
people who have a “try anything once”<br />
approach when it <strong>com</strong>es to food, you’re<br />
in for a gala time in South Africa. That’s<br />
essentially the South African attitude, as<br />
a diet of chicken, beef and pork are often<br />
supplemented by kudu, springbok and<br />
ostrich!<br />
The country is a major supplier of meat and<br />
is known for its superior quality cuts. The<br />
South African diet, then, clearly revolves<br />
around meat which is <strong>com</strong>plemented by<br />
their love for hunting. It’s a major industry<br />
here, one that injects much money into<br />
rural areas. Appreciably, it’s extremely rare<br />
to find endangered animals on menus<br />
here, and when they are, rest assured the<br />
food industry takes special effort to ensure<br />
that they are sourced responsibly.<br />
With a plethora of exotic animals to see and<br />
savour, South Africa persuades travellers<br />
to entertain their adventurous side. From<br />
warthogs to giraffe, game meats can be<br />
healthy as well as delicious. The meat is<br />
supposed to be leaner and healthier than<br />
your typical beef cuts. So, let’s take a look<br />
at some exotic (sometimes shocking) meat<br />
and places you might enjoy their flavours.<br />
One bite into an ostrich burger and you’ll<br />
forget your favourite beef burger joint. A<br />
versatile red meat, it sports half the fat you<br />
get on chicken and it makes for appetizing<br />
steaks, burgers, and more. Additionally,<br />
ostrich eggs are considerably bigger and<br />
richer in flavour than the typical chicken<br />
egg. This is a bird popular across the<br />
country.<br />
There are numerous ostrich farms in<br />
Oudtshoorn in the southern regions. The<br />
Buffelsdrift Game Lodge, situated just<br />
outside Oudtshoorn, is renowned for its<br />
particularly succulent ostrich carpaccio.<br />
The flame-grilled ostrich fillet served here<br />
is another popular dish. Its texture is akin to<br />
a sirloin steak and tastes utterly delicious.<br />
Then there’s the springbok, a kind of<br />
gazelle that frolic across the plains in<br />
Africa. Farmers often prefer to raise<br />
springbok to lamb as they eat less grass in<br />
<strong>com</strong>parison. It tastes a lot like venison and<br />
is predominantly served as a steak. The<br />
best place to sample this exquisite meat<br />
would be the 5 Ryneveld Restaurant in the<br />
Stellenbosch wine region.<br />
Chef Addington Murray, with his experience<br />
of working in several 5-star hotels in<br />
Zimbabwe and South Africa, serves up a<br />
particularly delectable dish. The meat is<br />
well seasoned and grilled to perfection over<br />
an open flame which helps the springbok<br />
flavour to shine. Ac<strong>com</strong>panying that is a<br />
side of roasted potatoes and vegetables<br />
with a balsamic reduction.<br />
Not the best-looking animal, the warthog<br />
makes for a surprisingly scrumptious meal.<br />
It’s like pork in flavour and texture and<br />
there’s no better place than the Savoy<br />
Cabbage restaurant in Cape Town to try<br />
some. A fine-dining establishment, their<br />
Fennel-Dusted Warthog Loin is tantalizing,<br />
to say the least. Served with turnip and<br />
potato mash, onion marmalade, and fig<br />
syrup, it’s definitely worth a try.<br />
Next up on this tasting adventure is the<br />
kudu, an African antelope. Some people<br />
who’ve had the pleasure of sampling it,<br />
claim it’s the best tasting game meat in the<br />
world! A lean meat, it’s usually served either<br />
as a steak or as biltong, in cured form.<br />
Unlike jerky, it’s traditionally marinated in<br />
vinegar and spices to add an extra zing to<br />
it.<br />
Try some of Richard Bosman’s exceptional<br />
kudu biltong at the Earth Fair Market in<br />
Cape Town. The meat is dark red in colour<br />
and tastes extremely good even on its own.<br />
Biltong is quite popular in South Africa<br />
and several eateries have taken to making<br />
biltong using a variety of ingredients.<br />
Given that they are endangered, giraffes<br />
are extremely rare on menus in South<br />
Africa. With an objective to treat the animal<br />
responsibly, restaurants obtain giraffe<br />
meat through proper culling programs.<br />
This involves the removal of animals from<br />
overpopulated areas, typically game<br />
reserves.<br />
The Carnivore Restaurant in Muldersdrift,<br />
near Johannesburg, is renowned for the<br />
wide variety of bushmeat served here.<br />
They tenderize and marinate the giraffe<br />
meat before roasting the steaks on Massai<br />
swords on open flames. Given its sinewy<br />
nature, the meat is known to be chewy and<br />
tough but delicious.<br />
The wildebeest or gnu is yet another<br />
exotic meat served in South Africa. Heavy<br />
creatures, they are famous for their annual<br />
migration from the Serengeti to the Masai<br />
32 33
Mara. Usually, the loin or shank cuts of the<br />
animal are used for preparing delicious<br />
meals that toy with your taste buds.<br />
The acclaimed Aubergine Restaurant in<br />
Cape Town is a great place to try some<br />
wildebeest.<br />
Chef Harald cooks a mean seared<br />
wildebeest with a coriander and pepper<br />
crust. The meat is marinated in juniper<br />
berry dust, gin, and orange rinds before<br />
being seared to caramelize the loin. It’s<br />
then baked to a medium rare and served<br />
with dried fruits. It is usually not too gamey<br />
and goes well with truffles.<br />
The most dangerous animal on this list, the<br />
crocodile, is a low fat, slightly bland white<br />
meat that has a fishy chicken taste to it.<br />
Typically, it’s served in pieces, but some<br />
restaurants also serve a tail fillet. A popular<br />
eatery to try some crocodile is the Mama<br />
Africa Restaurant and Bar in Cape Town.<br />
They serve delightful crocodile kebabs that<br />
are grilled with red and green peppers,<br />
served with rice and peanut satay.<br />
While two species of the zebra are<br />
endangered, plain zebras are <strong>com</strong>mon in<br />
South Africa and can be found on some<br />
menus. Zebra meat is supposed to be very<br />
tender like beef, only sweeter. The Savoy<br />
Cabbage has been known to serve zebra<br />
as an appetizer in the past. Chef Pankhurst<br />
had created a dish <strong>com</strong>prising sugarcured<br />
zebra served with soba noodles,<br />
pineapples and habanero salsa.<br />
Not an exotic meat but a rare experience<br />
worth having, you must try and attend a<br />
braaing. Enjoyed in many cultures, it’s a<br />
social event, a cookout of sorts, where<br />
people get together and grill meat on<br />
an open fire. It’s an event that focuses on<br />
good food and quality meat. If you fancy<br />
yourself as a genuine meat lover, it’s worth<br />
travelling to South Africa to attend one.<br />
You cannot truly experience a culture and<br />
empathize with it till you’ve tried its food.<br />
And South Africa will surely prove to be one<br />
of the toughest places to do that given its<br />
fondness for exotic meats. But if you think<br />
you have it in you to get a holistic enriching<br />
experience, then know this – you’ll <strong>com</strong>e<br />
out feeling a deeper connection with this<br />
beautiful country!<br />
34 35
THE 8 CUISINES<br />
OF CHINA<br />
A few millennia of history, great imperial dynasties,<br />
thriving arts and impressive technology, reasons<br />
enough for China to be a must on every traveler’s<br />
places to visit list. A vast and extremely diverse<br />
country, it boasts just as rich and diverse a culture<br />
which has evolved plentiful over the years. And<br />
nothing depicts the country’s varied cultures it’s<br />
many regional cuisines.<br />
It’s no surprise then that a country so<br />
vast and dynamic has a culinary scene<br />
that is just as <strong>com</strong>plex as it’s history and<br />
scenery. This translates into an astonishing<br />
range of ingredients, cooking methods,<br />
delicacies, and eating habits, all of which<br />
fall under the massive umbrella that is<br />
Chinese cuisine. Although the list is quite<br />
extensive, there are eight regional cuisines<br />
that stand out more than others – Sichuan,<br />
Hunan, Cantonese, Fujian, Anhui, Jiangsu,<br />
Shandong, and, Zhejiang.<br />
Formally called 中 国 八 大 菜 系 (zhōng<br />
guó bā dà cài xì), they have their unique<br />
attributes due to geographical and cultural<br />
influences, and the different ingredients<br />
available. While rice is a staple in the<br />
southern parts, the northern parts feature<br />
dumplings and noodles more heavily. So,<br />
while for first-timers a meal in China maybe<br />
unrecognizable, curious foodies will be<br />
rewarded with an extensive, <strong>com</strong>plex and<br />
diverse menu of exquisite delicacies.<br />
First, we’ll sample some Cantonese dishes<br />
which originates from the Guangdong<br />
province (around Hong Kong) and is the<br />
most popular style of Chinese food served<br />
around the world. They say Cantonese<br />
food includes anything that can walk,<br />
crawl, swim or fly. But don’t let this turn you<br />
from the food as Cantonese cuisine as it’s<br />
revered for its emphasis on bringing out<br />
pure flavors.<br />
Known for its fresh, mild and slightly<br />
sweet flavors, it makes use of rare<br />
ingredients cooked in a refined manner.<br />
All about subtlety, dishes rarely use<br />
strong overpowering seasonings. Instead,<br />
unconventional cooking methods like salt<br />
roasting, steaming with wine and braising<br />
are used to draw out an ingredient’s<br />
natural flavors. The likes of rice wine, dried<br />
tangerine peels, licorice roots, oyster and<br />
fish sauces, and clam oils are used to add<br />
flavor to the dishes.<br />
Classic Cantonese dishes include dim<br />
sums, roast pork buns, egg tart custards,<br />
wontons and spring rolls. While the bravehearted<br />
souls may want to try some braised<br />
snake porridge made from the rare meat of<br />
a cobra, Grimalkin, and pullet. Or perhaps<br />
sample some chrysanthemum fish which<br />
the most skilled chefs’ adept at cutting,<br />
shape like the chrysanthemum flower.<br />
The next course on this gourmet journey<br />
include dishes from the much-loved<br />
Sichuan style of cooking. Known for its<br />
brazen flavors, tongue-tingling peppers,<br />
and sweat-inducing spiciness. It would be<br />
foolish, though, to judge this cuisine based<br />
on its heat alone because of the wide<br />
range of flavors it has. There’s saying about<br />
the variety of Sichuan cuisine and it goes<br />
something like ‘one dish with one flavor<br />
and one hundred dishes with one hundred<br />
flavors.’<br />
It’s characterized by the pungent<br />
seasonings of the ‘Three Peppers’ (pepper,<br />
hot pepper and Chinese prickly ash), the<br />
‘Three Aromas’ (given by shallots, ginger<br />
and garlic), the ‘Seven Tastes’ (being sweet,<br />
sour, spicy, tingling, piquant, salty and<br />
bitter) and lastly the ‘Eight flavors’ (of sour<br />
with spice, pepper-tingling, fish-flavored,<br />
odd flavor, ginger sauce, red spicy oil and<br />
home cooking). Add all of that together<br />
and you get the mouth-numbing sensation<br />
Sichuan food is known for.<br />
Popular dishes include the universally<br />
loved kung pao chicken, hot pot, dan dan<br />
noodles and lamp shadow beef. However,<br />
if there’s one dish that all meat and spice<br />
lovers must try then it’s mapo tofu – tofu<br />
sautéed with minced pork, beans, and chili.<br />
One bite in, it will burn you from the inside,<br />
and yet it’s so delicious you’ll find yourself<br />
inexplicably digging into your bowl till<br />
there’s nothing left.<br />
In contrast to the brash flavors of Sichuan,<br />
we have the aromatic, elegant and aesthetic<br />
Jiangsu cuisine. It was originally catered<br />
to officials and upper-class citizens, it’s a<br />
gourmet and healthy cuisine with light and<br />
sweet flavors. Featuring fish and seasonal<br />
vegetables heavily, it’s also known for the<br />
elegant and aesthetic way the dishes are<br />
plated up.<br />
An absolute must try is the three sets of<br />
ducks – an interlinked dish with pigeon<br />
stuffed inside a wild duck which is stuffed<br />
inside a fowl duck. This is then stewed<br />
resulting in a tender fowl duck, crispy wild<br />
duck, and delicate pigeon. Other exquisite<br />
dishes include the watermelon chicken and<br />
sweet and sour mandarin fish. An example<br />
of their unique presentation style would<br />
be the stir-fried eel which is served as it<br />
crackles on the plate getting crispy while<br />
giving out a tantalizing aroma.<br />
36 37
The fourth course on this Pan-China meal<br />
tasting are the gastronomical delights of<br />
the Zhejiang cuisine. Known as the ‘Land of<br />
milk and honey’, Zhejiang is a brings to the<br />
table light, fresh flavors of the sea. Another<br />
refined cuisine, it makes use of simple and<br />
easy prep and cooking techniques. The<br />
food itself is mildly seasoned and a bit on<br />
the salty side.<br />
As ac<strong>com</strong>paniments, the dishes are served<br />
with tender bamboo shoots and stir-fried<br />
fresh vegetables. With a great balance<br />
of flavors, it’s neither too sweet or sour,<br />
nor too spicy or greasy. Like the Jiangsu<br />
cuisine, this too has a refined artistic side<br />
to it. Try some delicious dongpo pork or<br />
shelled shrimp in Longjing tea. For desserts<br />
enjoy some sweet Ningbo rice balls, often<br />
served at celebrations and festivals.<br />
We move on now to one the oldest cuisines<br />
of China – Fujian. It revolves around<br />
precise cutting techniques, alternative<br />
soups, special seasonings and superb<br />
cooking which focus on the umami of the<br />
ingredients. It involves a very delicate style<br />
of cooking which emphasizes the light<br />
but deep tastes of seafood and mountain<br />
vegetables.<br />
Commonly used ingredients range<br />
from fresh fish and shrimp to herbs and<br />
vegetables foraged from the forests with a<br />
dash of orange juice for some <strong>com</strong>plexity.<br />
It’s well-known for its well-balanced soups,<br />
stews, and stir-fries. If you’re feeling a<br />
bit adventurous, savor the rich flavors of<br />
‘Buddha jumps over the wall’, a poultry and<br />
seafood soup. Dig into the tender braised<br />
Fujian red wine chicken or the famous Fried<br />
Xi Shi tongue.<br />
If the spicy Sichuan cuisine did not whet<br />
your craving for heat, you’re in for a treat<br />
with Hunan food. In contrast to the sharp<br />
heat of the Sichuan peppercorns, Hunan<br />
cuisine relies on the dry heat of the chilis<br />
from the region. This style of cooking<br />
stresses the use of oil, dense colors and<br />
methods that result in crispy, soft and<br />
tender dishes.<br />
The Hunanese are masters of fermentation<br />
and are known for their spicy pickled<br />
vegetables, served as ac<strong>com</strong>paniments.<br />
Along with the heated punches the dishes<br />
pack, they have a certain fresh aroma that<br />
tickles your olfactory senses. Expect the<br />
dishes to be colorful and star seasonal<br />
ingredients, with a sourness and saltiness<br />
to them.<br />
Sink your teeth into dishes like Dong’an<br />
Chicken, chopped pepper fish head,<br />
and Mao’s braised pork belly. Another<br />
experience to be had when sampling this<br />
cuisine is the traditional hot pot experience.<br />
They say Sichuan people aren’t afraid of<br />
spicy food, no degree of heat frightens<br />
Hunan people, while people from Guizhou<br />
are afraid of food that’s not spicy.<br />
The penultimate cuisine on this culinary<br />
journey across China will take you the<br />
Shandong Province known for its Anhui<br />
Cuisine. Given its long coast, fresh river fish<br />
and seafood reign supreme when it <strong>com</strong>es<br />
to local culinary delights. Its considered to<br />
be a healthy and visually interesting cuisine<br />
with simple and rustic flavors.<br />
One of the earliest regions to be civilized, it<br />
was a cultural hub, inspiring and influencing<br />
the cooking styles of the regions around<br />
it. Albeit the region boasts rustic, hearty<br />
mountain peasant food, but it would be<br />
foolish to discredit the cuisine. It represents<br />
a great Chinese culinary tradition that has<br />
refined its dishes to pack tons of nutrition<br />
and flavor.<br />
The ingredients menu heavily features the<br />
38 39
local mountain and lake flora and fauna<br />
like wild ferns, berries, tea leaves, bamboo<br />
shoots, wild game, and, fresh-water fish.<br />
A special focus is given to the dish’s color,<br />
presentation, taste, and temperature. The<br />
flavors reflect the ingredient’s earthiness,<br />
using light spices and braising in brown<br />
sauce.<br />
Salted and cured meats and mushrooms<br />
along with fresh bamboo are typically<br />
served with any meal. Golden and<br />
tantalizing, the Fuliji grilled chicken is a<br />
must have, as the tender meat leaves you<br />
with a tingling sensation. If seafood it’s the<br />
seafood you wish to try, enjoy a specialty<br />
dish that pairs braised Mati turtle with ham.<br />
A particularly delightful dish, its said to<br />
have inspired poets.<br />
The final course on this gastronomic<br />
tasting is the Shandong cuisine, one of the<br />
earliest cuisines of China that dates to 200<br />
BC. Another predominantly seafood-based<br />
cuisine, it’s known for its nutritional value,<br />
crispy flair, and, sweet and salty taste. Often<br />
termed as the Imperial cuisine, it made its<br />
way into the royal kitchens of Beijing.<br />
When navigating Shandong menus, you’ll<br />
often find deep-fried or stir-fried seafood<br />
that’s crispy on the outside but soft on<br />
the inside. The traditional method behind<br />
these foods involves three key steps – first<br />
stewing, then frying and finally baking<br />
them. They also utilize a good variety<br />
of grains and wheat in their meals that<br />
take the ultimate form of steamed buns,<br />
dumplings or pancakes. While several<br />
vegetables are also used, roasted peanuts<br />
are often added as a topping to add some<br />
crunch to the dishes.<br />
Typical dishes include braised abalone,<br />
sweet and sour carp, and a variety of<br />
different soups. And how can one leave<br />
out two of their most famous and widely<br />
popular dishes? There’s the slowly roasted<br />
fowl dish, Peking duck, that’s made a<br />
permanent place for itself on restaurant<br />
menus everywhere. And of course, mushu<br />
pork – eggs, wood-ear mushrooms and<br />
succulent shredded pork all wrapped up in<br />
a paper-thin crepe.<br />
The star dish, though, is ‘Eight Immortals<br />
Crossing Sea teasing Arhats’ – served as<br />
an appetizer at feasts. A sophisticated dish<br />
makes use of eight key ingredients: sea<br />
pumpkin, fin, asparagus, abalone, ham,<br />
and prawns. Each of these ingredients is<br />
symbolic of one of the eight immortals<br />
while the Arhats (or Buddhist saints) are<br />
represented by a chicken breast. The stock<br />
itself is flavored using the fish’s swimming<br />
bladder and bones.<br />
These eight cuisines are representative of<br />
about only a fourth of the culinary heritage<br />
of a vast country. But within the vastness<br />
of ingredients, spices, and, cooking<br />
techniques used are these eight cooking<br />
styles. Cuisines that can be considered<br />
great, supported by centuries of history,<br />
skilled chefs, and an astonishing number of<br />
delectable dishes.<br />
40 41
FOOD IN PENANG<br />
Penang is an exciting city, brimming with diversity.<br />
The city is teeming with a mix of locals, expats, and<br />
travellers <strong>com</strong>ing through Malaysia or Singapore.<br />
If Kuala Lumpur is the serious, ‘businessy’ elder<br />
brother, then Penang is it’s hustling, crude cousin.<br />
Cliched as it may sound, Penang is a diamond in<br />
the rough.<br />
The city was founded as a trading<br />
post by Captain Francis Light of<br />
the East India Company in 1786. There’s<br />
a bit of romanticism involved with its<br />
history which adds a certain level of charm<br />
and appeals to the city. The captain was<br />
intended to take Thailand as a trading<br />
port, but one love affair later, the captain<br />
eloped to Penang and the rest, as they<br />
say, is history.<br />
One case of accidental British colonialism<br />
later, the city grew into a hub of diverse<br />
culture. The influences of which can<br />
be found deeply ingrained in the city’s<br />
cuisine. From street food stalls to the top<br />
hotels, the city serves up gastronomical<br />
delights like no other. The food you’ll get<br />
here can be broadly classified into four<br />
kinds – Chinese, Peranakan, Indian and<br />
Malay.<br />
If you’re craving a traditional Malay dish,<br />
look no further than the Mermaid Cafe.<br />
Try their signature dish- Ikan Bakar. They<br />
marinate a fish of your choice in delicious<br />
spice paste <strong>com</strong>prised of sambal, turmeric<br />
and other herbs and spices. This is then<br />
wrapped in banana leaves and grilled to<br />
perfection. Slightly crispy and imbued with<br />
a smoky flavor, the fish packs a flavourful<br />
punch.<br />
When it <strong>com</strong>es to Indian food, try some<br />
appoms while you stroll down the street.<br />
A crepe-like dish, it has crisp outer edges<br />
and creamy egg center. The Prawn Malai<br />
Curry is another popular Indian dish you<br />
should feast on. A mouthwatering sloppy<br />
dish of cashews, coconut milk sauce, and<br />
shrimp; the Karaikudi Restaurant serves<br />
up the best Prawn Malai Curry in Penang.<br />
Try the Popiah, at Stall 17 of the Padang<br />
Brown Hawker Centre. A Peranakan dish,<br />
it’s kind of spring roll made from porous<br />
crepes that contain soybean curd, eggs,<br />
vegetable stew and Chinese lettuce.<br />
Dipped in chili sauce and black sauce, the<br />
rolls make for a crispy and saucy delight.<br />
Another Peranakan delicacy, the Asam<br />
Laksa is one of Penang’s crown jewels.<br />
Essentially a spicy noodle soup, this<br />
dish will leave you craving for more. The<br />
thin broth is made by stewing poached<br />
mackerel, tamarind, lemongrass, chillies<br />
and shrimp paste. Served with a huge<br />
helping of rice vermicelli and other<br />
toppings, Ayer Itam Pasar is said to serve<br />
the best Asam Laksa in the entire world.<br />
Finally, we <strong>com</strong>e to the Chinese specialties<br />
that are famously abundant. Savor some<br />
Lor Bak, if deep fried is your thing; it<br />
<strong>com</strong>prises various meats, seafood, tofu<br />
and vegetables that are well seasoned,<br />
rolled in bean curd skin and then fried.<br />
Served with a variety of sauces, stop by<br />
the Kheng Pin Cafe to try some.<br />
If it’s noodle dishes you’re interested in,<br />
look no further than Chee Cheong Fun at<br />
the Seow Fong Lye Cafe. The latter is a flat<br />
rice noodle dish served with prawn paste,<br />
chilli sauce, and a dark red sweet sauce.<br />
Another noteworthy dish is Oh Chien –<br />
an omelette dish served with oysters. A<br />
greasy delight, try some at the Kedai Kopi<br />
Seng Thor.<br />
End this amazing gastronomical journey<br />
with a dessert like no other- the Cendol.<br />
Coconut milk, jelly noodles, shaved ice<br />
cream and palm sugar; it’s perfect for<br />
everyone. A healthy and nutritious dish<br />
that’s not too sweet. Teo Chew Cendol is<br />
the best place in Penang for some Cendol.<br />
Penang is one of the world’s top<br />
gastronomical destinations. The major<br />
attraction, of course, is the plethora of<br />
street food on offer. Penang is a haven for<br />
foodies, so pack your bags and head out<br />
for an amazing culinary journey.<br />
42 43
SEAFOOD IN AUSTRALIA<br />
From fly-fishing for trout in the southern forests<br />
of western Australia to shucking fresh oysters in<br />
Sydney or spearfishing for barramundi in Arnhem<br />
Land, Australia is heaven for seafood lovers.<br />
Coming from a variety of sources, it is a significant<br />
part of the Australian diet.<br />
Despite having the third largest<br />
fishing zone in the world, Australia<br />
imports a large chunk of seafood as well.<br />
The clean oceans allow for bountiful access<br />
to a plethora of sea creatures. The highquality<br />
and exquisite range of sea produce<br />
have heavily influenced Australian cuisine.<br />
With over 600 varieties of marine and<br />
freshwater species found here, the sky’s<br />
the limit when it <strong>com</strong>es to the delicacies<br />
on offer.<br />
In fact, such is the diversity that when<br />
we talk about seafood delicacies from<br />
Australia, it’s best if we do so location wise;<br />
looking at the unique catches and specialty<br />
dishes that some of the major regions in<br />
Australia are famous for. Best grab your<br />
fishing gear, pack your cookware and don’t<br />
forget your taste buds as we explore all the<br />
seafood Australia has to offer.<br />
We begin our journey in the New South<br />
Wales, a state famous for the many gourmet<br />
foods and wine trails present here. Sydney,<br />
being a harbor city, sees fresh fish as a<br />
staple in most menus. Aspiring cooks can<br />
even learn how to prepare dishes at the<br />
many seafood cooking classes in the city,<br />
taught by renowned chefs.<br />
While here, try the Sydney rock oysters,<br />
touted as the best oysters in the world.<br />
Other delicacies to try include the<br />
barramundi and snapper served around<br />
Darling Harbor and the Rock restaurants.<br />
The outstanding selection also includes<br />
rock lobsters, tuna prawns, mulloway, mud<br />
crabs, and squid.<br />
Next up on the tour is the capital territory<br />
of Canberra. Stop by the Maestral<br />
Seafood Restaurant for some Croatian<br />
and Mediterranean style grilled octopus.<br />
Alternatively, you can visit the popular<br />
Fyshwick Fresh Food Markets for some<br />
fresh catch of the day – be it shucked<br />
pacific oysters or the local crustaceans.<br />
Visit the Ottoman while the parliament is<br />
sitting, and you’ll be treated to a mouthwatering<br />
degustation menu. Clarence<br />
River prawns, calamari from Port Phillip<br />
or south coast garfish, chef Kaya will have<br />
you swooning over what is one of the best<br />
seafood feasts in the country.<br />
We travel now to the Northern Territory,<br />
famous for its wild barramundi. If you fancy<br />
your chances, catch your own longtail tuna,<br />
Spanish mackerel or barramundi on the far<br />
north coast of Australia. Then cook it afresh<br />
at the Barramundi Lodge in Arnhem Land.<br />
Moreover, you can pick up local ingredients<br />
like mussels and mud crabs at the Darwin<br />
Fish Market. They even have cooking<br />
classes to teach you how to best prepare<br />
your choice of seafood. Enjoy a unique fine<br />
dining experience at the Char Restaurant<br />
as they bring to your platter a modern<br />
interpretation of traditional Australian<br />
seafood dishes.<br />
Head on out to western Australia for some<br />
of the finest freshwater fish you’ll ever have.<br />
As odd as it is to talk about a steakhouse<br />
when discussing seafood, the Rockpool<br />
Bar & Grill in Perth serves up tantalizing<br />
grilled coral trout. Alternatively, you can<br />
tuck into some classic fish and chips at the<br />
Fishing Boat Harbor.<br />
The west boasts numerous spots for<br />
freshwater fishing, especially the southern<br />
forests. For an enchanted and fun-filled<br />
morning, try your hand at collecting<br />
crustaceans from craypots on the<br />
Coral Coast, an experience catered by<br />
Reefwalker Charters. Western Australia<br />
offers scrumptious seafood platters and<br />
stunning waterfront views.<br />
South Australia offers an epicurean<br />
adventure, as you travel along its stunning<br />
coastline. The King George whiting caught<br />
off Kangaroo Island, the Port Lincoln<br />
bluefin, and blue swimmer crabs are very<br />
popular in these parts. Challenge yourself<br />
at the Port Lincoln Hotel with an oyster<br />
weighing one kilogram or try famous king<br />
prawns and seafood chowder in Adelaide.<br />
Better yet, go on an amazing seafood trail<br />
in the Eyre Peninsula from the Whyalla<br />
to Streaky Bay. The peninsula boasts the<br />
freshest seafood in the country. Cage<br />
diving with great white sharks or swimming<br />
with sea lions, or seafood safaris, the<br />
peninsula is at the forefront of Australia’s<br />
seafood scene.<br />
Additionally, you can enjoy a tour of the<br />
world-renowned oyster farms at Coffin Bay.<br />
This includes a lesson in shucking them as<br />
well enjoying the delicious treat. While in<br />
Streaky Bay, you can join the dolphins and<br />
catch your own meal while on a cruise. Get<br />
44 45
a behind the scenes tour of the seafood<br />
industry with the Fresh Fish Place or go<br />
fishing for a King George whiting with the<br />
Triple Bay Charters, both in Port Lincoln.<br />
Onwards to Tasmania, the land acclaimed<br />
for its lobsters, octopus, pacific oysters and<br />
abalone. What better way to enjoy all that<br />
Tasmania has to offer than their famous<br />
Seafood Seduction Cruise. A day’s worth<br />
of activities on Hobart’s lively waterfront,<br />
amongst the boats moored at Constitution<br />
Rock.<br />
Devour fresh rock lobsters, sea urchins, and<br />
abalones as you make your way down the<br />
Derwent River. The Huon valley brings to<br />
you fine wines along with some spectacular<br />
trout fishing. Visit the Drunken Admiral,<br />
arguably the best restaurant in Tasmania<br />
as they serve up divine creations like the<br />
Hotrock Salmon and Ocean Trout Plate.<br />
Queensland’s up next on this seafood<br />
adventure down south. Perfectly suited<br />
for saltwater barramundi, tiger and Crystal<br />
Bay prawns are other delicious catches<br />
found in abundance. You’ll also find the<br />
much sought-after Balmain and Moreton<br />
Bay bugs here along with spanner, blue<br />
swimmer, and mud crabs.<br />
Give spearfishing a go as you try to catch<br />
mud crabs and mussels near Port Douglas.<br />
Sample the mouthwatering olive tapenade<br />
glazed salmon or garlic prawn spaghetti at<br />
the Zinc Restaurant & Lounge Bar. While<br />
Swampdog in Brisbane brings to the<br />
plate grilled barramundi with pesto and<br />
delectable pepper squid.<br />
Our last stop will be Victoria, where the<br />
lake regions offer an abundance of fish<br />
species. From the flathead snapper to the<br />
john dory and silver dory, Victoria is no<br />
short of Mecca for fish lovers. If you’re in<br />
Queenscliff or Portsea, Gone Fishing runs<br />
chartered trips to some of the best fishing<br />
spots.<br />
You’re likely to knab a prized King George<br />
whiting or some southern bluefin tuna<br />
in these waters. Enjoy an extraordinary<br />
dining experience at the Lobster Cave in<br />
Melbourne as they blow you away with<br />
their food. Packed with freshness and<br />
flavor, treat your taste buds with top-notch<br />
lobster bisque or Ferg’s Flaming Favorites.<br />
The culinary scene in Australia has <strong>com</strong>e<br />
a long way, having lived in the shadow of<br />
the English Sunday dinner. It’s drawn soul<br />
and inspiration from its local ingredients,<br />
Pacific cultures, and cooking techniques.<br />
The ‘Land Down Under’ has be<strong>com</strong>e a<br />
destination for fine dining with the advent<br />
of ‘Mod OZ’ (Modern Australian Cooking).<br />
Just talking about the seafood industry<br />
alone, Australia is taking the gastronomical<br />
world by storm. With its plethora of<br />
ingredients, focus on fresh and local<br />
sourcing, and use of modern revolutionary<br />
cooking techniques the country is at the<br />
forefront of culinary innovation. More<br />
reason to go on an adventure sampling all<br />
they have to offer! Bon Voyage!<br />
46 47
RESTAURANT<br />
AWARD WINNER<br />
PROFILES<br />
Image by: Chuttersnap<br />
48 49
Argentina<br />
EL CUARTITO<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Australia<br />
VUE DE MONDE<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Talcahuano 937, C1013AAS CABA, Argentina ♦ Tel +54 11 4816-1758 ♦ lamejorpizzeria.<strong>com</strong><br />
Rialto Towers, 525 Collins St, Melbourne VIC 3000, Australia ♦<br />
Tel +61 3 9691 3888 ♦ vuedemonde.<strong>com</strong>.au<br />
El Cuartito – “The Little Room” – houses two large dining halls with blue walls<br />
adorned with sports posters, Boca Junior’s memorabilia and photos that tell stories<br />
about its history. What’s special about this jostling pizzeria apart from being a part of the<br />
Buenos Aires’ cultural heritage, is that it’s also one of the most popular and oldest pizza<br />
restaurants in the city.<br />
You can gorge on pizzas with thick but tender airy bases overflowing with mozzarella,<br />
stuffed with generous helpings of sweet onions, ham, spinach and various other toppings.<br />
The pizzas here are up there with the Chicago deep dishes and the New York thin crusts.<br />
Best known for their napoiliatanas and fugazza pizzas, they also serve some of the best<br />
empanadas you’ll ever have. The crowd here is just as eclectic as the place’s decor.<br />
This restaurant is always packed with pizza lovers, so you’ll have to wait a while for your<br />
otherworldly cheesy delight!<br />
Highly acclaimed chef Shannon Bennet’s restaurant, Vue de Monde, is a testament<br />
that dining inrestaurants can be a grand and memorable experience while still<br />
paying tribute to classical fine dining in a contemporary yet sophisticated context. Vue<br />
de Monde brings to you a breathtaking view of the Melbourne cityscape, exquisite food,<br />
great wines, and an amazing ambiance all paired with the best service in the industry.<br />
From start to finish, you are treated in a regal yet friendly and courteous manner. It’s not<br />
just the food and wine being served but even the manner and the synchronicity with which<br />
each course is served and taken away by different waiters that add more flavor to your<br />
experience. The entire service staff, be it your host/hostess, your sommelier or even the<br />
wait-staff, all strive to make your experience at the Vue de Monde as perfect as possible.<br />
50 51
Bangladesh<br />
BUNKA<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Canada<br />
LEE RESTAURANT<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
13th Floor, Road 96, House 19, Gulshan 2, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh ♦ Tel +880 1987-009810<br />
♦ http://<strong>www</strong>.bunkadhaka.<strong>com</strong>/<br />
601 King St W, Toronto, ON M5V 1M5, Canada ♦ Tel ++1 416-504-7867 ♦ susur.<strong>com</strong>/lee<br />
Bunka at the Six Seasons Hotel in Dhaka is by far the best restaurant you can <strong>com</strong>e<br />
across in Bangladesh. Specializing in Oriental cuisine, the restaurant offers an<br />
incredible menu of authentic Chinese Hunan, Japanese, Thai and Korean food. Whether<br />
you sit inside or on the balcony, you will be treated with a beautiful panoramic view of<br />
the city and the Gulshan Lake which makes the experience more special. Don’t even<br />
get us started on the plethora of choices when it <strong>com</strong>es to the food options. Besides<br />
serving dishes À la carte you can also choose to order from its famous buffet menu which<br />
<strong>com</strong>prises over 100 items! They even feature a live sushi bar, live teppanyaki, teriyaki,<br />
tempura items, and some insanely delicious desserts, all prepared by their expert chefs.<br />
They even offer Bento Boxes, which consist of a <strong>com</strong>plete take-away meal and serve<br />
perfectly for your lunch meetings!<br />
Highly acclaimed chef Susur Lee’s restaurant in Ontario is a culinary destination,<br />
offering small-plate and shareable delicacies of modern Asian and French cuisines.<br />
The vibrant and scintillating dishes with exotic cocktails served here derive much of their<br />
inspiration from the various continents that Lee has traveled. Needless to say that the<br />
service here is excellent, with the staff willing to go out of their way to ac<strong>com</strong>modate your<br />
dietary preferences (be it peanut allergies or vegetarianism) even when it <strong>com</strong>es to orders<br />
like the chef’s choice menu! The wait-staff does their best to explain the various dishes<br />
and what goes into making them, providing you with the best of re<strong>com</strong>mendations. Lee’s<br />
has an impeccable service staff, working great as a team, all prompt, polite and skilled at<br />
what they do. This is perhaps the reason why so many customers keep <strong>com</strong>ing back here<br />
frequently to be pampered with delicious food and great service!<br />
52 53
Canada<br />
SAVEURS DE L’INDE<br />
Indian Restaurant of the Year<br />
China<br />
DIN TAI FUNG<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
of the Year<br />
1275 Avenue Maguire, Ville de Québec, QC G1T 1Z2, Canada ♦ Tel ++1 418-683-0006 ♦<br />
saveurdelinde.alaqsamosque.co<br />
Jianguo Road Chaoyang District, Beijing, China ♦ Tel ++86-10-6533-1536 ♦ dintaifung.<strong>com</strong><br />
Craving some flavor packed and spicy Indian food in Quebec? Look no further than<br />
Saveurs de l’Inde – The Flavours of India. Despite looking like a simple restaurant<br />
on the outside, once you step inside, you’re greeted with typical grand Indian decor.<br />
You will find the entire room here wafting with a strong aroma of spices and delicious<br />
Indian food. The cooking staff strives to recreate the true flavors of traditional Indian<br />
delicacies from all parts of the country. Unsurprisingly the butter chicken, the biryani, and<br />
the naan bread are favorites of regulars. The authenticity of the place, be it the more than<br />
generous helpings of some simply amazing food, the pleasant music in the background<br />
or the culturally inspired decor, really do make you feel like you’re in India. They truly have<br />
maintained the zesty flavors of traditional Indian cuisines and brought them to Canada!<br />
Din Tai Fung is a traditional Taiwanese restaurant with branches all over the world.<br />
They offer Asian, Chinese and Taiwanese cuisine and specialize in xiaolongbao<br />
(steamed dumplings) and dimsums. Originally a tinned cooking oil <strong>com</strong>pany, it converted<br />
into a full-fledged restaurant in the 70s. Despite being a huge chain of restaurants, it’s<br />
encouraging to note that their food and service is consistently good across the world! Just<br />
like all other Taiwanese restaurants, these guys take their dumplings very seriously and<br />
each one is made with great precision. You have a plethora of great options to choose<br />
from, each good in their regard. They also serve the most soothing organic jasmine tea<br />
along with a rice and red beans cake as a dessert. This Michelin star restaurant truly is a<br />
dumpling heaven, offering good and fast <strong>com</strong>fort food, a pleasant ambiance, efficient<br />
service, but most importantly it offers an enriching and fulfilling dining experience!<br />
54 55
Colombia<br />
SANTA FE<br />
RESTAURANTE<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
France<br />
AU BUFFON<br />
CHEZ EDDY<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
of the Year<br />
Bogotá, Cundinamarca, Colombia ♦ Tel ++57 1 2816794 ♦ santafecaferestaurantebogota.co<br />
A<br />
bright red, century-old house<br />
on the streets of Bogota<br />
frames Colombia’s Restaurant of the<br />
Year – The Santa Fe Restaurante.<br />
Serving authentic and amazing<br />
gastronomic delights, they are also<br />
renowned for their special Colombian<br />
coffee and chef Deufreys Sánchez’s<br />
original creations. With a typical<br />
antique South American interior,<br />
you can choose to dine either in the<br />
living room, the patio or the terrace.<br />
Music from saxophone master Edgar<br />
Ramirez will definitely make your<br />
experience more pleasant. The<br />
chef personally chooses fresh and<br />
organic ingredients daily from the<br />
markets. The divine ‘Lechoncito’ and<br />
the buffalo steak in chocolate sauce<br />
are must-haves. The assortment of<br />
home-made desserts will leave you in<br />
a food stupor. Another praiseworthy<br />
aspect would be their plating and<br />
food presentations which are nothing<br />
short of works of art! If you’re ever in<br />
Bogota, the Santa Fe Restaurante is<br />
one place you must dine at!<br />
28 Rue Buffon, 21000 Dijon, France ♦ Tel ++33 3 80 65 39 91 ♦<br />
aubuffonchezeddy.business.site<br />
Au Buffon chez Eddy is a small, intimate French restaurant located in a quiet street<br />
in a quaint neighborhood in Dijon, France. Unpretentious and unseemly on the<br />
outside, it’s rather elegant and wel<strong>com</strong>ing on the inside. The hostess is very friendly<br />
and polite, and her husband runs the kitchen. They are known for using locally sourced<br />
ingredients to make honest local food (du terroir). They have a short menu <strong>com</strong>prising<br />
some classic French dishes and a good wine selection which will definitely impress the<br />
food connoisseur in you. Among the dishes, you should try out the meurettes eggs and<br />
bourgogne snails in entre, the ‘andouillette fricassee’ in mains and either the Paris-Brest<br />
or Tiramisu in desserts. The creme brulee here is a work of gastronomic art! If you’re<br />
looking for a charming boutique French restaurant, Au Buffon chez Eddy is that place,<br />
bringing you the best of traditional French food.<br />
56 57
France<br />
LE CRABE MARTEAU<br />
Seafood Restaurant of the Year<br />
Germany<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
MEDICI<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
16 Rue des Acacias, 75017 Paris, France ♦ Tel ++33 1 44 09 85 59 ♦ crabemarteau.fr<br />
Le Crabe Marteau is undoubtedly the best seafood restaurant you will <strong>com</strong>e across in<br />
France. The “Hammer Crab” is renowned for the quality, freshness and authenticity<br />
of its food. They typically serve 800g-1kg crabs ac<strong>com</strong>panied by different sauces, a side<br />
of potatoes and bread made specially to go along with the ’hammer crab’. Back in 2004,<br />
they revolutionized the industry, <strong>com</strong>ing up with the concept of serving fresh crab caught<br />
on their shores. With rustic interiors, friendly hosts and lively and fun environment, it’s<br />
quite an experience eating here. What really adds a touch of flair to the whole set is the<br />
fact that the tables are topped with local presses, planks, hammers, and bibs that just<br />
add to the ambiance. It’s fun whether you’re using a hammer or peeling everything by<br />
yourself. Goes without saying, the food is a treat for your tastebuds.<br />
Weißadlergasse 2, 60311 Frankfurt am Main, Germany ♦ Tel +49 69 21990794 ♦<br />
restaurantmedici.de<br />
Medici, situated in the heart of the city center of Frankfurt in Germany, is a gourmet<br />
and fish restaurant which serves the most exclusive food and wine you can find<br />
in the city. Owned and run the two brothers, the place is known for its modern take<br />
on European cuisine. Incredible food, friendly and exquisite service, warm atmosphere<br />
and plush interiors define this restaurant. It’s <strong>com</strong>mendable that though the service staff<br />
usually <strong>com</strong>municate in fast German, they switch to fluent English in a jiffy. Do not miss<br />
out on the venison and even beef here which are highly rated. The meats are cooked to<br />
perfection, they are succulent and tender and are served with a delightful side of potato<br />
gratin with veggies. The gourmet touch and feel <strong>com</strong>e from the addition of a truffle foam<br />
and potato crisp used for decoration. You can also sip some great wine and have a fine<br />
dining experience like no other.<br />
58<br />
59
Greece<br />
LAUDA RESTAURANT<br />
The Award for Excellence in Service<br />
Greece<br />
PLATANOS<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
of the Year<br />
Oia, Thira 847 02, Greece ♦ Tel +30 2286 072182 ♦ lauda-restaurant.business.site<br />
In the heart of the island<br />
town of Santorini in Greece<br />
lies one of the best fine dining<br />
and gourmet restaurants in the<br />
country – Lauda Restaurant. This<br />
restaurant has everything you can<br />
ask for – traditional Greek dishes<br />
made from organic ingredients,<br />
excellent service and scenery<br />
that just takes your breath away!<br />
Lauda stands right at the edge of<br />
a cliff and has distinctive features<br />
of elegance. The chef does an<br />
exceptional job of keeping up<br />
with culinary trends while still<br />
doing great justice to traditions.<br />
What truly sets exceptional<br />
restaurants like Lauda apart<br />
from the others is the exemplary<br />
service they provide here which<br />
is professional, courteous and<br />
friendly. Fret not if you’re a<br />
vegetarian as they have a special<br />
menu just for you! They go out<br />
of their way to ac<strong>com</strong>modate<br />
your preferences and this is what<br />
creates special memories for all<br />
their customers here.<br />
4 Diogenous Street, Athens, Greece ♦ Tel + 30 21 0322 0666<br />
♦ http://lachaniaplatanos.<strong>com</strong><br />
The Taverna Platanos, in suburbia Greece, is an absolute gem of a place, one that<br />
strives daily to stay true to its Greek culture and heritage. Started in 1932, it’s<br />
still run by the same family, as they serve up typical flavors over a romantic and lovely<br />
view setting overlooking the vast city of Athens. It’s got a quaint, authentic aura about it,<br />
that glows strongly thanks to their homely service. The freshness of the food, the grilled<br />
locally grown vegetables, a variety of scrumptiously grilled meats, cheeses, fresh fish,<br />
homemade bread, local olive oil and herbs from the mountains, just the thought of all<br />
this should have your mouth watering! The pleasant Greek weather, loud and lively music,<br />
the aroma of those kebabs being cooked will all take you away to this delightful tasteful<br />
wonderland and will leave all your worries behind and help you unwind, one morsel at a<br />
time.<br />
60 61
Hong Kong<br />
TIN LUNG HEEN<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
India<br />
BUKHARA<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
of the Year<br />
1 Austin Road West, Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong ♦ Tel ++852 2263 2263 ♦ ritzcarlton.<strong>com</strong><br />
The Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Hong Kong houses one the best and most authentic<br />
Cantonese restaurants of the city – Tin Lung Heen. Providing fine dining in its most<br />
elegant sense this restaurant <strong>com</strong>es with a spectacular view from the 102nd floor. Adding<br />
to this is their outstanding service and the experience of their six-course degustation<br />
menu which will give you an idea about why this place is a culinary heaven. Creative<br />
dishes, brilliant presentation, and amazing flavors here are indeed a treat for your senses.<br />
Their traditional dim sums are definitely the best you’ll ever have while the signature pork<br />
dish is another highly rated delicacy that is a must try. It’s endearing to note how wel<strong>com</strong>e<br />
they make you feel, trying to make your experience as special as they can. Authentic<br />
Cantonese food, packed with flavorful punches, impeccable service and a gorgeous view<br />
— you cannot ask for more!<br />
Diplomatic Enclave, Sadar Patel Marg, New Delhi, Delhi 110021, India ♦<br />
Tel + 91 11 4621 5124 ♦ <strong>www</strong>.eazydiner.<strong>com</strong><br />
To win the Traditional Restaurant of the Year award for Indian food, that too in<br />
India, the place really has to stand out from the thousands out there. Quite a<br />
feat then, that Bukhara at the ITC Maurya Hotel in New Delhi earns the title. And boy<br />
does it deserve it! It’s a place that has, for generations, introduced people to the rustic,<br />
traditional flavors of North India. You can try out some of their signature dishes like the<br />
Sikandari Raan and the Murgh Malai Kebab which have impressed people for years. The<br />
restaurant has a rugged interior with carpets from Bukhara and copper pots hanging from<br />
the ceiling. To stay true to their roots, they cook their mouth-watering kebabs in clay<br />
tandoors; and serve them without any cutlery. Served in earthenware crockery, you will be<br />
encouraged to eat the food with your hands as it enhances not just the flavors but also<br />
the overall experience.<br />
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63
India<br />
THE FISHERMAN’S<br />
WHARF<br />
Seafood Restaurant of the Year<br />
Israel<br />
MASHYA<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Hyderabad, Telangana 500032, India ♦ Tel +91 91003 32244 ♦ thefishermanswharf.in<br />
Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel ♦ Tel +972 3-750-0999 ♦ mashya.co.il<br />
The pride and joy of Goa, The Fisherman’s Wharf is the ultimate culinary destination,<br />
resting on the banks of the river Sal. The beautiful backdrop of the Cavelossim<br />
village, the glistening waters of the river and exquisite fusion food with Goan influences<br />
will give you a dining experience like no other when visiting Goa.<br />
They offer an assortment of delicacies which include authentic Goan classics <strong>com</strong>plemented<br />
with Indian and global flavors alike; add to that the most refreshing and spirit uplifting<br />
drinks and you’ll have a <strong>com</strong>plete culinary experience. The smooth and tasteful music<br />
here set the perfect vacation mood and vibe that Goa is known for. The Squid Tempura<br />
served with Wasabi and the Masala Rava Fried Prawns with some delicious Goan Prawn<br />
Curry are popular choices off the menu. It <strong>com</strong>es as no surprise then that this place has<br />
made its place in the heart of Goa and is, therefore, the winner of the best Seafood<br />
Restaurant in India!<br />
Mashya in Tel Aviv, Israel, takes you on a gastronomic adventure like no other<br />
place in the country. Led by Chef Yossi Shitrit, who was inspired by mace — the<br />
local spice that the restaurant is named after — has reinvented traditional Israeli cuisine,<br />
taking the rough textures of locally sourced natural ingredients and cleaning, brightening,<br />
smoothening and uplifting them. This gourmet restaurant, filled with the aroma of spices,<br />
blends with the spirit of Israel.<br />
The interiors have a soft lighting and you will be served on specially crafted metal and<br />
ceramic tableware. With green vines covering the restaurant’s walls, you will have a<br />
pleasant experience in this cozy ambience. They use the highest quality of ingredients<br />
with advanced cooking techniques to bring out the best from the ingredients. If you ever<br />
visit this gem of a restaurant, do try the Ricotta Dumplings and the Mushroom Mafrom,<br />
not to mention the Lamb Katayef and the Fine Veal.<br />
64 65
Italy<br />
RISTORANTE LIN<br />
Chinese Restaurant of the Year<br />
Italy<br />
SETA<br />
Traditional Restaurant of<br />
the Year<br />
Via Basento, 70/76, 00198 Roma RM, Italy ♦ Tel +39 06 854 6270 ♦ ristorante-lin.it<br />
Via Andegari, 9, 20121 Milano MI, Italy ♦ Tel + 39 02 8731 8897<br />
♦ <strong>www</strong>. mandarinoriental.<strong>com</strong><br />
If you’re ever visiting Italy,<br />
you just have got to try<br />
out the Chinese there! Rome<br />
is home to one of the best<br />
Chinese restaurants in the<br />
country, Ristorante Lin. The menu<br />
<strong>com</strong>prises an assortment of<br />
mouthwatering dishes hailing<br />
from various geographical<br />
regions of China. Kudos to the<br />
cooking staff that does its best<br />
to put on your plate amazingly<br />
well-balanced Chinese fusion<br />
flavors. They use local, fresh and<br />
seasonal products to prepare<br />
delectable modern Chinese<br />
dishes. The restaurant, much like<br />
their food, has a modern, hip yet<br />
plush look and feel which makes<br />
for a pleasant dining experience.<br />
The service staff is very courteous<br />
and professional and is welldeserving<br />
of credit for the great<br />
work they do daily. The Sea Bass<br />
and Salmons, in particular, are<br />
absolute delights. As for desserts,<br />
their Green Tea Ice Cream served<br />
with a green tea sponge cake, is<br />
second to none.<br />
Seta is a two Michelin-starred Italian restaurant with chef Antonio Guida at the helm<br />
in Milan, Italy. Located in the courtyard of the hotel, the place offers a chic yet classic<br />
background to the culinary treats whipped up by the chef. A great fine dining experience<br />
awaits you at Seta which serves traditional dishes that undergo an iterative process of<br />
being refined with creative and modern cooking techniques that offer you an exciting new<br />
take on classic Italian dishes.<br />
An open kitchen offers you a chance to watch your food being cooked which makes the<br />
experience almost theatrical. From the wait staff to the sommelier, the service quality is<br />
top notch. The Petto di Piccione is one dish you must try if you’re willing to try something<br />
new and exotic, while the Riso is a safer but still delightful option. For desserts, try the<br />
Mandarino which is another famous delicacy.<br />
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67
Japan<br />
ISE SUEYOSHI<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Japan<br />
TSURUGYU<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Japan, 〒106-0031 Tokyo, Minato, Nishiazabu, 4 Chome−2−15, 水 野 ビル ♦<br />
Tel +81 3-6427-2314 ♦ isesueyoshi.blog.fc2.<strong>com</strong><br />
Ise Sueyoshi is chef Yuki Tanaka’s brainchild. He studied Japanese cuisine at Kikunoi in<br />
Tokyo and then traveled to over 15 countries and came to realize the significance of<br />
local ingredients in food culture. This eventually led to the birth of the restaurant in the<br />
heart of Tokyo with a focus on ingredients from the ancient city of Ise. The minimalistic yet<br />
elegant interiors make for a pleasant ambiance as you enjoy your meal.<br />
This is your chance to enjoy the four seasons of Japan on a plate. The dishes depict Japan’s<br />
rich culture with each representing a scenery from the passing seasons. Not only are they<br />
works of art but masterful delicacies. The sake pairings on offer really <strong>com</strong>plement the<br />
food and the service feels personal and leaves you smiling. It might be a small, intimate<br />
place, but people are falling head over heels for it. The Tempura and the Prawn Nigiri are<br />
particularly delightful dishes that you must try.<br />
3 Chome-5-14 Kawarayamachi, Chuo, Osaka, Osaka Prefecture 542-0066, Japan ♦<br />
Tel +81 6-6767-2989 ♦ tsurugyu.<strong>com</strong><br />
It’s a no mean feat for a restaurant to earn the award for excellence in service. The<br />
fact that Tsurugyu in Osaka, Japan wins this coveted prize is therefore quite an<br />
achievement for the restaurant. Essentially, the place serves Kobe Beef with various cuts<br />
cooked in appetizing ways. The reason they bag the prize is because of their exceptional<br />
service staff which takes care of everything with great care and finesse right from choosing<br />
and using the best ingredients to cook your food till the moment you get your check.<br />
The meat is cooked to perfection and that makes it so tender that it melts in your mouth.<br />
The tongue, for instance, is grilled Yakiniku-style that brings out rich color and flavor in<br />
the meat. Each cut of the meat is served with different kinds of dips; some of which are<br />
simple while others are more elaborate too. Of course it’s not just the divine food service<br />
that makes this place stand out, but also the hospitality and professionalism of the service<br />
staff that make your experience all the more worthwhile.<br />
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69
Japan<br />
THE GARDEN<br />
ORIENTAL OSAKA<br />
Steakhouse of the Year<br />
Kenya<br />
TATU<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Osaka Prefecture 534-0026, Japan ♦ Tel +81 6-6358-5533 ♦ gardenoriental.<strong>com</strong><br />
The Garden Oriental Osaka<br />
is a western steakhouse<br />
housed in a former prefectural<br />
governor’s house. The modern<br />
architecture of the building, plush<br />
interiors and the vast and lush<br />
green lawns make for a pleasant<br />
gastronomical experience. Low<br />
dramatic lighting, soft music,<br />
fancy leather chairs, and unique<br />
settings (they have a special dish<br />
to rest your cutlery) all add to the<br />
flair and panache of the place.<br />
On offer is a set menu of New York<br />
Strips, Horse Tartar, Lamb Chops<br />
and other such tasteful dishes<br />
that send your taste buds on an<br />
amazing journey. The meats are<br />
seasoned and cooked to absolute<br />
perfection. Kudos to their service<br />
staff who go out of their way to<br />
make your experience as good as<br />
it can be. Top off your hearty meal<br />
with their delicious cheesecake<br />
and some coffee and you won’t<br />
be disappointed in the least!<br />
Harry Thuku Road | Harry Thuku Rd, Nairobi 00100, Kenya ♦ Tel +254 20 2265000 ♦<br />
http://<strong>www</strong>.fairmont.<strong>com</strong>/norfolk-hotel-nairobi/dining/tatu-restaurant/<br />
The Fairmont Hotel in Nairobi, Kenya is home to signature restaurant Tatu. Serving<br />
contemporary Americano-Kenyan cuisine, the restaurant has won several accolades<br />
for its exceptional cuisine, and personalized and attentive servicing. In contrast to the<br />
dated buildings, the steakhouse offers a fresh look and feel with an open kitchen, modern<br />
furniture and exotic African portraits. Chef Joshua and his team know what they are doing<br />
and put on a good show as they prepare your meal. Start the meal with an exquisite<br />
“Lobster Cappuccino” with a lobster croquette, move on to the divine Seared Duck with<br />
Oranges followed by a palate cleanser in the form of Handmade Mango Sorbet. Wrap<br />
this up with what can be described only as the best beef tenderloin steak you’ll ever have;<br />
well-seasoned and cooked to perfection, the flavors of this dish dance with your tongue.<br />
Pair this with the in-house vodka and you are in for an amazing dining experience.<br />
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Malaysia<br />
THIRTY8<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Netherlands<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
ARGENTINO LUNA<br />
Steakhouse of the Year<br />
Kuala Lumpur, Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia ♦ Tel +60 3-2182 1234 ♦<br />
kualalumpur.grand.hyatt.<strong>com</strong>/en/hotel/dining/THIRTY8.html<br />
Located strategically on the 38th floor of The Grand Hyatt in Kaula Lampur, Thirty8<br />
is the signature restaurant and bar of the hotel and offers a breathtaking panoramic<br />
view of the city. The venue is quite chic and fashionable with sophisticated interiors. The<br />
place is perfect for a night of socializing, business and unwinding. The elegant circular<br />
wine bar and live music help build a relaxing ambiance to <strong>com</strong>plement the city view.<br />
On offer are a wide selection of steaks, fresh seafood, sushi and various tantalizing<br />
Chinese dishes. Their signature Thirty8 Cake is another must have. If the food, the view<br />
and ambiance weren’t enough, they pull another rabbit out of the hat in the form of their<br />
excellent service. The staff is very friendly and cordial and the members do their best to<br />
ensure top-notch service. The staff members are very engaging and pleasant and that<br />
really helps elevate your experience here.<br />
Lindengracht 152, 1015 KK Amsterdam, Netherlands ♦ Tel +31 20 627 4149 ♦<br />
restaurantluna.nl<br />
If you’re a steak lover, then the Restaurant Argentino Luna is the place for you. Present<br />
in the Jordaan district of Amsterdam, this place has the best Argentinian steaks you’ll<br />
have. Named after founder Carlos Luna and under the guidance of chef Oberdan the<br />
place has turned into quite a hub for the city’s nightlife. The place feels very intimate<br />
with enjoyable music and a friendly atmosphere. They serve authentic Argentinian food<br />
with amazing service. Be it the rib-eye, the sirloin or the rump steak, the meats are<br />
beautifully cooked and melt in your mouth on biting; the flavor explodes on your tongue<br />
and leaves you in ecstasy. Pair your grilled meat with a side of either mushroom gravy or<br />
the peppercorn gravy and you’re in for a delightful experience. The portions served are<br />
hearty and delicious. So if you’re ever in Amsterdam do try and visit!<br />
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73
Spain<br />
UMA<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Turkey<br />
SANS<br />
RESTAURANT<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
Carrer de Mallorca, 275, 08008 Barcelona, Spain ♦ Tel +34 656 99 09 30 ♦ espaciouma.<strong>com</strong><br />
Gourmet dining doesn’t<br />
get any better than dining<br />
at Uma in Barcelona, Spain.<br />
This flagship restaurant under<br />
the steady hands of chef Iker<br />
Erauzkin lives to serve unique<br />
and creative cuisines that take<br />
your taste buds on a joy ride. It<br />
sports a slightly old look and<br />
feel coupled with a stylish open<br />
kitchen. The restaurant serves<br />
typical Mediterranean dishes with<br />
a dash of Asian flavors thrown<br />
into the mix. As strange as the<br />
<strong>com</strong>bination of flavors sounds,<br />
the dishes that leave the pass<br />
look and taste nothing short of<br />
wondrous. The service is par<br />
excellence and really makes the<br />
dining experience worthwhile.<br />
From the passionate look on the<br />
chef’s face as he prepares your<br />
meal to the aromas that tease<br />
you from the kitchen, it makes<br />
for some good theatre while you<br />
wait for the appetizing dishes to<br />
be served. Uma is indeed a gem<br />
of a restaurant in Barcelona.<br />
Haci Adil Cad. Palmiye Sok. No:1 Levent, Besiktas, Istanbul 34330, Turkey ♦<br />
Tel +90 212 280 38 38 ♦ sansrestaurant.<strong>com</strong><br />
Established in the Levent village of Istanbul, Sans Restaurant is a gastronomical<br />
wonderland. Sans is a fine dining restaurant that serves Mediterranean and Turkish<br />
cuisine with a contemporary twist. The two-storeyed gourmet destination has modern,<br />
plush interiors with a historic and regal vibe. Although traditional dishes remain the<br />
constants, they add variety to the menu by incorporating fresh seasonal dishes ever so<br />
often.<br />
The Beef Rib with Lemon Risotto and the Oven Baked Red Bream are some notable<br />
dishes that are served here. For desserts, the Mastic Rice Pudding is a must-have for<br />
those with a sweet tooth. Try pairing your meal with some of the exceptional Turkish<br />
and International wines they have on offer. The service is <strong>com</strong>mendable, with everyone<br />
very warm, wel<strong>com</strong>ing and courteous. Overall, Sans makes for quite the experience and<br />
definitely qualifies as one of the best restaurants in Turkey if not the best.<br />
74 75
USA<br />
SIX SEVEN<br />
RESTAURANT &<br />
LOUNGE<br />
The Award for Excellence in Service<br />
USA<br />
INDIAN ACCENT<br />
Indian Restaurant of the Year<br />
2411 Alaskan Way, Seattle, WA 98121, USA ♦ Tel +1 206-269-4575 ♦<br />
edgewaterhotel.<strong>com</strong>/seattle-six-seven-restaurant.aspx<br />
123 W 56th St, New York, NY 10019, USA ♦ Tel +1 212-842-8070♦ <strong>www</strong>.indianaccent.<strong>com</strong><br />
The Edgewater Hotel in Seattle is home to the flagship Six Seven Restaurant<br />
which features a unique menu <strong>com</strong>prised of dishes made from fresh and organic<br />
ingredients. The restaurant has a modern and delectable décor which is bettered only by<br />
the outstanding view of the Olympic Mountains and the Puget Sound. Chef Jesse Souza<br />
and his team toil to make every diners’ experience pleasant and memorable.<br />
The dishes take inspiration from beloved home-style recipes like mac and cheese, and<br />
tuna melt sandwich which are given a fresh, creative interpretation. What helps Six Seven<br />
be<strong>com</strong>e better than the rest though, is their exceptional service quality. Courteous, polite,<br />
friendly and great at what they do, the service staff works like a well-oiled machine in<br />
tandem with the culinary team. It should not <strong>com</strong>e a surprise then that the Six Seven<br />
Lounge wins the award for excellent service!<br />
Offering a fresh and creative approach to Indian cuisine, Indian Accent in New<br />
York stands apart from the rest and makes its name as one of the best Indian<br />
restaurants in the USA. Chef Manish Mehrotra takes you on a culinary tour of India like<br />
no one does. While staying true to their roots, the dishes don’t shy away from showing<br />
their global influences and methods. The restaurant has both an indoor as well as outdoor<br />
seating and looks radiant and classy.<br />
You can choose to eat a la carte or the pre-fixed menu. In addition, there’s also a ninecourse<br />
chef’s tasting menu. Regardless of what you end up choosing; be prepared for a<br />
burst of amazing flavors with each bite. Be it the kebabs or the chaats, you can’t go wrong<br />
with any of the appetizers. Popular mains include the Prawn Koliwada and the Ghee Roast<br />
Lamb. End the night with some delicious traditional Makhan Malai for dessert.<br />
76 77
USA<br />
DEL POSTO<br />
Italian Restaurant of the Year<br />
UAE<br />
TOMO<br />
Restaurant of the Year<br />
85 10th Ave, New York, NY 10011, USA ♦ Tel +1 212-497-8090 ♦ delposto.<strong>com</strong><br />
tomo.ae ♦ Tel +971 4 357 7888 ♦ Exit 56, Dubai, United Arab Emirates<br />
Luxurious European style<br />
interiors, exceptional<br />
service, a good wine list and most<br />
importantly divine food – the four<br />
qualities that make Del Posto<br />
one of the best Italian restaurants<br />
in the USA. This fine dining<br />
establishment on 10th Avenue<br />
New York checks all the right<br />
boxes when it <strong>com</strong>es to giving<br />
you the best that Italy has to offer.<br />
The knowledgeable and<br />
passionate service staff help you<br />
make the menu selections and<br />
suggest the best wines to go<br />
with your meal. Notable dishes<br />
include the PICI with Bolognese<br />
Sauce, the Pork Ribollita and<br />
the Licorice Panna Cotta. Goes<br />
without saying but the pasta here<br />
is simply out of the world. The<br />
place really stands out and sets<br />
incredibly high standards for what<br />
gourmet Italian food should be<br />
like. So if you’re ever in New York,<br />
make it a point to go here.<br />
Looking for some authentic Japanese cuisine in Dubai? No place serves it better than<br />
Tomo. Situated in the Raffles Hotel, this restaurant will give you the real taste of<br />
Japan in the UAE. You can choose to sit indoors in the cozy environment or can sit out on<br />
the Tatami Terrace and gorge on the amazing food with cool breeze blowing on your face<br />
along with a stunning view of the Dubai skyline and the creek . If you’re seeking a more<br />
private dining experience, they have multiple private dining rooms and separate floor<br />
seating areas for a more intimate dining indulgence. Needless to say, the professional<br />
team of Japanese chefs here will treat you to some of the finest preparations like Oshinko<br />
Moriawase and Yamakake. Whether you’re a vegetarian or a meat lover, this restaurant<br />
has something for all. They also open up their floor for various events.<br />
78 79
RESTAURANT<br />
AWARD WINNER<br />
DIRECTORY<br />
Image by: Asena Hatice<br />
80 81
HOTEL & ACCOMMODATION WINNERS<br />
Argentina<br />
El Cuartito<br />
Restaurant<br />
HG Restaurant<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Australia<br />
Attica<br />
Restaurant<br />
Vue De Monde<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Flavour of India<br />
Edgecliff<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Intermezzo Italian<br />
Restaurant<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Bangladesh<br />
Bunka<br />
Restaurant<br />
Bahamas<br />
Graycliffe Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Dune<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Barbados<br />
Primo Bar & Bistro<br />
Restaurant<br />
Canada<br />
Ile Flottante<br />
Restaurant<br />
Lee Restaurant<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Saveurs de l’Inde<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Oro Restaurant<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Miku<br />
Japanese Restaurant<br />
Cassidy Country<br />
Kitchen<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Joe Fortes Seafood &<br />
Chop House<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Gibbys<br />
Steakhouse<br />
Chile<br />
Peumayen Ancestral<br />
Food<br />
Restaurant<br />
Latin Grill<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
China<br />
Jin Xuan Chinese<br />
Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Flair Rooftop<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Din Tai Fung<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Choy’s Seafood<br />
Restaurant<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Colombia<br />
Santa Fe Restaurante<br />
Restaurant<br />
Fulanitos<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Egypt<br />
Fayruz Lebanese<br />
Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
France<br />
Epicure<br />
Restaurant<br />
Bliss<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Luci Sera<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Shang Palace<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Au Buffon chez Eddy<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Le Crabe Marteau<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Germany<br />
Restaurant Medici<br />
Restaurant<br />
Restaurant Bieberbau<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Haveli<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Vinothek by Geisel<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Mongkok<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Schnitzelei<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Greece<br />
Kapari Wine Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Lauda Restaurant<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Platanos<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Trata Fish Tavern<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Hong Kong<br />
Tin Lung Heen<br />
Restaurant<br />
India<br />
Nawab Saheb<br />
Restaurant<br />
Romano’s<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Bukhara<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
The Fisherman’s Wharf<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Israel<br />
Mashya<br />
Restaurant<br />
Italy<br />
La Bottega del Buon<br />
Caffe<br />
Restaurant<br />
La Pergola<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Ristorante Indiano<br />
Zafferano<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Ristorante Lin<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Seta<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Da Ciccio Cielo Mare E<br />
Terra<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
El Gaucho<br />
Steakhouse<br />
Iyo<br />
Japanese Restaurant<br />
Indonesia<br />
Sana Sini Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Abhayagiri Restaurant<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Japan<br />
Ise Sueyoshi<br />
Restaurant<br />
Tsurugyu<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Elio Locanda Italiana<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Le Bouchon<br />
French Restaurant<br />
Atsuta Horaiken Honten<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Sapporo Kaniya<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
The Garden Oriental<br />
Osaka<br />
Steakhouse<br />
82 83
HOTEL & ACCOMMODATION WINNERS<br />
Jamaica<br />
Morocco<br />
Sweden<br />
USA<br />
UK<br />
Toscanini Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Jordon<br />
Gusto Italian Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Kenya<br />
Tatu Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Misono<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
Malaysia<br />
Kebaya<br />
Restaurant<br />
THIRTY8 Restaurant<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Qureshi Malaysia<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Tek Sen Restaurant<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Ishin Japanese Dining<br />
Japanese Restaurant<br />
Restaurant du Red<br />
House<br />
Restaurant<br />
Netherlands<br />
Hoftrammm<br />
Restaurant<br />
Vinkeles<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Librije’s Zusje<br />
Amsterdam<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Restaurant Argentino<br />
Luna<br />
Steakhouse<br />
New Zealand<br />
Chillingworth Road<br />
Restaurant<br />
Russia<br />
Severyanin<br />
Restaurant<br />
Bolshoi<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Operakallaren<br />
Restaurant<br />
Thailand<br />
La Gritta<br />
Restaurant<br />
David’s Kitchen<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Pagoda Chinese<br />
Restaurant<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Issaya Siamese Club<br />
Traditional Restaurant<br />
Turkey<br />
Sans Restaurant<br />
Restaurant<br />
Old Ottoman Cafe &<br />
Restaurant<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Uganda<br />
Seven Seas at<br />
Sheraton Kampala<br />
Restaurant<br />
Gabriel Kreuther<br />
Restaurant<br />
Six Seven Restaurant &<br />
Lounge<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Indian Accent<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Del Posto<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Mister Jiu’s<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
Truluck’s Restaurant<br />
Seafood Restaurant<br />
Cafe des Architectes<br />
French Restaurant<br />
Raku<br />
Japanese Restaurant<br />
Joe’s Seafood, Prime<br />
Steak & Stone Crab<br />
Steakhouse<br />
Mixtli<br />
Mexican Restaurant<br />
Gastronhome<br />
Restaurant<br />
Adam’s<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Zaika<br />
Indian Restaurant<br />
Osteria Romana<br />
Italian Restaurant<br />
Yang Sing, Manchester<br />
Chinese Restaurant<br />
UAE<br />
Tomo<br />
Restaurant<br />
Indego by Vineet<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Mexico<br />
Eloise – Mexico<br />
Restaurant<br />
Spain<br />
Uma<br />
Restaurant<br />
Uruguay<br />
Imarangatu<br />
Restaurant<br />
Oh Lala!<br />
The Award for Excellence<br />
in Service<br />
Restaurante Az-Zait<br />
The Award for<br />
Excellence in Service<br />
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