India Today

OLD CHEFS, NEW HATS

Food today is as much about showmanship and skill as it is about flair and flavour, and this is where Indian chefs across the globe are upping the ante. And who better than Garima Arora to benchmark India’s special moment on the culinary map as she wins her second Michelin Star for Gaa, a first for an Indian female chef. Chef Sujan Sarkar relocated to Chicago and opened Indienne during the pandemic, where he showcased traditional creative Indian cuisine such as Golden Ossetra Caviar with Medu Vada doughnut, Elaneer Payasam with crispy honey and alba white truffle, and Foie gras Galouti eclairs with cherry chutney, bee pollen, and gold. This inventiveness earned him the much-coveted Michelin. Meanwhile, the two-star Chef Srijith Gopinathan astounded diners with his upscale South Indian cuisine at Copra in Chicago. These extraordinary chefs have shattered the notion that culinary creations must adhere to regional boundaries. Instead, they have skillfully reflected the diversity of India and its diaspora in their kitchens, employing traditional techniques and indigenous ingredients. But great food is not just about being star studded, Spice tracks the trajectory of six avant-garde Indian chefs, who are cooking up a storm, reimagining the language of global gastronomy for 2024.

GARIMA ARORA

Chef-Owner Gaa and Marigold, Bangkok

FORTE

Arora has elevated Indian gastronomy with a modern perspective by promoting local ingredients and honouring her culinary heritage, securing a second Michelin star for Gaa.

BACKGROUND

A champion of modern Indian cuisine, and the founder of Food Forward India, she is an advocate for diversity. From her Mumbai kitchen origins, Arora’s trajectory from journalist to exceptional chef began during

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from India Today

India Today2 min read
A Monumental Eye
A photograph of a monument is more than what meets the eye. It’s an act of “heritagisation”, says Sudeshna Guha, who has curated the exhibition, Histories in the Making: Photographing Indian Monuments, 1855-1920, which opens on August 31 at DAG, Delh
India Today5 min read
The Haryanvi Poll Hustle
ON THE AFTERNOON OF AUGUST 17, the Nayab Singh Saini cabinet in Haryana approved certain tweaks to the Scheduled Caste (SC) and Other Backward Class (OBC) quotas and service norms for contracted college lecturers. While this might appear as routine a
India Today2 min read
Common Thread
More than 40 works of art; 11 women artists; a common motif of telling their stories through weaving, embroidery and installations. Recently opened at Mumbai’s 47-A, Feeling Through Fibre presents a kaleidoscope of mediums, art forms, textures and co

Related Books & Audiobooks