Saturday, November 23, 2013

Hungry in Hyderabad: Little Italy at Hitech City (finally!)

Can't escape the buffet
There are some places which are ubiquitous, everyones been there done that a million times. Eating at Barbecue Nation for one is as usual routine for techies as getting a haircut. But there is of course chance of  one odd which gets left out.

Same it seems is for Little Italy, I seriously don't know why I missed it. The countless eating excursions as part of the IT industry to the same old tired and tasted venues, its so bad I never got to try Little Italy in Bangalore.

Its a vegetarian Italian restaurant with very good and wide options. Ordering a la carte doesn't make sense here when compared to the buffet. So if its lunch time, it has to be the buffet. A wide spread of soups, salads, breads, starters, dips the list goes on. Plus you get to order a starter, pizza course and pasta course at your table.



The desert array is pretty good. The Mousses and Panna Cotta are great! We were warned to make room for desserts and its to be taken very seriously.

OK thats done, next stop long pending visit to Hard Rock cafe.

Hungry in Hyderabad: Dialogue in the Dark at inOrbit

Yes that's how it looks

This is my best shot of a restaurant ever, actually its just black color image. But that's exactly what is Dialogue in the Dark all about. Its a dining experience in absolute darkness, and a unique experience it is. You absolutely cannot see anything. All you have to guide you are your other senses touch, sound, smell and would you believe - taste.

Unlike a usual restaurant you pre-pay for your meal from the combos on offer, check in your phones (I like this a lot, I hate phones during meals), your watches and basically any light emitting device. You also get frisked by a guard for good measure. Past thick curtains you meet your server, a very capable and warm blind person who leads you to your table and looks after you for the meal.

You constantly remain amazed at the lack of sight in the new, almost alien environment where even discovering there is a plate and fork, spoon placed in front of you and how you and your friends sound. Those senses are highly amplified. I couldnt wait for my meal.

The server serves your meal deftly, and its a complete surrender to the food. Despite my unwashed hand, I had to dig in to feel what I am eating and taste it and know it minutely. As I said - amplified. I could really taste how good the various items on my plate were. Very nice experience to have.
Outside,  some of the staff leaving for the day in the background

And I really liked the fact that this idea benefits the blind, gives some of them a role in such an experience and some of the funds go for their welfare.

Its also a very good corporate team building activity I came to know, so I might get my future colleagues to a similar place later.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Whats for lunch?



'So how did it go?' I asked a A friend of mine who had just got back from an interview. 'Aaah pretty OK, lets see, I am not too excited' he replied nonchalantly. 'But isn't it your target company and best fit job?' I asked. 'Yeah well it was until this afternoon'. 'So what changed?' I asked again now irritating this guy who was focusing on his Chhole Samosa. 'Arre yaar, unka cafeteria main khaana achha nahi thha, thhoda enthu kam ho gaya' (The food wasn't good in their cafeteria, I lost some enthusiasm for it ) he replied between breaths.

So after a few more minutes of pointless banter over jobs and the relation of food with it, we decided we should send a mail to career services to include the cafeteria menu of the recruiting company along with the job description. Though at the serious thought of pissing off the career services, I chickened out.

But food in a company or organization does come up in conversations. Company feedback from seniors end conversations with 'things are good...but the food sucks'. Hey but, I am going to work there and build a career, not check into a restaurant and comment on their idly vada sambar.

An army marches on its bulging stomach. Food comes as a break from stress and rigour. Taste is one of the senses which we can pamper and something which we can control and affect. and it needs to be pampered. Health of course is of course a big outcome of what we eat, and if we don't have healthy tasty choice, we are in a soup quite literally.

And blessed are the ones who get a delicious dabba (lunch box), once in a while. Prepared by a spouse who is in the exact stage of lateness to office or a dabba delivery service which drowns their veggies in copious unrefined oil.

Beggers cant be choosers most of the times, but when the opportune moment comes and I get asked 'so do you have any questions for us?' I shall probably reply 'khaan main kya hai?' (whats for lunch?)