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Isn’t food enough to attract customers?

Bengaluru's restaurant scene is evolving, with luxury hotels using animation, AI, live acts, and diverse cuisines to attract customers seeking experiences beyond just food.

Updated on: May 22, 2024 04:10 PM IST
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When you go to a restaurant, what do you go for? If it is just food, I would argue that you can get better food at your home or a relative’s home. Most of us go for the experience, the theatre, the presentation, the service, the feeling of being cosseted. This is what we pay for. The question is how much premium are you willing to pay for this?

These days, Bengaluru is changing from an IT-driven city to one that is embracing the good life (davit85 - stock.adobe.com)
These days, Bengaluru is changing from an IT-driven city to one that is embracing the good life (davit85 - stock.adobe.com)

For restaurants in luxury hotels, this becomes a key question. “The problem is that there are too many standalone restaurants competing for customers,” said one luxury hotel’s general manager ruefully.

It’s true. The Bengaluru restaurant scene is surging with new openings, many of them brewpubs. Standalone restaurants are packed, even on weekdays. This is normal in Delhi and Mumbai, but Bengaluru was considered to be a sleepy city. Not anymore. These days, Bengaluru is changing from an IT-driven city to one that is embracing the good life. Given the competition, hoteliers and restauranteurs have to figure out how to get footfalls.

The Ritz Carlton Bangalore decided to use animation and AI to create an immersive experience. They have partnered with a global outfit called “Dinner Tales” to create a story called “Banquet of Hoshena”. Frankly, when I attended this banquet, it had too much “jing-bang” as we call it for me to pay attention to the storyline— about kings and queens. There were levitating dishes, candles that lit when you pointed at them, a ceramic statue of a lady whose eyes moved, projected flowers on the table cloth, speaking plates. Kids would love all this. Depending on your point of view, this takes fine dining to the next level or distracts from the food. The contemporary Indian food created by Chefs Anupam Gulati and Imran worked hard to stand up to the over stimulation, and largely succeeded. Conversation too is interrupted by the story so if you want an intimate uninterrupted meal, this is not for you. This experience would be perfect for corporates though, because you can wow your colleagues or clients without having to engage in too much chit-chat.

When people think of Bengaluru food, they don’t think of five-star hotels but what we call “darshinis.” The thing though is that this state’s cuisine is more than the idli and dosa. This point was made to me at a recent food festival that MTR Foods organised. The advertisement said that there would be over 100 dishes, all vegetarian. I must have eaten every single item. I could do this because the portions were small with throwaway eco-friendly leaf-plates. I drank wood-apple juice, piquant kokum rasam, jowar roti with a variety of brinjal preparations, had spongy steamed sannas wrapped in jackfruit leaves and tasted a mind-boggling array of chutneys. Heard of bilimbi chutney? It is a sour citrusy fruit about half the size of a melon. Made into chutney, it goes well with the millets that are the mainstay of Uttara Karnataka. From Kodagu (Coorg), we vegetarians who are always made fun of because we cannot eat their famous pandi (pork) curry had an option—it is called “moodaray kanee” a soup made with horse gram. I dislike horse gram in general, but this soup/kanji, I could drink every day. And so it went at every counter—representing the regions of Karnataka. Something new, others familiar, always fresh and healthy. The food of this state is super-healthy. Most people don’t know that but it really is the foodie takeaway of this column.

(Shoba Narayan is Bengaluru-based award-winning author. She is also a freelance contributor who writes about art, food, fashion and travel for a number of publications)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shoba Narayan

Shoba Narayan is Bangalore-based award-winning author. She is also a freelance contributor who writes about art, food, fashion and travel for a number of publications.

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