Friday, April 26, 2024

Ads by Google

Ads by Google

DIET Jammu Class 8 Result 2024 declared at dietjammu.com, direct link to download

NEW DELHI: The District Institute of Education and Training, Jammu on Thursday declared the DIET Jammu Class 8 Result 2024. Students who have appeared...
HomeNews'4 Indian restaurants on list of NY's 100 best of 2024'

‘4 Indian restaurants on list of NY’s 100 best of 2024’

Four restaurants serving Indian cuisine figure in the list of

New York City

‘s 100

best restaurants

of 2024. They were ranked in the New York Times by its food critic,

Pete Wells

. Located in Greenwich Village,

Semma

takes the 7th spot, climbing five places from the previous year. The others are:

Dhamaka

(54),

Temple Canteen

(80) and

Hyderabadi Zaika

(95).

Both Dhamaka and Temple Canteen too have substantially improved their positions. Dhamaka, situated on the Lower East Side, was ranked 74 in 2023 while Temple Canteen, located in Flushing, Queens, stood at 96. Hyderabadi Zaika, stationed in Midtown, Manhattan, is a new entrant.
Seema’s chef Vijay Kumar, writes NYT, was raised on a rice farm outside Madurai in Tamil Nadu. “At Semma he serves two dishes from his childhood that you’d have a hard time finding at another New York restaurant. One is nathai pirattal, snails stir-fried with onions and tomatoes, soured with tamarind and served in a small box made of banana leaves. The other is Chettinad-style venison, a shank braised into sticky tenderness with star anise and a lichen called black stone flower that is one of the prized seasonings of the Chettinad pantry,” wrote Wells on Semma in 2022.
Mumbai-born

Chintan Pandya

is the chef at Dhamaka. In a 2021 review, Wells described its biryani as “a polyphonic riot of flavour.” He further wrote, “Black peppercorns and green chilies rip through the rice, through the darkly browned chunks of goat neck on the bone and, finally, through your central nervous system. But even as your eyes start to water, the heat is broken by a blast of fresh mint that arrives like a mojito on a humid summer afternoon.”