LTH Home

Bhel Puri at Viceroy

Bhel Puri at Viceroy
  • Forum HomePost Reply BackTop
  • Bhel Puri at Viceroy

    Post #1 - August 28th, 2005, 11:03 am
    Post #1 - August 28th, 2005, 11:03 am Post #1 - August 28th, 2005, 11:03 am
    This friday evening we went to Viceroy on Devon for dinner. We've been going there for a decade, and it is noteworthy to me as a Chicago Indian restaurant that I've never had to cross off my list. I would wish that they would love up their atmosphere and decor a bit, clean their windows, etc. But I don't recall ever having a bad, deal-breaker meal there.

    We ordered the bhel puri appetizer, a scrumptious mixture of crispy snacks, potatoes, cilantro, onions, and spices, slightly sweet. I asked the waiter if it was considered a breakfast dish and he said no, it's a dish you eat with drinks. And indeed I enjoyed it with my refreshing Gin Sling. I haven't found this dish anywhere else on Devon, though I'm sure it's served there somewhere.

    To backtrack, the meal began with a platter of papadam served with tomatoes, cucumbers, raita, tamarind sauce, cilantro sauce, and a chutney. The bhel puri was followed by lamb biryani with more raita and aloo gobi served in copper dishes (the portions have perhaps gotten smaller). Quite delicious. Service was gracious and attentive.
  • Post #2 - August 28th, 2005, 11:38 am
    Post #2 - August 28th, 2005, 11:38 am Post #2 - August 28th, 2005, 11:38 am
    My understanding is that bhel poori is also a street food, though with drinks makes sense, considering its vague resemblance to Chex Party Mix. I think you tend to see it more in the snack shops than the more proper restaurants (hence seeing it at Viceroy, which is both). Here's a thread about how to make it.
    Watch Sky Full of Bacon, the Chicago food HD podcast!
    New episode: Soil, Corn, Cows and Cheese
    Watch the Reader's James Beard Award-winning Key Ingredient here.
  • Post #3 - August 29th, 2005, 11:03 am
    Post #3 - August 29th, 2005, 11:03 am Post #3 - August 29th, 2005, 11:03 am
    Funny thing about Viceroy. We have been going there for years and years. When it's good, it's really good. The tamarind sauce, samosas, lamb biryani are all outstanding. However, I find it really inconsistent. Last couple of times we've gone there, it's been mediocre at best.

    Don't think I will go back, unless something changes for the better.
  • Post #4 - August 30th, 2005, 11:02 pm
    Post #4 - August 30th, 2005, 11:02 pm Post #4 - August 30th, 2005, 11:02 pm
    Mike G wrote:My understanding is that bhel poori is also a street food, though with drinks makes sense, considering its vague resemblance to Chex Party Mix. I think you tend to see it more in the snack shops than the more proper restaurants (hence seeing it at Viceroy, which is both). Here's a thread about how to make it.


    It is a street food, yes - mostly a Bombay street food IMHO. Its available all over
    Devon, but not in restaurants. You can find it at Sukhadia, Amrit Ganga,
    Annapurna etc - all snack-type places, more than actual dinner places.

    Also, if the bhel-puri was sweet as indicated by the OP - well, thats not
    bad, but probably not quite as authentic as the most common version in
    street food (you can get sweet, but more people IMHO would get
    hot). Had bhel-puri at Sukhadia's only like 2 days ago with a group of
    Indians (who eat Indian food everyday but are mostly into the less-hot
    Indian foods)... and they found Sukhadia's bhel-puri (and vada pav, pani
    puri etc) ridiculously hot, mouth-burning, forehead-sweating hot. Though,
    they werent having it with drinks - as you mostly certainly would need to
    when its that hot :-) (I found it very hot that day too, BTW - but I sort
    of enjoy that, so it wasnt too bad for me).

    BTW, "bhelpuri preparations" can mean not just bhel-puri, but also
    pani-puri (which can be very very spicy sometimes), dahivada (which
    is not spicy at all) etc. Am adding below a paragraph from an article
    about eating bhelpuri/panipuri etc...

    -----------------
    There is nothing mild and subdued about the taste of bhelpuri preparations.
    They are hot stuff – as hot as a raging prairie fire. Therefore people who are
    brought up on mashed potatoes (mashing a potato seems to me to be the worst
    insult to which it can be subjected!) and who have eaten nothing hotter than hot
    dogs, should not venture to taste them without expert guidance.

    But once they learn to enjoy the ecstasy of setting their tongues on fire
    they will realize that bhelpuri preparations are not merely hot. They are also
    sour, pungent, peppery, salty, spicy, creamy, crisp, fluffy (and believe it or
    not) sweet. All these tastes annoy, tease, titillate and soothe the tongue
    while the fire continues to rage on.
    ...
    _____________

    As you can see, "sweet bhelpuri" is entirely possible - but sweet should
    not IMHO be the primary impression one should come away with. At least,
    not without some sweating and gasping for water first :-)

    c8w
  • Post #5 - September 3rd, 2005, 7:50 am
    Post #5 - September 3rd, 2005, 7:50 am Post #5 - September 3rd, 2005, 7:50 am
    fwiw, sukhadia's bhel is probably my favorite right now - I like it with some spice - unfortunately no place around town that I know of makes it with slivers of green mango.

    Even better at sukhadia than bhel, IMO, is the samosa chaat, a samosa, topped with their very good channa, and then many of the bhel toppings.

    nice quote by the way -that book is available at the U of C library, the whole essay kills
  • Post #6 - September 7th, 2005, 5:59 pm
    Post #6 - September 7th, 2005, 5:59 pm Post #6 - September 7th, 2005, 5:59 pm
    Oh man, thanks for the recommendation! I looooove Bhel Puri.

    I'm drooling over thinking about it.
  • Post #7 - September 7th, 2005, 6:47 pm
    Post #7 - September 7th, 2005, 6:47 pm Post #7 - September 7th, 2005, 6:47 pm
    zim wrote:fwiw, sukhadia's bhel is probably my favorite right now - I like it with some spice - unfortunately no place around town that I know of makes it with slivers of green mango.

    Even better at sukhadia than bhel, IMO, is the samosa chaat, a samosa, topped with their very good channa, and then many of the bhel toppings.


    Yes, had the samosa chaat too - again, I liked it, but the others found it way
    too spicy. (They even asked for ti non-spicy, ie they wanted to add the
    chutneys themselves, but no dice).

    BTW , meant to ask you but kept forgetting, have you tried the Madras
    chain "Hot Breads" yet? There's a branch in Schaumburg now, but I
    havent gotten to it yet (people keep telling me that the chicken tikka
    croissant is very good).

    c8w
  • Post #8 - September 7th, 2005, 8:16 pm
    Post #8 - September 7th, 2005, 8:16 pm Post #8 - September 7th, 2005, 8:16 pm
    c8w wrote: but the others found it way
    too spicy. (They even asked for ti non-spicy, ie they wanted to add the
    chutneys themselves, but no dice).

    BTW , meant to ask you but kept forgetting, have you tried the Madras
    chain "Hot Breads" yet? There's a branch in Schaumburg now, but I
    havent gotten to it yet (people keep telling me that the chicken tikka
    croissant is very good).

    c8w


    the trick at sukhadia to customizing your order (i.e. chutney's on the side, a little extra yoghurt, etc. is to talk to the folks at the counter rather than the older guy at front - he always seems a little overwhelmed just by the ordering chaos, and after he relays the order I think he feels he's blessedly out of it until its time to add up the bill)

    I haven't tried Hot Breads yet, don't get out to the schaum very often, but next time I'm out there I plan on stopping in. Any other suggestions when I do get out there?

Contact

About

Team

Advertize

Close

Chat

Articles

Guide

Events

more