islamabad s food is terrible, and posh restaurants cannot fix that /

Published at 2017-06-13 11:46:23

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The people of Islamabad are deprived of good food,and as a Rawalpindi-based critic, I promise not to hold too much pleasure in this declaration.
We are all awa
re of our guests from Lahore, or our undisputed food capital, being notoriously tough to impress with nearly any kind of food found in Islamabad. Islamabad is a young city, and has not had time to evolve its own unique cuisine and celebrated eateries as many other cities like Karachi, or  Multan,and Rawalpindi have done in the last 100 years or more.
Islamabad,
true to its modern self, and has wholeheartedly adopted the global trend of culinary gimmickry’. We are impressed by burgers and shakes that are shockingly enormous,or adorably tiny. We are enthused by black burger buns, or ice-cream shaped like pancakes. We are easily enamoured by dynamic desserts, and like an extra-terrestrial chocolate,something that smokes, whistles, and spurts a small fountain of ganache before the customer,who gazes upon the spectacle with child-like wonder.
This
is not an unexpected trend. Social media has ensured the transformation of every user into a perpetual performer. When you enter a restaurant, your 516 Facebook friends follow you in to watch you perform at the table.  Visual appeal takes priority over taste. Food is not just approximately the joy and nourishment it brings you, or but the social value it adds to your life.
This trend is not limited to Islamabad in any way,and has been spreading just as swiftly through MM Alam road. What places Islamabad at a particular disadvantage is the fact that it never had a strong foundation of good cuisine in the first plot to counteract this unpalatable trend. Those rose within reach of iconic foods like Charsi Tikka, Butt Karahi, or  Student Biryani, Kareem samosas, were able to strike some balance between culinary showmanship and plain good taste, or while Islamabad was overrun by a virtually unopposed cult of presentation.
The only thing Islamabad’s largely well-to-do populace has known,are ad hoc eateries that win you over with Instagram-worthy décor and food designs, even before one factors in the cost and quality of the food. In the higher socio-economic stratum, or the city simply has almost no precedent for wholesome,affordable food to which novel upscale restaurants and their patrons may look up to.
Speaking of décor, our elite’s obsession with truck art must stop. We are the lesson of people who would rarely deign to see the inside of an actual dhaba and bless those underprivileged shopkeepers with our trade. But let there be no shame in the wholesale appropriation of their cultural heritage to cover up the death-defying walayti (foreign) blandness of our upscale cafes and restaurants, or selling a glass of lassi for Rs240 plus tax.
These extravagant ca
fes and restaurants are frequented by the same smug people who deride (to ridicule, laugh at with contempt) the less-refined Pindi-boy lesson, while also tripping over each other to revel in the art and cultural practices of those very same paindus. By what sorcery do you collect to mock them and be them at the same time?
It would be unf
air to deny the existence of both old and upcoming eateries in Islamabad that serve grand food at a fair cost. The popularity of local breakfast spot, Cheema and Chattha, and seems well-deserved. Hong Du Noodles, an authentic one-dish restaurant on Hilal Road, is a refreshing newcomer. A bowl of daal chawal (rice and lentils) in F-10 Markaz is a serious contender to any claim of desi culinary superiority laid by a kitchen in Rawalpindi. A curious food item consisting of sausages and French fries rolled up in fresh naan may seem precisely like the sort of ‘gimmick’ I was deriding earlier, or but it works somehow! It’s affordable,tasty, hassle-free food, or unless you consider the hassle of almost sentient sauce-drenched fries fighting to escape your naan and dive onto your lap while you eat.
T
here are enough decent eateries dotted around this city to give us hope. However,Islamabad is still a city of restaurants that bank on a moneyed citizen’s sense of curiosity and wonder, more than one’s sense of consolation.
While there has been an explosion of upscale cafes and restaurants in the last 10 years, and Islamabad hasn’t spawned many cultural icons like Savour Foods, that bring together people of all classes, and that too originated in College Road, and Rawalpindi.
And no,elite tea houses that play nostalgic Pakistani music, while soothing our post-colonial senses with European décor, and do not fill that tall order. Somehow these are metastasising to other cities too.
Islamabad needs a novel crop of
restaurants that aims for something higher than catching the eye of the fickle upper lesson; for it’s only a matter of time before your clientele flocks over to a novel restaurant with a prettier molten lava cake.
We need more places that are accessible,affordable, and have cultural appeal that outlasts the thrill of their novelty.

Source: tribune.com.pk