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| Treated Like a King at Udupi Palace | ||||
| Posted by Sheryl Kirby in indian, restaurant review, south asian on June 19, 2007 at 1:32 pm | ||||
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Udupi Palace has locations in Maryland, Illinois, Seattle, Queens and Mountain View, California to name but a few. All focus on South Indian vegetarian food, and all are located in areas with a concentrated Southeast Asian population. The Toronto location, smack in the middle of the Gerrard India Bazaar, is a basement space that disconcertingly resembles a banquet hall. Tile floors, granite tables, and trompe l’oeil paintings on the wall combine to make the space feel somewhat cold and stark. It’s freakishly clean to the point of being almost clinical, and while it doesn’t actually smell of bleach, I always have the impression that the whole place is “sanitized for your protection” every evening at closing. |
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Within minutes, mango juice
and mango lassies ($2.95 each) appear at our table, quickly followed by
the hefty assorted hors d’ouevres platter ($7.95) containing iddly
(steamed rice and lentil patties), bhaji (sliced potatoes breaded and
deep fried), special bondo (lentil dumpling with onion and potato) medhu
vada (fried lentil donuts) chili pakora (deep-fried, breaded whole Indian
chili pepper) and onion pakora. All of these are perfectly crisp (well,
except the iddly which is steamed and fluffy) and lucky for me, the husband
wimps out and I score both of the chili pakoras, a blast of heat tempered
by both the breading and the accompanying sambar and coconut chutney. Next up is a dish from the new menu, the Iddly Manchurian ($4.95), in which the steamed iddly are cut into quarters and fried and served in a sauce that appears to be primarily comprised of garlic. This is absolutely awesome. Those red-shirted servers whisk past us in waves, one carrying what we jokingly refer to as “the party dosa” but which appears on the menu as a paper dosa ($6.95) – this is a massive rice and lentil crepe, cooked crispy. It is about two and a half feet long. |
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I totally dig the flavour combination of the pineapple in the pancake paired with the coconut chutney. At this point we are always full, although a Udupi server once told us that the dosa and uthappam are actually meant to be a first course, to be followed by a curry or thali. For those with a stronger constitution, or perhaps a hollow leg, Udupi Palace offers curries and thalis (all $8.95) served with rice and bread. |
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