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Mm...indian food - Page 2

post #16 of 24
the 4 arms stuff just signifies the power of the gods
post #17 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by impolyt_one View Post
I like how Indian food in America always seems to end up being the 'premium ethnic food'.. apart from 'sushi' - we only had one Indian place in my college town and it was like $20 a curry, $5 for a couple naan or roti.

wtf that's ridiculous.


I live in quite an indian neighbouhood. I especially love "Chaat", which is yoghurt based stuff with spices and a sweet/spicy flavour. Hard to describe but it's like a yoghurt and chickpea/lentil thick sauce over samosa or roti stuff. really nice.


also, dhal is probably the cheapest and most nutritious thing you could make if you're a student.
post #18 of 24
there's an awesome indian place in Pasadena, for lunch it's 12$ all you can eat buffet which rocks, but dinner is kind of expensive
post #19 of 24
I once went to an Indian buffet in a 5-star hotel in Beijing, which was not bad. The salted lemonade was rather unpalatable, however.
post #20 of 24
My girlfriend's mom cooks me authentic food every once and a while good stuff
post #21 of 24
^ Is the authentic food indian? Because that would even better!
post #22 of 24
Shahi Paneer is the SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIT

That and Chicken Biryani (but that's Pakistani I believe, whatever).

Love me some Indian food.
post #23 of 24
WTF is up with all these stupid comments about Indians and Hindus. Anyways, the range of vegetarian dishes in north Indian cuisine is unmatched IMO and eating non-veg in an Indian restaurant is missing the point. Needless to say, I am totally biased in favour of north Indian food and prefer veg food over non-veg though I am not exclusively vegetarian. Have you guys tried south Indian food ? Appams are yum ..
post #24 of 24
Quote:
Originally Posted by LabelKing View Post
I once went to an Indian buffet in a 5-star hotel in Beijing, which was not bad. The salted lemonade was rather unpalatable, however.

There are generally 3 types of lemonades on offer. A sweet one, a salted one and a mix of sweet and salt one known as shikanji. Here, in a restaurant if you order a fresh lime, the waiter will ask which one you want
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