Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Chef who brought Indian fine dine to US dies of Covid-19

- Rachel Lopez letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Celebrated chef Floyd Cardoz, the name behind top restaurant­s such as Tabla in New York and The Bombay Canteen and OPedro in Mumbai, died of Covid-19related complicati­ons in New Jersey on Wednesday. He was 59, and was last in India earlier this month.

A statement by Hunger Inc, the Indian hospitalit­y company he co-founded, said that Cardoz tested positive for the coronaviru­s disease in the US on March 18, and was being treated for it in New Jersey.

Mumbai-born Cardoz is widely credited with giving Indian fine-dining its due in the US, and for adding a modern, relaxed vibe to Indian cuisine in Mumbai. Trained as a biochemist, he attended culinary school in Mumbai and the Global Hospitalit­y Management School in Les Roches, Switzerlan­d, before moving to New York in 1988.

There, he quickly climbed up the ranks to set up Tabla with restaurant guru Danny Meyer in 1997. It had a successful run in midtown Manhattan, and by 2012, Cardoz, who won Season Three of the show Top Chef Masters and donated his winnings to cancer research, became a prominent member of the city’s culinary set. It was in the 2010s that Cardoz truly came into his own, opening three restaurant­s in the US, and becoming the culinary director and creating the launch menu for Mumbai’s The Bombay Canteen in 2015.

The restaurant introduced a light, inventive take on Indian dining, serving dishes such as a seafood bhel, a spicy club favourite “Eggs Kejriwal”, and a tuna ceviche with sol-kadi sauce. This, along with the Bombay Canteen’s tapas, and fusion desserts such as the gulab-nut (a gulab jamun-donut hybrid), set the restaurant apart in a market then dominated by comfort

European food and highpriced imports such as Norwegian salmon and New Zealand lamb chops.

Restaurate­ur Riyaz Amlani, former president of the National Restaurant Associatio­n of India and proprietor of dining chains Smokehouse Deli, Saltwater Cafe and Social, says Cardoz’s death has stunned those in the hospitalit­y industry. “He was the first true ambassador of Indian food abroad to a new generation of diners who saw Indian food as trendy and high quality,” Amlani said.

Cardoz authored two books, most recently Flavorwall­a in 2016. But to food lovers, he will be remembered as the man who gave Indian food (long considered cheap and stodgy in the West) a fresh, light makeover.

 ??  ?? Floyd Cardoz
Floyd Cardoz

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