The Hindu (Thiruvananthapuram)

Upcoming takeovers worth sampling:

- Suman Mahfuz Quazi

t would be imprecise to say that restaurant takeovers are a new phenomenon. This F&B trend’s seeds were, in fact, sown more than a decade ago, but it is inarguably more unpreceden­ted today.

Take a conversati­on with lm profession­al Sidharth Mirchandan­i for instance. Even as he chats about what makes such events appealing to him as a diner, he is gearing up for a Nose to Tail pop-up at Magazine Street Kitchen (MSK), an experienti­al events space in Mumbai’s Byculla where Chef Shriya Shetty (the mind behind Mangalore’s Cafe Buco) and independen­t Chef

Christophe­r Fernandes (of Goa’s Cravings By Chris) will be laying out a meaty spread. “It’s part pleasure, part unwinding,” he condes. Sidharth nds himself regularly attending one-of-a-kind and often, time-limited culinary experience­s. These range from collaborat­ions between two restaurant­s and pop-ups helmed by guest restaurant­s to time-bound takeovers by guest chefs and mixologist­s.

Incidental­ly, the brainchild behind MSK, veteran restaurate­ur Gauri Devidayal, became one of the rst to experiment with these formats back in the day. It was 2012 and Gauri was looking for a way to perk up her kitchen team’s morale at the now-revered The Table, a ne diner — and one among her many restaurant brands — in South Mumbai. But the two-day ‘collab’ dinner that transpired between the diner and California-based Chef John Paul Carmona — also a mentor to Chef Alex Sanchez, who was heading the kitchen at The Table at the time — was a result of happenstan­ce.

“The culinary landscape was so di–erent then; restaurant­s worked in their little silos. When we brought the chef to spend three weeks with us, the idea was just to have fun together and create some new dishes,” Gauri recalls, adding how spontaneou­sly the dinner

Imenu emerged as a way of introducin­g newness to the city and also, to recover some costs. “There was no concept of sponsors at the time,” she stresses, referring to an important facet of these experienti­al shindigs today. But more on that later.

At that rst dinner (and a few more later), Gauri observed a hunger in the market for exclusive soirées. And therein lay the rst ripples of this monumental culinary wave.

While Gauri went on to set-up MSK, an out-and-out events space, where takeovers and pop-ups form the business model (versus a diner hosting the occasional guest chef/restaurant/mixologist), other restaurant­s, especially those inside ve-star hotels, began œying down the teams behind accomplish­ed hospitalit­y brands from countries far and wide. The genesis of takeovers, pop-up, and guest-chef series, ie, di–erent formats that essentiall­y featured a cross-over or coming-together between two or more F&B entities, was decidedly underscore­d by an internatio­nal œavour. “When we started, people were hungry — pardon the pun — for these things: new experience­s and di–erent options because there were such few restaurant­s and bars,” Gauri echoes, explaining why in the rst-wave of culinary events the focus was greatly on internatio­nal players.

Today, the culture has shifted to focus on local talent with bars, restaurant­s, and home chefs between Mumbai, Delhi, Goa, Bengaluru, Kolkata, Pune, (and sparingly from the Northeast) coming in cahoots for unique dining collaborat­ions. “It’s a saturated market and you need to keep it fresh, keep innovating… but how many times will you keep changing your menu? So, you create something for a weekend and it generates buzz to bring people in,” Gauri says about the pivot from “discovery” to “marketing” in this space.

Be that as it may, for mixologist Avinash Kapoli, Bengaluru’s latest cocktail bar, SOKA’s owner, takeovers and collaborat­ions have proven to be “a great marketing

Burnt Ends Singapore comes to Khi Khi in Delhi on June 21

Khi Khi pops up at SOKA on August 8 tool”. In its six months of existence since opening doors in November 2023, the bar has already popped up at Mumbai’s Bandra Born and Slink and Bardot.

“When we went to Bandra Born, guests who come to us regularly pinged their friends in Mumbai saying, ‘Hey, you know what? A bar from Bengaluru is doing a takeover in your city, you should denitely go.’ So, in that way it helps us spread the word,” he shares, adding that as a 42-seater, they are targeting a niche community and it is crucial for their business. Avinash and team are working towards launching Lime House Thursdays, cocktail nights celebratin­g limey drinks, such as daiquiris and margaritas, with twists and hope to host mixologist­s from India and beyond.

In another part of the collaborat­ions’ universe, the script has œipped — from Indian establishm­ents playing host to internatio­nal culinarian­s to homegrown restaurant­s taking their oeuvre overseas. In October last year, Mumbai’s Slink and Bardot took over the line and pass at Singapore’s Indian-Mexican restaurant, Ms.Maria & Mr. Singh for the latter’s rst anniversar­y. Whereas, the chef-duo Seefah Ketchaiyo and Karan Bane of Bandra’s Thai-Japanese restaurant, Seefah, œew to Maldives for a pop-up at the Four Seasons

Resorts in April 2024. “We love exploring — new cities, di–erent cultures, and new ways of eating,” Karan says of what prompts chefs to pack their bags and showcase food despite the challenges of a new atmosphere. “It also allows for increased exposure; for us and our team,” he adds.

“These formats provide a platform for culinary experiment­ation and innovation, enabling chefs to showcase their creativity to a wider audience.

They also facilitate collaborat­ion within the industry,” summarises Avinandan Kundu, head chef, Sienna Calcutta, which concluded its rst internatio­nal pop-up, Epar-Opar (literally translatin­g to ‘across’) at Singapore’s modern Vietnamese diner, Lo Quay in April.

The award-winning, progressiv­e Indian restaurant Ekaa, Mumbai, too has seen its own share of internatio­nal ‘collabs’ — at The Elephant Room, Singapore in 2022; a bar takeover at Nairobi’s Hero Bar and Sinnerman the same year; and an 11-course degustatio­n menu pop-up at the South Indian and Sri Lankan cuisine restaurant Nadodi in Kuala Lumpur in 2023.

You would think this emanated from crucial planning, but chef-owner Niyati Singh feels,

“Our thought was never to sit in the beginning of the year and set targets for the number of pop-ups we’d like to do. We prefer natural collaborat­ions with like-minded partners and that’s how most of our national and internatio­nal pop-ups happened. Although meticulous planning is necessary, the best ones unfold e–ortlessly.”

Which brings us to the question of arrangemen­ts, and importantl­y, budgets. From travel to stay, and transporta­tion of ingredient­s and raw materials — there is quite a bit of logistics involved. Then there is means required for promotions. This is where sponsors come in. And increasing­ly for F&B experience­s, it is the liquor brands, who are already manoeuvrin­g their way around restrictio­ns on advertisin­g alcohol. “For them, it becomes a way of marketing their product. For the bar/restaurant that’s coming, it’s to promote themselves, and for the space that’s hosting it’s to bring in guests. That entire ecosystem is hinged on promotions,” Gauri adds.

For Avinash though it is equally about fostering a sense of community and keeping things fresh. “Consumers always like it when there’s something special” he says. Which is true; it all boils down to creating a memorable experience, for the industry and its patrons, in equal measure.

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