May 24, 2024
4 mins read

Tasting Tradition: Marwadi Khana’s Homage to Marwari Cuisine

It is their cuisine that Abhilasha Jain has been serving over the past ten years to her growing clientele across her home base, Gurugram, and Delhi, from her 1,000-square-foot cloud kitchen. And the brand she helms is appropriately called ‘Marwadi Khana’…reports Asian Lite News

It is one of those unresolved ironies. For the world, Marwari food is synonymous with a vegetarian, no onion-no garlic-no tuber fare, but Rajasthan’s rugged Marwar region is equally famous for its robust non-vegetarian cuisine with game meat, notably wild boar, ruling the tables of the Rajput royalty.

The only way one can explain this dichotomy is that Marwar, though famous for brave kings and warriors who were hearty non-vegetarians, became known as being strictly vegetarian when the trading class of this region, particularly those from Churu Jhunjhunu and Sikar, moved to other parts of the country and gained control over the levers of business and finance. They became famous everywhere as the ‘Marwaris’.

It is their cuisine that Abhilasha Jain has been serving over the past ten years to her growing clientele across her home base, Gurugram, and Delhi, from her 1,000-square-foot cloud kitchen. And the brand she helms is appropriately called ‘Marwadi Khana’.

Jain, a homemaker who was born in Bhilwara, studied in Ajmer and got married to a software professional in Jaipur, started modestly on Facebook, becoming active in foodie groups that were sprouting all over the social networking site in the early 2010s.

She acquired a formidable social media following because of her recipes and very soon, people started placing food orders with her.

Those were the early sparks that lit the fires of the ‘Marwadi Khana’ kitchen and Jain quickly realised that her home kitchen was too small to handle the kind of orders she was getting, from corporate meals in Goa to house-warming parties at Camellias, the most exclusive address in Delhi-NCR, to people hungry for good food during the Navratras.

With her reputation as a dependable home chef with sound business operations who delivers freshly cooked vegetarian meals across Delhi-NCR — her WhatsApp channel has 10,000-plus phone numbers of satisfied repeat clients today — she was going to draw the attention of five-star hotels.

Well, she did get invited by The Leela Ambience Gurugram’s fashionable Indian restaurant, Diya, where she has been presiding over a Marwari food pop-up, which will continue till Sunday, May 26. And what a treat she has laid out.

Jain could have stuck to a familiar script and done the dal-baati-choorma routine, followed by kair-sangri and gatte ki sabzi, but her touches of innovation are what make her spread stand out.

The honeycombed ghevar, a dessert associated with Teej during the monsoon, ends up in a chaat; the nibbles, from the soft and crunchy papad paneer rolls to kachche kele aur badam ke kabab (a Navratra favourite because of the injunction against eating potatoes), are a meal by themselves; the sangri, or stringy desert beans, go into koftas (a favourite, Jain told us with visible pride, of Mewar’s popular royal, Sriji); the kair, or desert berries, end up with cashew; and makhana, or fox nuts, are paired with grapes to make a delicious sabzi.

Jain left us gobsmacked with her kadhi kachori and mirchi bada chaat, a street delicacy that brings back memories of her school days in Ajmer, and her rendition of Jodhpur’s savoury gulab jamun ki sabzi.

Of course, there were the hardy perennials that no Marwari spread can miss — three kinds of baati (plain, stuffed and Bafla) served with ‘panchmela’ dal and different varieties of choorma, including the jaripalla packed with khoya, dry fruit and saffron, as well as the simpler options made with atta and besan. Then there were the breads, namely, the ‘tikkad’, floral-shaped thick bread, and the unputdownable Bikaneri paratha stuffed with ground roasted dal.

For dessert, the choice was between makhane ka kheer and the tempting aam kalakand, a complete reinvention of the kalakand flavoured with mango. No points for guessing. We ended a soul-satisfying meal with the latter and just couldn’t stop digging into it!

Abhilasha Jain has opened up a new world of tastes, textures and flavours. If her WhatsApp channel now has one new member, it is because of the lasting impression her food has left on our edible memory.

ALSO READ-Bite sized deliciousness: Laddooh by Chef Sugandha Saxena

Previous Story

Savour the Season: Chef Kunal Kapoor’s Comforting Winter Soup Recipes

Next Story

Prolonged Sitting Equals Dangers of Smoking, Obesity

Latest from LITE BLOGS

Priyanka Chopra’s Action Thriller

The film’s technical team includes Steven Price as the music composer, Ben Davis behind the lens as cinematographer, and Tom Harrison-Read serving as the editor—indicating a polished and impactful cinematic experience After

Recipe: Cranberry Coconut Laddoo

A recipe deeply rooted in Indian culinary traditions, it’s always a refreshing take to infuse classic recipes with contemporary twists. One such delightful innovation is the Cranberry Coconut Laddoo—a harmonious blend of

Long Naps Raise Risk

Researchers believe that irregular and long naps could disrupt natural sleep cycles and might indicate underlying health issues such as diabetes, heart disease, and depression Sleeping more than 30 minutes in the

An evening with Mr Cupid

A musical saga Mr Cupid is Cruel sets a new trend of short films in Oman, reports Vinod Raghavan A brainstorming session at the launch of Video Haiku series 4 was held

Bollywood Fuels British Creative Sector

Housefull 5, the fifth instalment of the hit Bollywood comedy franchise, recently launched its trailer on 27 May 2025 to overwhelming response The UK’s visual effects industry continues to gain global acclaim—this
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Magic of Indian Cuisine

Turmeric powder is one of the most widely used spices in every

Saransh Brings ‘Goila Butter Chicken’ To London

FnB columnist Riccha Grrover in conversation with Chef Saransh Goila