A journey of flavours at the Copper Chimney in Delhi

Mumbai’s Copper Chimney famous for its North Indian cuisine for five decades has finally debuted in Delhi dishing out its classic butter chicken masala, paneer tikka and biryani and the diners are thronging for the culinary trek

April 05, 2024 01:37 pm | Updated April 17, 2024 01:15 pm IST

Copper Chimney has opened its 20th outlet in Rajouri Garden Delhi

Copper Chimney has opened its 20th outlet in Rajouri Garden Delhi | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

This is a story from the seventies: when a rumali roti went wrong at the hands of a chef of a newly opened restaurant in Mumbai and the owner got down to fixing the disaster.

Apparently the chef flipped the rumali roti on the griddle and forgot about it! What was meant to be a soft roti turned crispy and crunchy biscuit-like. The owner came to the rescue with an instant, innovative reinvention. He asked the chef to slather the roti with butter, spread a layer of finely chopped onions, tomato and coriander over it and top it with a medley of flavourful spices and sesame seeds.

The ever popular Kadak Rumali served at Copper Chimney

The ever popular Kadak Rumali served at Copper Chimney | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

Kadak rumali was thus born accidentally in the kitchen of Copper Chimney (CC) started by Mumbaifilm distributor J K Kapoor and ever since, the paper thin roti roasted on an inverted tawa and layered with masalas has become an integral part of its signature menu.

Story behind recipes

When the story of kadak rumali is shared with customers while taking orders, the item is a sell out. “Diners love it as a starter,” says Shikha Nath, the culinary director since 1997, who was in Delhi recently to assess the public response to the first outlet in the Capital, after CC’s presence in Gurugram, Chennai, Pune, Bengaluru, Kuwait, Kualalumpur and London.

Shikha is full of stories about tweaked dishes, which she compiled into an Autograph menu for the restaurant in its golden jubilee year in 2022. “It has dishes that were created or modified to suit palates by Kapoor out of his love for food ,” she says.

The popular chelo kebab has another story; That time plain cooked rice turned sticky and Kapoor transformed it into a butter and cream-rich rice pudding crowned with a variety of spicy, juicy and smoked kebab chunks, drawing inspiration from Iran’s national dish, the chelow kabab. He had tasted and liked it during his travels and gave the dish his own twist, says Shikha, who has also been working on a book that contains many such interesting nuggets about CC from the day it was inaugurated at Mumbai’s Kalaghoda by actor Dilip Kumar in 1972.

The popular chelo kebab from its Autograph menu served at Copper Chimney

The popular chelo kebab from its Autograph menu served at Copper Chimney | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

“Kapoor wove his passion for food with his personal memories of undivided India’s cuisine and the kitchens of refugees,” says Shikha. “I am a foodie but never thought food could be my career until I met him; I learnt the nuances of traditional food from him and built upon his culinary legacy that steers clear of any fusion and artificial colours,” adds the 62-year-old.

Shikha Nath, Culinary Editor of Copper Chimney 

Shikha Nath, Culinary Editor of Copper Chimney  | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

There are lot of memories attached to CC’s heirloom recipes and the special garam masala made with 19 ingredients by Kapoor that have been handed down to successive generations. The main Ustads, who have been with the group for four decades drive the success of CC as they constantly work on the brand’s forte — the revival of lost spices, recipes and flavours of India before partition and North-West Frontier.

Injecting new energy into the way Delhi savours Punjabi food, the CC outlet in Rajouri Garden is dishing out regular fare such as the all-time favourite butter chicken masala, paneer tikka, sarson ka saag with makai ki roti, kali daal, jeera aloo, namkeen matthi, biriyani, range of naansand evoking memories.

Try the chicken bharta (minced chicken), Barniwala achari mutton(rustic mutton on bones cooked with onions and pickling spices) inspired by the local dhabas of Jalandhar, the karari nimona tikkis (crisp green pea cutlets stuffed with chilli spiked cheese and chena) and the lal mirch jhinga(spicy prawns).

And I give the chelo kebab a perfect score!

The vegetarian kababs and curries platter offered at Copper Chimney

The vegetarian kababs and curries platter offered at Copper Chimney | Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

Copper Chimney, Unit GF-06, Vishal Complex District Centre, Shivaji Place, Tagore Garden Extension, Rajouri Garden; 12pm to 4pm and 6.30pm to 11pm. Cost for two: Rs.2000

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.