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Indian food is very diverse. You’re beginning to see some regional cuisines show up in restaurants- until recently, it was pretty generic Punjabi/ North Indian food.
A2B in Herndon is quite authentic for South Indian food. Rasika and Celebrations by Rupa Vira are more fancy/ fusion, but do have some tasty dishes. Ditto Bindaas (more casual) I’d check out Chai Pani, which opened recently in DC. I’ve eaten at the original one in Asheville and it’s pretty good. |
I’m South Asian and I too hate coconut milk. Admittedly I don’t go to Indian restaurants very much, but I think you can mostly avoid it in non-South Indian food? Most Indian restaurants serve North Indian food anyway. I get it, though. I don’t go to SE Asian restaurants because it’s hard to avoid coconut milk. I just don’t think of Indian food as being coconut milk heavy, though. |
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I love northern Indian cuisine, particular various iterations of goat curry. Being Japanese, I love curry in practically all its forms (except when it has coconut).
Prepandemic, I would have recommended Passage to India in Bethesda, but it's gone downhill. I don't actually have a great recommendation. |
| I don't like the mushy things, but I love the warm spices, I love garlic naan, samosas, all the rice dishes. The curry though less and less these days because I can't do spicy foods. |
I do too, though I don't like Indian desserts. I've never had one that wasn't cloyingly sweet. |
| I don't like that if you're not in the mood for that flavor profile (a poster called it CCCGG?) then you're really out of luck and need to move to a different cuisine/restaurant. |
No sorry my two paragraphs were two separate thoughts. Rasika is North Indian. There aren’t good South Indian places in DC that I know of. Yes, Rasika has space you can rent out, I’ve been to private gatherings there. It’ll be pricey but they do a good job! |
It’s hard to describe food as “Indian food” since there is so much variation depending on region. I believe that coconut milk is used mostly in food from certain areas of India - Goa and places on the coast. I love Sri Lankan curries, which often does contain coconut milk, but not always. Northern Indian food uses dairy, yogurt, paneer, and ghee instead of coconut milk. I can’t think of a northern Indian dish that uses coconut milk. |
| I love Indian food but the aftertaste keeps me from wanting it again (that sense like I need to burp but I don't for hours after). |
That’s how I felt about most western hemisphere cuisines (except Mexican food) until I had more experiences with them as an adult living in ny and in Europe. French - butter, cream, herbes de provence. Italian - tomato, garlic, basil. American - ketchup, bbq sauce, salt, sugar. Most eastern hemisphere foods seemed so much more complex and aromatic with all the herbs and spices. Now I appreciate both. You can’t eat at a couple of takeaway places and think you understand the flavors of civilizations that developed over millennia. |
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Love: saag paneer, naan, pickled chilis, cashew chicken, those giant crepe-like things
Don’t love: small takeout portions! rice |
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Love Indian food and British Indian food (yes, chicken Tikka Masala! Yum.) The only thing I ever ate in an Indian restaurant I didn’t like was a fish in mustard sauce that was really fishy. It wasn’t even the recipe’s fault, just too fishy fish. So good! I’m not going to make it as home though, because my DH hates the smell.
We have a gas station, of all things, with amazing Indian food here in our small town in the Midwest, so I don’t have to! I swear these home cooks in a gas station cook better food than Rasika. I don’t know how we lucked out! -average midwestern white person |
| Ananda in Howard county is a gem |
Agree on both. |
You need that yogurt sauce to calm your stomach after |