Moti Mahal Gerrard India Bazaar was the first Indian restaurant started in this area. It offers top-class dishes – tandoori chicken naan, meat thali, vegetable thali, chhole batoore and chicken samosas
By our correspondent TORONTO: Moti Mahal In Gerrard India Bazaar reminds one of the same-name famous restaurants in India. There was one on MG Road in Jaipur. Then there was one in old Delhi’s Chandni Chowk area, which again was a great place to go to with friends and families. So when I came to Toronto on my first trip in 1999, I was a little intrigued to find the same-name restaurant in Gerrard India Bazaar. Not only the name but also the quality of food was the same – or even better than that I had tasted at Moti Mahals in India. [caption id="attachment_86879" align="alignnone" width="640"] Keith Pankhurst is a regular at Moti Mahal because of its chicken samosas.[/caption] Over the past five or six years I have gone there a few times to eat, and objectively speaking, Moti Mahal is one of the best places for Indian food and sweets in town. Owner Gurjit Chadha and his staff also offer you the best of Punjabi dishes. They are equally good at dosas, Gujarati dishes such as Bhel Poori and Sev Poori, and Dahi Bhalla. For desserts, there are mouth-watering Gajar-halwa, Gulab-jamuns, Faluda and loads of other sweets. And you can round off your meals with their tasty masala chai. Every time you go there, delicious aromas wafting from the kitchen send your tastebuds racing. One cannot resist these aromas. [caption id="attachment_86880" align="alignnone" width="640"] Menu at Moti Mahal, Gerrard India Bazaar.[/caption] Topping my list on the menu at Moti Mahal is their tandoori chicken naan, meat thali and vegetable thali. Of course, snacks such as chicken samosas can be very filling. As Keith Pankhurst, who is a regular at Moti Mahal because of its chicken samosas, says, "I love this place for its chicken samosas. I discovered this place two years ago, and I have not stopped coming here since then simply because of their chicken samosas." Biting into a samosa, he says, "They are big, nice and tasty and I have not found any other place where they make such delicious samosas. In fact, once in a while my dinner includes only a couple of chicken samosas from Moti Mahal. This is the best place for me." [caption id="attachment_86883" align="alignnone" width="640"] Delicious chaat at Moti Mahal.[/caption] At another table where a family is having its lunch, a young girl who identifies herself as Sapna W, says, "Everybody praises the food at Moti Mahal. Their chicken karahi as well as vegetable curry are my favourite. Prices are reasonable as well. "The food is just so good. But I would like the atmosphere to be better here. I am a fan of sitting and these guys need to make this place a little more comfortable. But as for food, they are probably the best in the business in this area." For Moti Mahal owner Gurjit Chadha, who came here from Delhi in the mid-1970s, it was his first foray into this business. [caption id="attachment_86884" align="alignnone" width="640"] Gurjit Chadha, owner of Moti Mahal.[/caption] As Chadha recalls, "Since there were no good food shops in this area, my friend Navani of Indian Record Shop offered me this property to open a restaurant. That’s how we started here. When we opened Moti Mahal in Feb 1979, we were such a success on the very first day. We sold all our stuff in no time. I knew instantly that we have a great future here.’’ In fact, in the 1980s, people coming to Gerrard India Bazaar – from far and wide and even from the US – would make it a point to taste food at Moti Mahal because of its reputation, say old-timers in the area. Over the years, Chadha opened other branches as well as franchised. But Moti Mahal in Gerrard Street – where he began his Canadian journey – remains his favourite. READ NEXT: Riyasat restaurant in Oakville serves real ethnic Indian food