Nepalese restaurant

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Discussion

Huzzah

Original Poster:

27,696 posts

192 months

Saturday 11th January
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We're off to a Nepalese restaurant tonight, any must trys?

Bill

54,872 posts

264 months

Saturday 11th January
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Everything!! We have one near us and I haven't had a bad dish from them.

spikeyhead

18,201 posts

206 months

Saturday 11th January
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Momos, as well as everything else on the menu

John D.

18,686 posts

218 months

Saturday 11th January
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Momos.

dapprman

2,519 posts

276 months

Sunday 12th January
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And even more momo - love them

Huzzah

Original Poster:

27,696 posts

192 months

Sunday 12th January
quotequote all
Thank you chaps.


Momos and curries all very tasty. thumbup

GT03ROB

13,640 posts

230 months

Sunday 12th January
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My local pub is Nepali run. They do traditional pub grub, Indian & Nepali.

I think I’ve tried everything off the Nepali menu. All the dishes are superb. Can all to easily have a couple a week!

ChevronB19

6,733 posts

172 months

Sunday 12th January
quotequote all
dapprman said:
And even more momo - love them
My daughters best mate is Nepalese, they have regular sleepovers and she brings these back, homemade by her mum, they are amazing!

MattsCar

1,449 posts

114 months

Sunday 12th January
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It is great food.

In my local small town, we are spoiled with Nepalese food. We have 2 good restaurants and also a food truck that comes in to the town on Saturdays.

We are close to Bramcote Barracks, which is a Gurkha Regiment, so over the past x amount of decades, along with Joanna Lumleys push for British citizenship of soldiers, many have assimilated here after once their service is up. Both restaurant owners do a lot for the community in terms of fundraising.

craigjm

18,631 posts

209 months

Monday 13th January
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Momos are always worth a try. Any suggestion of anything is quite tough and thats because a lot of "Nepalese" restaurants are no such thing. Not so long ago it was rare to find one and they were often run by retired Gurkhas etc. Nowadays they are everywhere and many of them are just Indian or Bangladeshi restaurants trying to differentiate themselves in the local market.

A real Nepalese restaurant is usually easy to spot from the menu which should be focused on, in addition to momos, stuff like Yomari, Sel Roti, Choila (nice and spicy), Sekuti Sadheko (like biltong), dal bhat, thukpa soup, goat curries, aloo ko achar, wai wai noodles etc.


Lotobear

7,469 posts

137 months

Monday 13th January
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craigjm said:
Momos are always worth a try. Any suggestion of anything is quite tough and thats because a lot of "Nepalese" restaurants are no such thing. Not so long ago it was rare to find one and they were often run by retired Gurkhas etc. Nowadays they are everywhere and many of them are just Indian or Bangladeshi restaurants trying to differentiate themselves in the local market.

A real Nepalese restaurant is usually easy to spot from the menu which should be focused on, in addition to momos, stuff like Yomari, Sel Roti, Choila (nice and spicy), Sekuti Sadheko (like biltong), dal bhat, thukpa soup, goat curries, aloo ko achar, wai wai noodles etc.
Indeed, my wife is Nepali and I recognise all of those 'real' dishes you mention, my FiL used to make them all and I really enjoyed them, notably Choila. Momo is very nice (especially with added bone marrow and the obligatory chilli and tomato chutney) and fun to make but tends to be the tikka of Nepali food.

FiL used to make what he called a 'beef roll' - left over beef with onions and spices wrapped in a deep fried roti and dipped in a tomato and chilli relish - bloody gorgeous.

Sadly with him now gone and Mrs Loto being more into western stuff I don't tend to experience it much these days.

Sisu9

295 posts

111 months

Monday 13th January
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Chicken Bhuteko is hard to beat, Chicken, sweet pepper, onion, ginger, chilli in a fresh tomato and coriander sauce.

Getting hungry here!

daqinggregg

3,606 posts

138 months

Tuesday 14th January
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Not sure how authentic it was/is, I used to dine at this lovely, but simple establishment in Hong Kong.



Prices are HKD; Hong Kong is not a cheap city.








Images from: restaurantguru.com

Owned/run by a 5ft nothing muscular man of few words, built like brick outhouse and his four lovely but decidedly mischievous daughters; the latter probably accounted for his lack of verbosity.

LRDefender

286 posts

17 months

Tuesday 14th January
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Did you ask them if they sold tongba?

It's a very interesting drink that is made from fermented millet I believe, I've tried it a few times and always found it quite unique....

halfpenny43

1,042 posts

245 months

Tuesday 14th January
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Visited my daughter who lives in Stafford last weekend and they wanted Nepalese - went to Ayo Gorkhali apparently owned and managed by ex-Gurkhas.

Food was excellent - and pork momo's were a revelation !

dapprman

2,519 posts

276 months

Tuesday 14th January
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craigjm said:
Momos are always worth a try. Any suggestion of anything is quite tough and thats because a lot of "Nepalese" restaurants are no such thing. Not so long ago it was rare to find one and they were often run by retired Gurkhas etc. Nowadays they are everywhere and many of them are just Indian or Bangladeshi restaurants trying to differentiate themselves in the local market.

A real Nepalese restaurant is usually easy to spot from the menu which should be focused on, in addition to momos, stuff like Yomari, Sel Roti, Choila (nice and spicy), Sekuti Sadheko (like biltong), dal bhat, thukpa soup, goat curries, aloo ko achar, wai wai noodles etc.
The Gurkha Square in Fleet was exactly like this, though after a few years they dropped a number of the less popular dishes (including a chicken piece in minced lamb dish I rather liked). I still got X-Mas cards from them for a few years after I stopped working at Hart District Council (in Fleet), but in time the management and chefs changed and it went down hill. Still there, with another Nepalese restaurant now just down the road, but I am rarely back in Fleet at the right time for an evening meal.

Glosphil

4,547 posts

243 months

Tuesday 14th January
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A year or so ago I went to a Nepalese restaurent on The Mount in Shrewsbury. The Yak & Yeti. Excellent food & good, friendly service.

craigjm

18,631 posts

209 months

Tuesday 14th January
quotequote all
LRDefender said:
Did you ask them if they sold tongba?

It's a very interesting drink that is made from fermented millet I believe, I've tried it a few times and always found it quite unique....
sour mushroom beer taste yuk. Its one of those things I try when I see it knowing I am going to hate it hehe

sly fox

2,271 posts

228 months

Tuesday 14th January
quotequote all
Gurkha Palace in Farnborough, Hampshire, has been an excellent restaurant for over 20 years.

Cooking with offal is quite normal in Nepalese cuisine, so if you see spicy chicken livers (usually a starter) then go for it.

Typically, i find Nepalese spicing levels are higher than Bengali cooking. You have been warned.

All delicious though, get stuck in.

GT03ROB

13,640 posts

230 months

Tuesday 14th January
quotequote all
sly fox said:
Gurkha Palace in Farnborough, Hampshire, has been an excellent restaurant for over 20 years.

Cooking with offal is quite normal in Nepalese cuisine, so if you see spicy chicken livers (usually a starter) then go for it.

Typically, i find Nepalese spicing levels are higher than Bengali cooking. You have been warned.

All delicious though, get stuck in.
With the Farnborough area having the largest Nepali community in the country, it should have the best Nepali food!!