A night before flying down, I sat with a colleague who hails from Indore and made a comprehensive Indore food guide based on his recommendations. Indore has so much food to offer, your stomach is not going to be able to keep pace. So it would help if you kept a list handy. Anything over and above that list is a plus 🙂
It is true that the people of Indore trip on food. I mean, I have read a lot about the food scene of Indore but they take things to another level. From originals like Bhutte ka kees and Garadu to their own take on several popular dishes like Shikanji and Jalebi, the city has many quirks up its sleeve. I hardly saw any restaurants serve full meals. Indore is all about snacks, chaats and namkeens and they taste bloody damn good!
Indore food guide: A staple breakfast
The ideal way to start your morning in Indore is to try the Poha Jalebi. It’s a staple breakfast for the locals. By breakfast, I mean before 9.30am. That’s when it’s freshly prepared. The combination of poha jalebi may sound absurd initially, but you have to eat it to believe in the goodness of this delightfully simple dish. The poha is light with a hint of sweetness and some lemon for zest. It’s topped off with finely chopped onions and a generous helping of Indori sev. Fun fact, people of Indore sprinkle sev on literally everything they eat.
The poha is accompanied by piping hot jalebi which is crunchy on the outside with a sweet syrupy filling. It went really well! We tried our Poha Jalebi at a nondescript stall on the highway from Indore to Mandu, although every other lane in Indore serves up this dish.
Sarafa Bazar – Street food market by night
We’ve all heard about the legendary Sarafa Bazaar, Indore’s night street food market. Sarafa Bazaar’s khau-gulli is actually a jeweller’s market by day, but come 8pm, food carts line up the lane and turn it into a foodie’s paradise. It’s like Mumbai’s Muhammad Ali road for vegetarians, open 365 days from 8pm till 2am.
What to eat at Sarafa Bazaar, Indore?
Waste no time to try the Bhutte ka kees in Sarafa Bazaar, a true original recipe and a specialty of Indore. Boiled corn is mashed and cooked in milk, ghee and spices, then topped with shredded coconut, coriander and chilly powder. It requires an acquired taste and, in all honesty, was a little too rich for my liking. But it’s an interesting dish and truly local.
Another local dish to tick off is the Garadu which is diced yam, deep fried and served with an extra spicy chaat powder. Tip: Never tell your chaat wala in Indore to make the food spicy; their level of spicy may get too much too handle!
Next, we tried the Coconut Crush – a recipe of coconut water, malai, sugar, water, and ice – blended in a mixer for about 30 seconds and voila! Texture and taste-wise, it is a thicker and creamier version of coconut water.
At Joshi’s Dahi Bada shop, foodies gather not just to eat the famous dahi vada, but watch him make it too. He’ll toss the plate in the air like a pizza dough without its contents spilling. It’s quite a sight and gathers a lot of bystanders.
By the time it was turn to try the dus pani wala pani puri, we were full, but gave it a shot nevertheless. The pani puris of Indore are special for the variety of spiced water. Apart from the regular pudina wala pani, expect kanji vada, adrak, nimbu, lassun, hing and jeera wala paani. They also serve 10 puris per plate. Bless their soul!
We ended our food adventure with the Indori gundi paan. It’s quite a mouthful – ensuring the contents don’t drip as it makes its way from the thaal to your mouth. Our enthusiastic paanwala also insisted on feeding us the paan as a tradition – an offer I politely refused!
That night, we didn’t have the heart to try the Jaleba – a king size jalebi, Mawa baati, Coconut Pattice and the Sabudana Khichdi at Sarafa Bazaar. Readers please make note to try them. Come back and tell me how it was.
What to eat at Chappan Dukan, Indore?
Sarafa Bazaar may be the popular brother that rakes in tourists in Indore, but Chappan Dukaan (called so because of 56 shops) has its own local fan-following. On our last day in Indore, we headed here to check out the food scene.
The Shikanji at Madhuram is unlike the regular Shikanji made of water and lemon. Indore’s version has milk, nuts, dry fruits and rabdi. That it’s rich and filling is a given!
Johny Hotdog is another legendary joint, open since decades and a favourite with the youth. It’s also possibly the only shop at Chappan Dukaan that sells non-vegetarian food. On offer are four items – veg hotdog, mutton hotdog, egg benjo and egg and mutton benjo. I tried all the four, but my favourite remains the Egg benjo which is an omelette tossed in a pan with ghee and served between a bread lightly grilled with butter, accompanied by ketchup, green chutney and some onions.
The Chhole tikki at Young Tarang is another favourite among the locals although it didn’t taste anything different from the ones we eat in Mumbai.
For dry-snacks and mixtures to take back home, Om Namkeen is your go-to place. Anything here is a great buy. Although if you ask me, the Khatta-Meetha namkeen and onion and garlic flavoured namkeens were excellent.
Tips to visit Sarafa Bazaar & Chappan Dukan
1) We visited Indore in July, and I’m thankful that it didn’t rain that night in Sarafa Bazaar. I don’t think I would have tried the amount of dishes I did, had it rained, since I am a little finicky about street food during monsoons. Chappan Dukaan on the other hand has permanent shops, so from the hygiene perspective a little better.
2) Although Sarafa Bazaar is open between 8pm and 2am, the best time to get the pulse of the place is between 10pm and 11.30pm.
Best way to travel to Indore
Indore has a thriving airport with flights from all major metros. Mumbai-Indore flights are actually quite cheap and a preferred way to reach fast. Indore also has a railway station. By road, Indore is about 580 km from Mumbai and 390 km from Ahmedabad.
Hotels in Indore: Where to stay?
Sayaji Indore is a premium property in the heart of Indore which makes it convenient to move around. A slightly budgeted but great option would also be Best Western Plus Indore.
Books to read on Indian food culture
Eating India by Chitrita Banerji
Food and Faith: A Pilgrim’s Journey through India by Shoba NarayanÂ
Food guide to India by Charmaine O’ Brien
Mouth watering post! Reminds me of my trip to Indore a couple of years ago. We missed Sarafa Bazaar that time around though…
Thanks wanderfulweekendz 🙂
indori #titbites gulabjamun dahiwada sarafa jaleba poha
very nice article.keep posting such nice articles.You can also visit http://www.indorepics.com for information about indore.
indore is the best city of the india
My friends from Indore always mentioned that Indore is known as food capital of India and I was always curious that what is so special about this Indori food so I visited Indore few days back and visited the famous 56 dukan and sarafa street. Being a chocolate lover, my friend insisted me to go to this café in Vijay Nagar named as The Chocolate Room though I am not crazy lover of chocolate but I just tried the Chocolate Avalanche from there menu and oh my god!! the taste was amazing, I haven’t tried such delicious chocolate flavoured dish ever.