Posts Tagged ‘odisha’

Odrra: an authentic celebration of Odiya Cuisine

August 25, 2025

Odisha’s food traditions remain relatively underexplored outside the state. Yet, Odiya cuisine is remarkably diverse – drawing on the bounty of its rivers, coastline and fertile plains. It is characterised by a balance of flavours rather than an overreliance on spice. Mustard, coconut, and rice play starring roles; slow-cooked vegetables and lentils reveal surprising depth; seafood and mutton are prepared with a quiet confidence. Many of its finest dishes are still best discovered in Odiya homes rather than restaurants.

This is why Odrra, a recently opened restaurant tucked away in a quiet residential neighbourhood of Bhubaneswar, feels so special. It serves as both an introduction and a homecoming -presenting Odiya food exactly as it is meant to be, without gimmicks or unnecessary innovation. The kitchen makes no attempt to “modernise”; instead, it honours tradition and lets the ingredients and recipes speak for themselves.

The menu is compact but thoughtfully curated, offering a mix of familiar favourites and lesser-known gems. There is enough variety to showcase the state’s culinary breadth without overwhelming diners. Even as an Odiya I found myself rediscovering some dishes I had only tasted later in life. Odrra brings that same sense of quiet discovery to the table.

Among the highlights are the Kandhamal roast, redolent of the tribal heartland’s earthy spices; chitou pitha with mutton curry, a dish that feels both festive and comforting; and the khiri sarsatia, a rare dessert that lingers in memory long after the meal. Every plate reflects the use of regional ingredients and time-honoured techniques, a reminder of how vibrant and distinctive Odisha’s food truly is.

Bhubaneswar already boasts some fine Odiya restaurants, and I have enjoyed many of them. But Odrra offers more than excellent food; it creates an experience. The red oxide floors, minimalist interiors, and warm, story-rich ambience exude a sense of understated exclusivity. The owners welcome guests with genuine warmth, making it feel more like dining in a gracious home than a commercial establishment. And despite its fine-dining sensibility, Odrra remains refreshingly affordable – indulgence without guilt.

For anyone curious about Odisha’s food culture, Odrra is an ideal starting point; for Odiyas themselves, it is a delicious reminder of the treasures of their own kitchens. Some of the best culinary journeys happen not by chasing novelty, but by celebrating tradition – and Odrra does just that.

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Farewell Raghu – the gentle guardian of dahibara aloo dum

August 16, 2025

An era has ended in Cuttack. Raghu, the humble custodian of the city’s most beloved street food, has passed away. For nearly six decades, his dahibara aloo dum has not merely been food, but a ritual, a memory, and a binding thread across generations of dedicated fans who queued up eagerly for that leaf cone of baras soaked in tangy curd and topped with his fiery aloo dum.

Over the years, little ever changed. Evening after evening, Raghu would arrive punctually at his fixed spot – first near Barabati Stadium when I was in school, and later in Bidanasi – bringing with him a set quantity of dahibara and aloo dum in large aluminium dekchis, carefully balanced on a cycle rickshaw. The aloo dum always retained its warmth till the very last ladle, not because of insulation, but because it vanished so quickly into waiting hands.

This summer, I finally made a pilgrimage of sorts to his home. A young and enthusiastic guide, Chris, led me down a quiet, winding lane dotted with contemplative cows, to the kitchen where this legendary dish had been prepared day after day, year after year, with unwavering precision. One of his sons was tending to the simmering aloo dum over a crackling wood fire, while another was preparing the paraphernalia for the daily journey to Bidanasi. And there was Raghu himself- bare-chested, in a simple lungi, lying on the floor in gentle repose under the shade of the courtyard. A picture of humility, almost blending into the rhythm of his household, yet filling the space with an unmistakable aura.

The wood fire that gave his aloo dum its earthy warmth, the blackened kadhai that had witnessed countless afternoons of stirring, and the heap of red chillies drying in the sun -all of it transported me beyond the sweltering heat into a state of quiet ecstasy. It felt less like a visit to a kitchen and more like the culmination of a pilgrimage.

Raghu was never one for flamboyance. He let the food speak for him. And speak it did – in the satisfied sighs of teenagers, in the hurried steps of office-goers grabbing a plate before dusk, and in the nostalgia of old Cuttackias returning from afar who felt instantly at home with that first bite. His gentle words and quiet smile became as much a part of the experience as the dahibara aloo dum itself.

Now, Raghu has passed, and with him goes a part of Cuttack’s living heritage. Yet the flame of his legacy will not die. His sons, already carrying forward the craft with care, will ensure the queues remain, the flavours endure, and the tradition continues.

Raghu’s physical presence may no longer grace that lane or his spot in Bidanasi, but his spirit will linger – in the aroma of tangy curd, in the fiery bite of aloo dum, and in the collective memory of a city and its diaspora .

Raghu is gone. But every time someone who has been in his presence , bites into dahibara aloo dum anywhere in the world, Raghu’s quiet, humble aura will be there.

Remembering Raghu Bhaina | His Dahibara Legacy Stays Eternal

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From the Internet