Have been a little lax in getting around to posting (even if not-at-all lax in actually consuming food) while in Bombay...hope to rectify this soon. For the first post, a short report on a trip to the Islamic area of Bombay, for a quick meal and dessert.
With a friend in town, two Chicagoans (well, 2 Chicago suburban-ites to be more accurate) took a trip down to the Bhindi Bazaar area of Bombay for an early lunch at the now-iconic Noor Mohammadi Hotel, for Nalli Nehari.
Nalli is bone-marrow - and many LTHers know Nehari from Devon (slow cooked beef, a (much much poorer) version of which is available at Sabri Nehari, Usmaniya and a few other places in Chicagoland.
Noor Mohammadi is a very basic eatery that has been operating in the same location since 1923. Their best-known dish is the Nalli-Nehari, cooked the same way it has been for almost a hundred years. Many moons ago, the quite terrific food-writer who went by the nom-de-plume of "Busybee" reviewed this restaurant, and his description of this dish and its preparation still holds true:
"The meat (beef) is lovely, the best part of the buffalo, the thigh muscle, cooked on slow coal fire for 12 hours....The bhattis for the nalli nihari are started twice a day, at 6 o'clock in the evening to get ready by 6 the next morning, and at 9 o'clock in the morning to get ready by 7 in the evening. They are cooked on dum, the marrow bones and the meat, in large vessels, sealed with an atta paste and a heavy 10-kilo weight put on the lid. When ready, the marrow is knocked out of the bone. There's a whole lot of extras that go into the vessel: saunf and sonth, jaifal, elaichi, lavang, javitri, wheat flour, jeera, black pepper, tej patta, ghee (vanaspati), crushed garlic and finely chopped onions."
Sauf=aniseed, fennel; jaifal=nutmeg; elaichi=cardamom; lavang=cloves; javitri=mace; jeera=cumin seeds; tej patta=bay leaves
The result is, in a word, fantastic -

A spicy "gravy", very tender buffalo-meat..

With luscious chunks of delicious bone-marrow floating in it
Before eating it (with hunks of the fresh-out-of-tandoor rotis), you add in the slivers of ginger and chillies...

The Final Result
Nalli Nehari comes off the slow-fire at 6am in the morning. Usually, if you get there much after 9am, it'll be gone (or, at least, the Nalli - the bone-marrow, which is a delicacy, will be gone)...it was often the hearty breakfast eaten by workmen, a meal that would carry them for most of the day.
Even after so many years, this remains one of my favourite meals eaten in Bombay.
c8w