Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. www.dishoom.com › menu › all-day-mainDishoom all day menu

    Dishoom House Chaat. Warm-cold, sweet-tangy, moreish. Golden-fried sweet potato covered with cool yoghurt, pomegranate, beetroot, radish and carrot. Tamarind drizzle and green chutney lift it nicely. (V) 8.90.

  2. Subscribe Now for More Exclusive Videos! https://www.youtube.com/erosnowWhen India’s top batsman goes missing in the Middle East, two cops from either side o...

    • 3 min
    • 24.7M
    • Eros Now Music
  3. Dishoom is mostly a walk-in café – simply come along and walk-in. However, if you'd like to make a reservation, groups of any size may book during the day. After 6pm, we accept bookings for groups of 6 or more. BOMBAY, MARCH 1923. Botanist, ecologist, and all-round man of the people Patrick Geddes reclines on a long-armed rattan chair.

  4. Dishoom is mostly a walk-in café – simply come along and walk-in. However, if you'd like to make a reservation, groups of any size may book during the day. After 6pm, we accept bookings for groups of 6 or more. Make a reservation. NOVEMBER. 1967. Heathrow airport. A young man leans against the Oceanic terminal’s high windows, waiting for ...

  5. Dishoom is mostly a walk-in café – simply come along and walk-in. However, if you'd like to make a reservation, groups of any size may book during the day. After 6pm, we accept bookings for groups of 6 or more. ONE DAY, AN eccentric old Irani Café (born circa 1930, Bombay), creaking slightly at the seams, made the long trip from Bombay in ...

  6. Small plates: Lamb Samosas, Vegetable Samosas, Bhel or Okra Fries. Grills: Murgh Malai, Dishoom Chicken Tikka or Paneer Tikka. Side salads: Chilli Broccoli Salad or Kala Chana Salad. Available in all cafés from Monday to Friday, 12pm – 4pm, priced at £24 per person. Light lunches are procurable and, indeed, bookable – no need to queue!

  7. Dishoom King's Cross is located within a restored Victorian industrial building — a former railway transit shed, built in 1850. To Londoners this is a warehouse, but to Bombayites, it would be a Godown. Vast quantities of goods once flowed through this foremost interchange between rail, road and canal.