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  • Where Indian eggs go for a Siberian toss

    Where Indian eggs go for a Siberian toss

    Delhi Newsline, India
    Aug 21 2005

    When Russians in Delhi want to go home they don't have to travel far.
    They just head for Bline, a four table restaurant in Anand Niketan

    Neha Sinha

    New Delhi, August 20: How many places is one allowed to call home? If
    you go by these Russians in Delhi, at least two-and common to both
    would definitely be lazy confines, curling kitchen smoke, and dollops
    of warm food.

    Zhanna, a shy Russian national in Delhi, can't speak much English.
    But what she can and does say, simply, is "This is home for me."
    Zhanna, along with a bunch of Russian regulars in the city, are
    talking about Bline, a Russian restaurant in Anand Niketan and
    effective substitute for home.

    Bline (Blee-nee, Russian for pancake) is a small four-tabled affair,
    where the inexpensive food-including authentic Russian juices, momos,
    blines, egg and meat preparations-is just part of the thrill. This
    is also a place where one can put up one's feet, smoke a cigarette
    and watch Russian movies, long after the meal is over. And there
    is always the added attraction of making friends with the friendly
    hosts-Elena and Aleksandr Melkinov-who do the cooking themselves.

    And they intend to keep it that way. "We get only regular customers
    here. We have never advertised because we like to keep our restaurant
    small and our customers select. We make only a small profit, but it
    is enough!" Aleksandr says.

    "When people ask me why I set up this little restaurant three and a
    half years ago, I ask them, why not?" Aleksandr laughs. "Though the
    eggs are Indian, I toss them in the Siberian way. Everything-including
    the beef and pork-is sourced locally. The difference is just that I
    make sure everything is clean, and there is service and quality in
    all we do," says Aleksandr.

    And the hard work has paid off, in very distinctive ways. Zhanna is
    not the only single Russian girl in the city who's found a place she
    can call home here-Elena gives a tour of her kitchen to anyone who'd
    like a look. "For girls who haven't learnt how to cook, I show them
    how to make blines," smiles Elena.

    Though the restaurant sees its real crowd in the evening, Russian
    embassy officials often come in for a hurried lunch in the afternoon.
    "Though our place is very small, sometimes we are asked to host
    parties here," says Elena. And guests from neighbouring countries
    hop in as well.

    Says Artem, chief of the counsellor section of the Armenian embassy,
    "Bline is special. Though the meat preparations are fabulous, I
    cherish my Russian friends in the restaurant. It is a place where I
    can simply enjoy."

    "When we first came to India, we intended to make this a restaurant for
    Indians, but we have become a hub for friends-Russians, especially,"
    says Elena. "Come as a friend," she says. Country no bar.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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