High-tech Indian Food

At the popular new restaurant Gaggan in Bangkok, the back of the house resembles a chemistry laboratory as much as it does a kitchen.

Large syringes hang from a rack in neat rows. A shiny metallic device spins a glass beaker in one corner. Digital thermometers dangle in pans of water for sous vide cooking, in which vacuum-packed foods are cooked at low, steady temperatures for extended periods of time. Carefully labeled jars hold freeze-dried mangoes, Indian Sea salt and other substances. And then there is the liquid nitrogen, which is available on tap and can be produced with the twist of a knob.

Chef Gaggan Anand says this is the world’s only restaurant serving Indian molecular gastronomy. “We are not only doing Indian cuisine. We are doing a new cuisine. It’s a new style of cooking in Thailand.”

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One thought on “High-tech Indian Food

  • Marisa SungPost author

    I cannot wait to check this place out!

    Reply

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