ISLAMABAD EAT 2018 - The Good, The Bad, The Ugly
What better way to celebrate the onset of winters than to indulge in a three-day food festival of innovative food stands, gluttonous cuisine
galore and some good sun-soaking time with the family? Every winter, the Eat
Islamabad hosts various vendors at its food-themed festival, ranging from local
restaurants to up-and-coming home-cooks and food vendors.
The entertainment deprived Islamabadis swarm such events and
with the chill setting in, the timing couldn’t be any better! From 23rd
November to the 25th, the Jinnah Convention Centre was hoarded with
families and enthusiastic foodies alike as they enjoyed a diverse range of food.
For the two days that we attended, our objective
was to hit all the food startups and skip the restaurants – give the little guy
a chance!
Fortunately or unfortunately, our bellies didn’t allow us to
visit all the food stalls but it’s safe to say we tried 70% of what the
festival had to offer and here’s our verdict on Islamabad Eat 2018:
The Good
Ticketing – Priced at Rs. 250/person and strictly for ‘Families
Only’ – the event ensured that it was reasonably priced, safe and not entirely
hijacked by hoards of men who’d make it impossible for the gentler gender to
feel secure.
Venue and Parking Space – Centrally accessible and open
space made it customer-friendly. Also, countless event managers along with
guards guided the onslaught of traffic in order to manage any jams.
Trash cans – the countless trash cans placed strategically
all over the venue was a good touch. Though, a lot of people still reverted to
their deplorable habit of dumping their plates wherever they chose to – the
event management had still made the effort to keep it clean.
Sauce disposals – the multiple sauce stands scattered over
the ground was a brilliant idea! Huge bottles of ketchup, garlic sauce, mustard
were to be used free of cost by whosoever chose too. Though, the stands mostly
went unnoticed, they were a sigh of relief for all the ketchup addicts out
there.

Noor’s Kitchen – This South-Indian styled dosa place is a
family-run business and at each festival, we make it a point to try their dosas
and till date, we are yet to be disappointed! For Islamabad Eat 2018, they introduced three
new dosa flavors and also for the first time, you didn’t have the familiar
Auntie making you the dosa but her employees doing the job for her – and for
sure, we missed seeing her behind the stove but the taste was the same and we
couldn’t be happier! We stuck to trying the Masala Dosa with the karri patta,
imli khajoor, tamatar and Alu Bukhara chutnies – and we decided that we need to
go through the entire menu to be entirely satisfied – it’s just THAT good and
cannot be missed!


Red Door – The novel addition of Chicken Pathoora with its
crispy, chewy outlook and a great sauce inside was definitely a winner. For
those attempting to try something new – you need to knock on this door for
sure.
Funky PoP – In July, I suffered from an asthma attack
because I made it a point to go try a new popsicle from their outlet in F-10
each evening. Did that stop me from
trying out their Berry Blast at Eat? Hell no! After standing in a long queue
for a good 15 minutes, it was just so totally worth it - the popsicle tastes
like a burst of wild frozen berries in your mouth! It’s exactly like advertised
and is one of the best things this year!
Tempura - Slightly more expensive than the rest but also
serving up some pretty good seafood, the tiger prawn tempuras were huge and
could easily be shared by two and their sauce was spot on! They are also
serving up a pretty mean crab gratin but I’ll admit here that I have an
instinctive suspicion of seafood in Islamabad and therefore can’t fully enjoy
it.


Honorable Mentions that ALMOST made it:
Punjabian Dhabba - Serving up a traditional breakfast of
halwa puri, chanay and aloo bhujia. I enjoyed it but wasn’t stunned. It stands
as a perfect representation of what average should be.

Mian Jee - Obviously
the real star here is the daal with paratha. Its exactly like the daal you’d
find at the hotel in Mandra. I was happy to eat it but didn’t finish because I
was afraid it would fill me up.
The Bad:
Lack of seating – much like last
year, the seating was scarce which resulted in multiple people lounging on the
floor. It’s okay for the young and sturdy but the old and feeble were duly
upset with the seating situation.


Chair Junction -- You
can get a matka chai for Rs. 180 a cup and it’s a very popular place because of
instagram. The tea on its own doesn’t have the usual smoky flavor because of
the hurry they’re making the tea in. It
is also more expensive than it should be but hey its still chai in winters
The Ugly
No Nearby ATMS – Sure an ATM
sounds like a privilege and you should have enough money when you’re out and
about but in case you run out of money - you have no way to get yourself any
food! Go back home!
Live Music - Excruciatingly painful to say the least, the festival can do without amateurs attempting to sing because instead of music, what they create can only be categorized as noise!! Don't see the purpose of putting a crowd through the torture....
Dollicious - We got the cookie dough from here and we don’t
know what we got. It was some strange concoction of what appeared to be a chunk
of Gurr in cream and served with roh afza and sprinkles. Not sure what we ate….
Chai pay - We saw an interesting fusion named pizza gol
gappay and guppay shots and jumped to get them! It’s horrid to say but the
guppay weren’t crispy, the water wasn’t tangy and the filling was quite bad and
went straight into the trash can!
us as some magically new red chocolate concoction. The mousse we purchased was supposed to be red colored chocolate with berry notes which is a category like dark and white chocolate but we’re still unsure of what we ate.
Murasaki - I love Sushi enough for my husband to have gotten
a special Sushi cake made for me from Murasaki a year ago! But at Eat, they
just messed up all that’s glorious about Sushi. The platter, costing Rs.350 is
a tiny plate of 4 makis filled with just cucumbers and a bit of tuna paste. I
love sushi but this simply wasn’t good.
isn't banning males a bad thing .it could be easily classified as discrimination as single females can enter but man cannot hypocrisy at its best
ReplyDeleteNot to generalize, but most events, when open to the entire public get hijacked by men which leaves women feeling rather insecure because you cannot disagree with the kind of environment those demographics ensure? I think the terms discrimination and hypocrisy are thrown about carelessly here - it was a 'families only' event - no crime there, no discrimination, no harm done...
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