- The Leela
Transcription
- The Leela
M A G A Z I N The art of the snap E CHaIRmaN’S meSSaGe L et me start by wishing you a great new year. I am sure you have made many eager resolutions and have a lot to look forward to in the upcoming months. For our own part, we are very excited about the Bhartiya City project, in Bengaluru: a massive integrated township sprawled across 125 acres, near Hebbal. The Leela Residences in Bhartiya City are swanky apartments for the fine luxury lover. The Leela Group, founded in 1986, has been a major player in the story of Indian hospitality, and this is one of the ways the group is pioneering new concepts in India. We are also confident that Bengaluru’s food The Leela Kathmandu, to be built in the heart of the city, augurs a new era of tourism connoisseurs will take to Le Cirque Signature at The Leela Palace Bangalore positively. The recently launched fine dining restaurant is a successor to Le Cirque Signature at The Leela Mumbai and Le Cirque at The Leela Palace New Delhi. Recently, The Leela Group also forayed into the partnership between international market by signing an agreement with India and Nepal the Summit Group to collaborate on the first of its four hotels to be built in Nepal. The Leela Kathmandu, the first of the series, and a five-star deluxe hotel to be built in the heart of Kathmandu, is expected to be completed within 36 months. This development augurs a new era of tourism partnership between the two countries. The Leela Group also made news for the many accolades it won last year — at the Conde Nast Traveller UK Readers 2014 awards, The Leela Palace New Delhi was declared one of the ‘Best Overseas Business Hotels’, and at the Conde Nast Traveller India Readers’ Travel Awards 2014, ESPA at The Leela Palace Udaipur was voted the ‘Favourite Hotel Spa in India’. We hope you can experience (or re-experience, as the case maybe) the group’s acclaimed hospitality at our properties nationwide. Thank you for your support, as always. Vivek Nair Chairman & Managing Director, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 6 | SPRING 2015 CONTENTS T H E L E E L A M A G A Z I N E — S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 38 Photography A glimpse at the work of Suresh Natarajan, a renowned fashion photographer 14 Luxe Effect 22 Books 24 Adventure 26 Explorations Cool watches and some of the Gurcharan Das on editing a book Motorcyclist Roshni Sharma on Gir is India’s top season’s classiest accessories series on Indian business history riding 5,000+km in two weeks destination for bird watching 30 Food 42 Shopping 50 Craftsmanship 64 Wheels How top chefs across the globe A guide to how to splurge Meet three of Milan’s The appeal of Bentley, and are reinventing vegetarian cuisine in the national capital best artisan shoemakers the brand’s milestone moments 42 30 THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 10 | SPRING 2015 64 T H E L E E L A M A G A Z I N E — S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 C O N T E N T S COVER Frieda Pinto, Photographed by Suresh Natarajan for Elle magazine THE LEELA EDITOR-IN-CHIEF — Lakshmi Nair PRODUCTION DIRECTOR — Shobha Patel CONTENT AND DISTRIBUTION — Priyanka Paul PRODUCTION — Prakash Bachche PUBLICITAS PUBLISHING EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF — Deepali Nandwani EDITOR — Jaideep Dave WRITER & SUB-EDITOR — Sana Krishna CLIENT SERVICE MANAGER — Reshma Malvankar ART 74 80 82 ADVERTISING SALES BACK OF T H E BOOK 72 Snapshot 82 Jet Set Go 73 Launchpad 83 Accolades 74 Bhartiya City 84 Events 78 Chef’s Corner 85 Insider’s Guide 79 Cocktails 86 Perspective 80 Oenophilia CREATIVE DIRECTOR — Muhammad Jaan Faruqui ART DIRECTOR — Rane Sanjay Vaman DESIGNER — Sudhakar Bhambade IMAGE EDITOR — Mrunali Gujarathi PRODUCTION MANAGER — Elidio Fernandes 87 Social Index “This Magazine is published by Hotel Leela Ventures Limited (“Leela”) and produced by Mediascope Publicitas (India) Pvt. Ltd., on behalf of and under agreement with Leela. Opinions expressed herein are of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Leela or of Mediascope Publicitas (India) Pvt. Ltd. All enquiries about editorial matters, reproduction of articles and advertising should be addressed to The Leela Magazine, Mediascope Publicitas (India) Private Ltd., 51 Doli Chamber, Arthur Bunder Road, Colaba, Mumbai 400 005, India. Email: [email protected] Material in this publication may not be reproduced, whether in part or in whole, without the consent of the publisher. Neither Leela nor MSP assumes any responsibility or endorses any claim made by the advertisers herein.” Printed at Parksons Graphics, Andheri (West), Mumbai 400053. This magazine is printed on environment-friendly, wood-free paper. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 12 | SPRING 2015 MUMBAI (022- 61377400) Vice President — Monica Chopra Lamont Dias, Rashmi Kapoor DELHI (011-23730873/66599300) General Manager — Asha Augustine Saloni Verma BANGALORE (080-25592714/82514) — Yogeesha A LUCKNOW (0522-2780560/754) — P P S Marwa KOLKATA (09831131395) — Subrata Mazumder JAIPUR (09828150706) — Peeush Gupta HYDERABAD (08978866599) — Sheetal Petkar KERALA (09414069321) — Sanjai Krishnan AD SALES - INTERNATIONAL HONG KONG (+852-2516 1003) — Winky Wong MALAYSIA (+60-3-7729 6923) — Shallie Cheng SINGAPORE (+65 6735 8681) — Joui Ong DUBAI (+9714 3913360) — Sunil Kanchan MARKETING MANAGER MARKETING SERVICES — Salim B. FINANCE & ACCOUNTS SR. MANAGER - ACCOUNTS & ADMIN. — Girish Sharma ACCOUNTS EXECUTIVE — Ashwin Makwana CREDIT CONTROLLER — Girish Joshi CORPORATE CEO & MANAGING DIRECTOR — Marzban Patel EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR — Anita Patel CFO — Anup Dutta DIRECTOR — Indu Joshi CONNECT WITH US ON 91 141 2620051 LUXE EFFECT Watches we like The lowdown on three of the season’s coolest watches. By Sabiha Ghiasi TISSOT CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN The Tissot Glamorous is a vintage-style women’s watch with an oval, 18-carat gold case that holds a mother-of-pearl dial. The numbers are depicted in Roman numerals. The strap is a choice between a string diamonds, a classic black-leather or a pearl-beige. It works on a quartz movement and has scratch- and water-resistant sapphire crystals. SWAROVSKI The ‘Passage Messenger’ bag exemplifies the cutting-edge design the Crafted in black Alcantara, the Belle Geometric Black Pierced Earrings are label is famous for. The elegant hardware has been inspired by the exceptionally light. A laser cut-out method used here defines a gorgeous architecture of Galerie Véro-Dodat in Paris, where the Louboutin brand was filigree design, which has been inspired from lace and tattoos. Delicate birthed. This shoulder bag has beautiful handles, and an optional shoulder crystals add a hint of sparkle, and the metallic part of this stunning piece strap or a cross-body strap to give your arms the leverage of freedom. This of jewellery is palladium-plated. The pair can be teamed with an attire of mini edition features metallic hardware, and is crafted from grainy leather. any colour, and can be worn for an evening party or a business luncheon. ROLEX Rolex’s Cellini Dual Time comes with dual dials. The smaller sub-dial is gold-rimmed, fitted at 6 o’clock; to differentiate daytime hours from night-time hours, a sun or moon symbol transits the aperture at 9 o’clock on the sub-dial. The straps are made of large-scaled alligator leather, in shiny black or brown. This watch works on a self-winding mechanical movement. The best of CORNELIANI The Corneliani Fall/Winter 2014 collection exhibits Bold perfumes, gorgeous contemporary elegance. earrings and more. It comprises neat and minimalistic patterns and portrays crisp looks. This jacket sits easy at the TAG HEUER waist, and the cuts TAG Heuer’s Formula 1 Calibre 16 Automatic is a fruit of of the shoulders are the partnership of the watch brand with Mclaren. It’s a soft. The collection casual sports timepiece that has drawn inspiration is targeted at men solely from Formula 1, and has an ultimate racing who prefer their look that complements its several features. A rubber style to be imbued strap and dapper black dial, and every other detail of with a dash of this chronograph, makes it perfect for motor racing. tradition. Always stylish, always masculine, it can be varied with racing red touches on hands, bezel and winding crown. For a more masculine look, you can choose the bold all-black version, ROBERTO CAVALLI with its rugged titanium carbide-coated case and striking strap. This bold philosophy of Roberto Cavalli has found a perfect expression in these With racing know-how in motion, this watch excels with its sapphire new scents: Just Cavalli Gold. A coup d’oeil of gold, and a touch of python print crystal case back and polished, fine-brushed steel features. take sultriness to a new level. The scent for men has hints of hazelnut and mandarin, while the one for women is a blend of jasmine and marshmallow. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 14 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 style | 15 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE BAR ACCESSORIES Silverware ice buckets, vodka glasses, and more. Spruce up your home By Tina Dastur FRAZER AND HAWS bar Get ready to sparkle with Frazer and Haws’s ‘The Royal Cup,’ an assortment of silverware bar accessories ideal for those celebratory toasts. The collection comprises classy pieces like the Vodka Shot Glass Set, Wine Bottle Case Vineyards, Wine Glass Romanov, and Ashtray Tigar, among others — all of them crafted from 92.5 sterling silver. Our favourite is the ornate Ice Bucket with Turquoise. WATERFORD This set from Waterford Barware is sure to be every vodka lover’s delight. An elegant flared bowl nestles within its crystal confines, six shot glass that in turn aptly surround the centre space, strictly designated for chilling a bottle of vodka. This is sure to add some warmth to your chilly winter days. EPISODE The Bar Wars collection from Episode is a quirky combination. Crafted in sterling silver or silver plated, the items range from fun bottle stoppers featuring pigs, rabbits, horses, and unicorns and flipper KEGWORKS cocktail picks to Back from a trip to a vineyard and wondering sophisticated, aptly- where to stack that pile of alcoholic goodness? named ‘celebration Kegworks’s Handmade Wooden Barrel Wine flutes’ and bar set Tasting Table, made out of recycled American (complete with an and French oak wine barrels, allows you to ice bucket keg, peg set up your very own wine haven at home. measure keg, pitcher Capable of holding up to 10 standard size cask, beer mug cask, bottles and 12 stemware glasses, this is a one- and nut bowl keg). of-a-kind handmade piece. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 18 | SPRING 2015 SABYASACHI BESPOKE MENSWEAR Kolkata | New Delhi | Mumbai | Hyderabad | Chennai | Ahmedabad | Bangalore Dubai | San Fransisco | London | New Jersey www.sabyasachi.com JEWELLERY CHAUMET The new Chaumet Hortensia Collection draws Ruby inspiration from an imaginary garden with traces of delicate botanical embroidery, celebrating the beauty of the hydrangea flower. This exquisite ring from the collection sees open-cut work in the form marvels of petals studded with tiny brilliant-cut rubies and pink sapphires enveloping the round red tourmaline bead at the heart of it, the entire piece set in From a beautiful 18-carat pink gold. The play on the hues of red ring to a stunning and pink comingle beautifully with the hydrangea, necklace, these four asserting the house’s naturalistic, refined style. pieces should be on your must-buy list. By Tina Dastur BUCCELLATI This regal ruby-cum-diamond necklace-earrings set is part of Unica, a collection of one-off pieces created by the esteemed Buccellati family. The necklace sees a total of 31 ruby teardrops AMRAPALI accentuating the warm hue of champagne- Manik Lotus Earrings from Amrapali’s coloured diamonds, while the earrings — simple Masterpiece Collection are a perfect teardrop rubies — are graceful accompaniment. example of what this timeless Indian Gianmaria Buccellati has avoided a clustered jewellery brand embodies: classical look by cleverly leaving open spaces between Indian heritage and tradition with a the stones, thus creating an airy design. contemporary eclectic twist. This pair of gorgeous jhumkas set in 23-carat and 18-carat gold is embedded with ROSE diamonds and Mozambican rubies, with The Carved Ruby Necklace is a mesmerising statement piece. Three rows of dainty pearls dangling effortlessly. While ruby beads culminate in a chunky pendant, with a heavily-carved ruby at the the obverse of the earrings sees a subtler centre. Flexible stems dotted with brilliant-cut diamonds that are interspersed representation of the lotus, their subverse with faceted rubies set in white gold hang from the pendant’s middle, lending is a more intricate manifestation of the this elegant piece dimension and contrast. For all the sparkly diamonds that flower in all its blooming glory. dazzle, this stunning necklace is undoubtedly a triumph of its deep red rubies. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 20 | SPRING 2015 BOOKS The history of commerce in India Gurcharan Das, the former CEO of Procter & Gamble and renowned author, is editor of a fascinating series of books charting the journey of Indian business and trade through centuries. He talks to Kushan Mitra about the trade routes between A fter quitting his day job, Gurcharan Das has been chronicling International Trade, by economist Kanaklatha Mukund, The Marwaris: From the story of Indian economy, for almost two decades now. India Jagat Seth to The Birlas, by Thomas A. Timberg, and The Mouse Merchant: Unbound, Das’ most famous book, is a sort of memoir which covers Money in Ancient India, by Sanskrit scholar Arshia Sattar. “This was a very the period from his birth, in 1942, to the time he wrote the book, in 1999. challenging series to put together for me,” Das says. “Not only did I have One of the main arguments Das gives in this book, and a recurring theme in to select the stories that needed to be told, from the long period of Indian his other publications, is that, while India gained political independence in history; it was a challenge to get academicians who have studied these 1947, the country did not gain economic independence until the reforms fields for years to write books that everybody can read.” of 1991. In the book, he refers to the period between 1966 and1990 as The books are a treasure trove of fascinating information. The ‘The Lost Years’, and much like his other works, Das tells these stories using Marwaris traces the roots of one of India’s most successful business several incidents and parables. “The four decades that we spent between and trading communities, in the 1950 and 1991, when our then Prime Minister Narashima Rao opened up the Indian economy, we lived in a state-controlled economy. Everything was controlled; I worked at Procter & Gamble during those days, and I remember one time when there was a cold wave and demand for Vicks Vaporub (a popular decongestant) skyrocketed, but our production was controlled by the government,” he tells me. He adds, “Those who were successful in this time were those who negotiated the corridors of power the best, and this, I feel, led to a situation where the middle classes got jealous of the wealthy.” Today, he says, thanks to the new entrepreneurs, particularly those taking inspiration from Silicon Valley, are writing a new narrative with their success. “Those who were successful in this time were those who negotiated the corridors of power the best, and this I feel led to a situation where the middle classes got jealous of the wealthy” Gurcharan Das Shekhawati region of Rajasthan, and narrates how and why they migrated outwards. century. Evidence for this has been found in the old vaults of temples in Das’ favourite story, though, is in The Mouse Merchant, which Some of the books shed Kerala and Tamil Nadu, where old Roman sesterii (coins) have been found. is a selection of tales from ancient Sanskrit texts, such as Jataka Tales, light on India’s glittering ancient Das tells me how there is even evidence in Roman texts, such as Pliny showing Indian attitude toward money. The Mouse Merchant is parable of Tamilakam the Elder’s Natural History, that there was communication and significant an entrepreneur who started out as a young man who took a dead mouse talks about how southern Indian trade between Rome and the southern Indian empires of the time. He from outside a rich man’s house. Selling the mouse to an old widow traders were trading with the also emphasises the role of the temples in the story of Indian business, with a cat, he used the proceeds to buy some chana. He then sold the Roman Empire several centuries particularly in the south, and how religion and trade were inextricably chana to some loggers, who paid him in wood instead of money; he sold before Vasco Da Gama arrived at interlinked. “Temples played a vital role as dispute negotiators, priests the wood to buy more chana. Eventually, he collected enough wood, so the coast of Kerala, in the 15th were judges,” says Das. once when there was a storm, he was able to make a killing, after the past. Merchants of For the past few years, Das logging stopped. After collecting so much money the once-poor young has been editing the Penguin/ boy became a shipbuilder and a trader of global renown. But he never Allen Lane series The Story of forgot how he started, so one day he had a jeweller cast a golden mouse, Indian the which he went on to gift to the merchant from whose doorstep he had 15 books have been released: taken the dead mouse. The old merchant was surprised, but after hearing Arthashastra: the young man’s story, he offers him his daughter’s hand for marriage. The Business. The Five of Science of Wealth, by US-based historian story emphasises diligence and gratitude. Thomas A Trautmann, The East India Company: The An upcoming book will be on the Hindu traders who plied World’s the Silk Route in massive (thousands of camels) caravans, Most Powerful Corporation, by and the Muslim rulers of Central Asian kingdoms, who afforded them Tirthankar teaches protection and who made trade easier for them. “Then there’s another economic history in the London Roy, book on the traders from Kutch who established a seafaring route School of Economics, Merchants between Gujarat and the east coast of Africa, in Tanzania. Some of the of stories are remarkable.” Tamilakam: who Pioneers of THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 22 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 23 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE VINIT BHATT southern Indian traders and the Roman empire, Nehruvian socialism, and more. ADvENTURE working in Bangalore as a software engineer when she decided to undertake the solo trip. “I had previously done shorter trips like Bangalore to Chennai and to Pune, and this helped me in my preparation for this journey,” says Sharma, who is now employed with Indian Motorcycles, a US-headquartered firm. Sharma began her journey on June 28, and it took her through Bangalore, Hyderabad, Riding all the way up to Leh, in north India, from Kanyakumari, Adilabad, Jhansi, Agra, Delhi, Manali, Sarchu, the southernmost point of the country, Roshni Sharma became Leh, Srinagar, Jammu, Panipat, Delhi and possibly the first solo female motorcyclist to cover such a long Narora. “I used to start my day at 6 am and end by about 7 pm,” she says. “But some days distance. She narrates her experience to Akhila Ranganna. I did get late and reached my destination only 5452 km, 14 Days around 11.30 pm.” She had food in the dhabas (roadside restaurants) she came across en route, but was also carrying “fruits, dry fruits and protein bars for emergencies”. Sharma did extensive research before The Vivekananda Rock Memorial, in Kanyakumari, Tamil Nadu Roshni Sharma hails from Narora, in Uttar Pradesh A road in Ladakh, connecting Leh to Likir “S et a goal in life, chase and achieve experienced every possible type of terrain and and is a sheer test of the biker’s endurance. “I get ready for her journey — first to mentally she started out, and one of the roads she was can take things as they come, which is the real it”: this is the life lesson 26-year weather conditions. “One of the best stretches did fall down at least six to seven times,” she condition herself and then to convince her warned about was the Central India route meaning and fun of adventure,” says Sharma, who is now planning a trip across Europe. old Roshni Sharma swears by. And was the Nizamabad-Adilabad stretch, a Naxalite says. “What I liked most was that look of total parents. “I got my bike serviced before starting through Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, this is exactly the belief the Gurgaon-based area with beautiful roads and lush forests. surprise and amazement on the people’s faces my trip. During the trip I didn’t have to endure for it is known to be unsafe. “But that was the Did she ever feel nervous or petrified 26-year-old put into practise when she went Another route that I will always remember, for when they came to help me, when they realised a single breakdown, not even a flat tire. I had exact route I took,” she says. “I was carrying during the trip? “I was scared to bits,” Sharma motorcycling solo from Kanyakumari to Leh, its beauty, was from Mandi to Manali — on that it was a woman who was riding the bike. learnt a few basic things, like chain tightening pepper spray and had taken basic martial art says with a laugh, “especially during the 60 covering more than 5000 km in two weeks, in one side, I was flanked by a rocky wall, and the It made me really emotional. It made my long and oil change, before I set off.” classes, but I never had to use them.” km stretch between Nagpur to Seoni that June 2014. other side was the river. I believe that every and sometimes intensely lonely journey really Hailing from the small town of Narora, Sharma says she loves solo riding ran through the Pench National Park. It was a From muddy roads to water crossings, biker must do the Manali-Leh stretch once in worth the trouble and often brought a smile to in Uttar Pradesh, Sharma is an automobile because of the freedom it affords. “You can deep, dense forest area, the road was winding sand dunes to mighty mountains and glacier their life.” As beautiful as the route may be, it my face.” aficionado. This passion she inherited from her explore the places the way you want. You with potholes, and all I could see were heavy melts, heavy rains to the scorching sun, Sharma is also one of the toughest in terms of terrain, father, an automobile businessman. She was need not plan everything meticulously. You trucks. I nearly cried!” THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 24 | SPRING 2015 It took Sharma nearly eight months to SPRING 2015 | 25 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE EXPLORATIONS Bird spotting in Gir W If it was not so famous for its lions, the Gir Forest ildlife parks, as you’d expect, get defined exclusively by their National Park might just have been primarily renowned chief attraction. The Kaziranga National Park, in Assam, is for its large population of rare birds. From the about the one-horned rhino; the Ranthambore National Park, in Rajasthan, equals spotting the tiger; The Gir Forest National Park and crested hawk-eagle to the yellow-faced endangered Wildlife Sanctuary, in Gujarat, is associated with the lion. To the thousands Egyptian vulture — the wildlife sanctuary’s feathered that flock to Gir every year, a quiet, unassuming property by the name of creatures have, in recent years, been attracting wildlife Gir Birding Lodge, near the periphery of the park, ought to suggest that photographers and avid birders from across India. there is more to the wildlife reserve. Still, even those who put up at this lodge begin their morning safari with the aim of photographing nothing more than the king of the jungle. By Sharan Saikumar Very few people who visit Gir know that it is one of the best birding Photographs by Manish Hariprasad destinations in the country, and home to a large population of rare birds, including raptors and owls. The crested hawk-eagle, for instance, may not be as wildly popular as the Asiatic lion, but it has its own niche following. For many nature photographers and birders, the lions in Gir hold no fascination because their sighting is pretty much guaranteed, with heavily mapped routes and a network of phone calls between the guides resulting in all tourist jeeps crowding around that one beast. This birder is a strange creature: picture a deeply tanned fellow with a large pair of soupedup binoculars hanging around his neck and a massive zoom-lens DSLR camera in The crested hawk eagle his hand, straining his ears for birdcalls and waiting for hours in the hot sun. He is a solitary person who passes many days without success; he simply dips into his unlimited reserves of patience and waits. Then if he’s lucky, he gets rewarded with a sight of that red-headed vulture. Or those tiny spotted owlets, which may or may not sit long enough to be captured by the camera, and yet, with just that fleeting glimpse, the birder’s day will be made. Compared to birding, animal spotting is like child’s play. Gir is one of the few forests in the world to offer sightings of the red-headed vulture, a species whose size has shrunk drastically over the years. Or, if you like your birds pretty, there is the yellow-faced endangered Egyptian vulture — the tiniest of the species, it was once worshipped in Egypt for its ability to clean up the surroundings. (Vultures are going extinct mainly due to the widespread use of the drug Diclofenac in veterinary The Great Tit, a sparrow-sized acrobat, is a treat to watch when hunting for insects THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 26 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 medicine, which makes the animal carcass poisonous, leading to kidney failure in these birds of prey.) | 27 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE Gir is a great place for taking close-up shots of the Indian nightjar Spotted Owlets can be surprisingly human in their display of affection Gir is one of the few forests in the world to offer sightings of the red-headed vulture, a species whose population has shrunk drastically over the years Some birds here especially enjoy making the birders work really hard. The nightjar is one of them. All the three species of nightjar found in Gir — Indian, Savannah and grey — are great at hiding themselves. This crepuscular bird merges completely into the branch, and can challenge even an expert bird spotter. It is best detected through its characteristic calls at dawn and dusk, which have been likened to a stone skimming the The Red-naped Ibis is a common sight in Gir surface of a frozen lake. The fact that it is so elusive makes the nightjar a challenging quest, but it’s not the prettiest bird around. For the amateur birder who begins his journey by seeking beauty above all else, there is a lot on offer in Gir Unlike the vulture, the crested hawk eagle, once known as the — the gorgeous blue and yellow coloured Tickell’s blue flycatcher, the changeable hawk eagle, is not endangered, but, nevertheless, worth stark contrast of the crimson-patched black ibis, the stunning paradise spotting. The name is derived from the many morphs — with crest or flycatcher, with its long tail, the pied avocet, with its long curved beak, the without, pale or dark — that this species has, but the common feature painted stork, and several varieties of brightly coloured kingfishers, which across the morphs is their arresting yellow eyes. You can catch him sitting dot a tree like Christmas ornaments. arrogantly on tree-tops, his eyes unmoving in its focus as he hunts his prey. As you get more interested in birds, you realise that they are more The sight of him taking down birds as big as a rooster or grappling with a than objects of beauty. Like animals, birds can move you with their grace, snake is spectacular but calls for hours of tracking. An easier picture, though their capacity for affection. Spotted owlets, one of the small species of no less stunning, would be capturing another medium-sized raptor by the owls, are known to display almost human-like emotions while huddling name of marsh harrier, which induces panic in large colonies of water birds, with one another or licking and preening their partners. Our photographer pushing them into taking a flight en masse. Neither of these raptors is easy caught a family of them huddling together on a branch, each sporting a to spot, but Gir is a dry jungle, unlike the thick overgrown forest of Corbett, different expression of disapproval at being photographed. Birding may which means watering holes here are few and far between and the birder be difficult, time-consuming and involve a lot of hours in the sun, but for has better visibility. pictures like the ones you are seeing, it’s well worth it. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 28 | SPRING 2015 FOOD The re-invention of Vegetarian cuisine W Well, it is not the end of haute cuisine, but a rewriting of the rules that have governed it hen Gaggan Anand, the rebel chef who has powered the humongous global success story of his namesake restaurant in Bangkok, presented a sponge-like ‘deconstructed dhokla’ served with coriander chutney foam and coconut ice cream to American Express Centurion Card holders in New Delhi, a senior hotelier and foster son-in-law of a prominent politician commented in jest that Anand would put Haldiram’s out of business. Like most other successful chefs who don’t lose sight of the till even as they rise to dizzying creative heights, Anand knows why it’s important to get his vegetarian repertoire right. Six of the 10 wealthiest Indians are vegetarians, and the culinary world not long ago was all abuzz about how Six of the 10 wealthiest Indians eschew meat; even the god of molecular gastronomy, Heston Blumenthal, has a new all- the renowned French chef Alain Ducasse ‘s new vegetarian menu ready each time a certain metal tycoon drops in to eat at restaurant in Paris has created news for having a predominantly veg menu; even China — believe it or not — now has more than 50 million vegans…. Not surprising, then, that chefs across the world are thinking out of the box to satisfy this growing and increasingly more demanding market. his Michelin three-star restaurant, Fat Duck, at Bray, Shropshire, in the UK. And Mukesh Ambani, India’s wealthiest man, procured generous quantities of fresh white truffles at the beginning of this prized commodity’s harvesting season in Alba, Italy, for ageless superstar Amitabh Bachchan’s 70th birthday. It was to woo the very same upper crust some years back that the prestigious Bordeaux First Growth, Chateau Margaux, flew in the world’s most celebrated vegetarian chef, Alain Passard of the Michelin three-star l’Arpege in Paris, for dinners across three cities attended by the rich and By Sourish Bhattacharya famous. Guests at The Leela Palace, Bangalore, paid Rs 15,000 per head for this vegetarian explosion of flavours (starting with root vegetables draped in Himalayan honey and served with candied lemon) paired with wines that rank among the world’s best. When Passard surprised the French gastronomic establishment by ‘turning vegetarian’ more than a decade ago, he was considered a pleasant aberration by chefs who had grown up worshipping the flesh and bones Gaggan Anand, owner of Gaggan, in Bangkok of animals at culinary schools. Yesterday’s fad is today’s fashion. If a chef of the stature of Pierre Gagnaire sources his vegetables exclusively from boxer-turned-farmer Asafumi Yamashita, who can get very prickly about how restaurants treat his micro tomatoes and kabu turnips, it is because their well-heeled and world-travelled clients are getting fussy about the quality of vegetables on the menu. Alain Ducasse, the chef with the most Michelin stars (21 in all, including three stars for three restaurants!), was only responding to this tectonic mindset shift when, recently, he re-opened his three-star establishment at the luxurious Plaza Athenee in Paris by striking off duck, veal and steak off the menu. Cream, too, has been shown the door and sugar put in its place. The new buzzword, after Ducasse’s grand move, is naturalite (naturalness), “the new expression of contemporary French haute cuisine”. ROHIT CHAWLA In an interview to the French news agency AFP, the celebrity chef explained what made him change his culinary philosophy: “The planet has increasingly rare resources, so we have to consume more ethically, more THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 30 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 31 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE fairly.” The stars of his new menu are black rice cooked in the oven with shellfish, squid and octopus; Mediterranean fish with bulgur wheat in a tagine; and Anjou grown quinoa and seafood. Fish and seafood are still on the menu, obviously out of consideration for the French market, but new age cereals and vegetables are finally being treated as first among equals. Unsurprisingly, Daily Mail said in its headline: “Is this the end of haute cuisine?” Well, it is not the end of haute cuisine, but a rewriting of the rules that have governed it. When Rene Redzepi, Macedonian-Danish chefowner of the world’s No. 1 restaurant, Copenhagen’s Noma, opened his establishment a decade ago in a vast football field, just one corner of it was set apart for the eatery; the rest of the plot was taken over by his vegetable garden. As Redzepi once said to an international audience at a food show in the snow-swept North Sea town of Oostend in Belgium, his biggest battle is against the spectre of scarcity in Copenhagen’s difficult winter, which was once described so rivetingly by Jo Nesbo in his crime The legendary French chef’s reopened restaurant at the Plaza Athenee, in Paris, has dropped many of the meat items off the menu thriller The Leopard. “I come from a city which gets 60 days and nights of frost, so we make the most from what we have,” said the good-looking chef, whose repertoire includes dried grains, lichens and moss (“Animals eat these in Farman Ali, Corporate Masterchef at The Leela Palace Bangalore Rene Redzepi, co-owner of the famous NOMA, in Copenhagen, which offers an impressive range of vegetarian dishes THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 32 | SPRING 2015 what was the secret weapon that powered the chef’s charm offensive? It was a pizza, but with a Manish Mehrotra twist. The base of the pizza was a papri shell and it was topped up with a spiced tomato concasse, cheese and beetroot carpaccio (it replaced the popular pepperoni!). Constantly playing with new ideas, and having tasted success in the two vegetarian weddings, Mehrotra is now possessed with the idea of giving gourmet pizzas an Indian twist. Even purveyors of traditional cuisine are adapting to the global twists of taste. At Jamavar — The Leela Palace Bangalore’s signature Indian restaurant — says Chef Farman Ali, Corporate Masterchef at the hotel, baigan ka bharta is cooked in olive oil, artichoke hearts and asparagus appear in the Subz Jamavar, and the old-fashioned palak patta chaat is given a new dimension — and flavour — with the inclusion of batter-fried betel leaves. As the well-known restaurateur, caterer for A-list weddings and author of Diva Green, an all-vegetarian cookbook, Ritu Dalmia, puts it, “Vegetarian diners are tired of the old aloo-gobhi-paneer routine.” What she didn’t say is that it is also business from these diners every major hotel chain, restaurant or wedding caterer is chasing diligently, particularly after the steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal opened the floodgates Dessert of strawberries and chamomile by Rene Redzepi Water melon & feta salad by Ritu Dalmia of vegetarian extravagance at his daughter Vanisha’s 2004 wedding reception at the Palace of Versailles. Diners of Mittal’s class have eaten Manish Mehrotra winter,” he said in his defence), and dried mushrooms. One of Redzepi’s Jamavar, Indian speciality restaurant at The Leela Palace Bangalore Chef Ritu Dalmia, co-owner of the restaurant Diva, in Delhi favourite dishes is the Danish classic, sauteed old bread served with a broth of dried berries and mushrooms — when he makes it, it look straight out of a still life by 16th-century Flemish painter Jan Brueghel. Redzepi shared his recipe of white currants and gelled freshly harvested cucumber served with sweet cicely (the flower used to flavour aquavit) and hazelnut milk. It struck the unfamiliar eye as a delicate flower arrangement, but on taking a closer look, we noticed the gelled cucumber sitting on a puddle of hazelnut milk with white currants scattered around. It was food for the eye and a feast for the senses. No wonder, chefs today talk about their micro-greens with the same palpable excitement their seniors would display in the presence of rare cuts of meats. In a globalised world, such developments cannot for long remain the monopoly of a few. Talented chefs, such as Manish Mehrotra of Indian Accent, have done it over and over again. At Nita Ambani’s 50th birthday bash in Jodhpur, Mehrotra lined up six designer chaats, including dahi batata poori with wasabi peas and caramelised onion kachoris gently drizzled with a blue cheese sauce. More recently, the inventive chef wowed his jet-set guests at two headline-grabbing, upper-end vegetarian weddings — the nuptials of TVS Motor Company CMD Venu Srinivasan’s son Sudershan Venu in Chennai, followed by those of the international mining magnate Pramod Aggarwal’s daughter Ritika in Fasano, a picturesque coastal town in Puglia, Italy. Guess THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 34 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 35 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE BHARANY’S Cauliflower and red chilli cake by Vicky Ratnani, a celebrity chef and TV show host around the world and, as Mehrotra points out, they are not going to settle for anything less. Indian chefs therefore have had to think out of the box to measure up to the expectations of this target audience. Vicky Ratnani, TV show host and celebrity chef famous as the one who introduced Mumbai to polenta, gives us a taste of this new creativity in his cookbook, Vicky Goes Veg. His vegetarian take on the polpette (Italian meatballs) with Anand’s faux steak tartare for vegetarians, similarly, is a symphony of flavours and textures potatoes and soy granules; sweet potato wafers with amla aioli; plantain (kachche kele) braised with Thai spices; green chilli and raw mango risotto; hing-roasted pumpkin; or stir-fried yellow squash spaghetti with parmesan and ginger (a carb-free dream alternative to regular spaghetti), all tell one story: our chefs are constantly innovating to tickle the taste buds of our Anand has reinvented the ‘Bird’s Nest’ by turning it into a work of art with what Bengalis call jhoori bhaja (fried potato shavings), chutney and an ‘egg’ created out of a potato mousse sphere globetrotting vegetarians. It for this tribe of outwardly mobile gastronomes that Anand has reinvented the ‘Bird’s Nest’ by turning it into a work of art with what Bengalis call jhoori bhaja (fried potato shavings), chutney and an ‘egg’ created out of a potato mousse sphere. His faux steak tartare for vegetarians, similarly, EXQUISITE JEWELLERY & FINE JAMAWAR SHAWLS is a symphony of flavours and textures — a liquid nitrogen-chilled baigan bharta, ‘false egg yolk’ and vacuum-fried onions. Even his khichdi speaks a global language, with its combination of nine-year-old rice, forest mushrooms, morels and fresh truffles with a hint of chilli. The distinctive aroma of each ingredient titillates your senses and gets your neurons on 14, Sunder Nagar Market, New Delhi-110 003 | Contact : +91 11 4351 8755, 2435 3957 Fax : +91 1 1 2435 3081 | E-mail.: [email protected] overdrive. With ‘going veg’ getting glamorous, and acquiring an ethical edge, vegetarian cuisine will no longer be the same. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 36 | SPRING 2015 PHOTOGRAPHY For Elle magazine The art of the snap Suresh Natarajan is one of the biggest names in fashion photography and advertising photography. The selftaught Mumbai-based lensman has been in business for almost 25 years now. The covers of magazines such as Elle and Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar frequently feature his photographs, as you’d guess, and, over the years, he has shot many a famous personality, from Bollywood stars like Ranbir Kapoor to eminent businessmen such as the late Captain Nair. Here are some snaps that give a flavour of his portfolio, selected by the man himself. For Harper’s Bazaar THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 38 | SPRING 2015 Clockwise from left: From Green Guardians Calendar 2011; Zohra Sehgal for Society magazine; actress Chitrangada Singh for Vogue magazine; for Hutch’s (now Vodafone) Holi campaign; for Elle magazine THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 40 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 41 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE SHoppIng How to splurge in Delhi L ike most capital cities across the world, Delhi has a collection of curated art on display. Vivid pieces put a multitude of options when it comes to shopping. Pretty dash of colour into the muted scheme of things, and up the luxury quotient here. much every major player in the retail scene globally has come to our shores and the malls here show an impressive variety. This city also has its Cottons and Satins: Regulars to Mehar Chand unique marketplaces, developing their own culture Market are no strangers to the wonders of this of art and design, promoting uniquely Indian cute shop, with a variety of textiles on offer. finds and talent. Here’s a list of my favorite spots There’s a decidedly Indian feel running through in three such markets nestled in the heart of south Delhi, each within around 30 minutes of The Leela Palace New Delhi. Gaurav Jagtiani, co-founder of the designer label Gaurav & Ritika, handpicks Mehar Chand Market Nivasa: This expansive store is spread over three levels and spans the entire range of home and three of the capital’s best shopping hubs the collections here, from hand-printed voiles to appliqués on cushion covers and an extensive line of Ikat weaves. But there are contemporary twists as well, with wallpapers, and curtains in modern interpretations of traditional Indian motifs. Chumbak: A truly Indian pop art-based store, décor. Unlike other spaces in the market, Nivasa and zooms into the Chumbak takes kitsch to the next level. Graphic is sunlit and airy. The furniture is elegant and interesting stores and and colorful, the product range here covers an understated with an abundance of European shops at each of those eclectic span from quirky collectibles like fridge influences, clean lines with a few ornate accents in places. Statement lamps and objets d’art add the destinations — furniture, perfect amount of flair to this elegant home store. hand printed textiles, But what really steals the show is their superb artworks, and more. CMYK THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 42 | SPRING 2015 magnets and photo frames to tableware, all covered in Chumbak’s busy and distinctive artwork. The accessories stand out, and unique pieces like luggage tags are perfect for gifting. Nivasa En-Inde Conceptualised as an art- and design-centric bookstore, by CMYK’s parent company, Roli Books, this unique shop houses a vast and detailed collection of specialist books and journals CMYK: Conceptualised as Playing with multiple elements, and fusing the organic with the industrial, an art- and design-centric these visually exciting pieces are much more than just statements. The bookstore, CMYK’s material mix is unusual, to say the least, consisting of jutes and metals parent company, Roli Books, in many instances. The elegant store, done in neutrals with heavy doses this unique shop houses a of solid black in places, also takes forward its vision with an interesting vast and detailed collection selection of Indian designers on the racks. The textile based works of Pero of specialist books and and 11.11 are perfectly at home in this carefully-put-together store. by journals. The attention to detail and care taken to Hauz Khas Village put the store together is Ogaan: The ogaan flagship store, with its arches and columns and evident not just in the span haveli style architecture, is the grande dame of Hauz Khas Village of titles housed here, but also in the beautiful merchandise on offer. establishments. ogaan represents an entire legacy of Indian designerwear, Limited edition postcards, art prints and some exquisite stationery make and is celebrating 25 years of being firmly established in the collective this so much more than just a book shop. consciousness of well-dressed women everywhere. Fittingly, it’s the first store that you see as you enter the village. Premier Indian labels, from En-Inde: Anupama Sukh Lalvani and Sonal Sood’s avant garde jewellery Anamika Khanna to Manish Arora to Sabyasachi, are all at home in this line, En-Inde, is a brilliant example of contemporary Indian aesthetics. beautifully done multi-level store. Explore Delhi with The Leela T he Leela Palace New Delhi has put together a three- art walk at the hotel, which showcases a slew of paintings day special that enables guests to put up at one of its and sculptures by renowned Indian artists. Day 3 includes Grand Deluxe rooms, and conveniently explore the shopping a visit to shopping places such as Santushti, which teems hubs in the capital. on Day 1, after breakfast at Qube, the with chic stores selling apparel, shoes, among other things, hotel’s all-day dining restaurant, you will be taken on a the adjacent Khan Market, a site that hosts handicrafts from guided tour covering, apart from the city’s major landmarks, across India, and Dilli Haat, where you get an authentic flavor like Rashtrapati Bhawan and India gate, Hauz Khaus of the country’s arts, crafts and culture, particularly that of its village, where you can check out contemporary artworks, rural regions. independent designer stores, etc. A highlight of Day 2 is For enquiries and bookings, please call The Leela a visit to Mehar Chand Market, at Lodhi Road, where you Reservations worldwide, 18001031444 (India toll free) can shop for Indian designwear; in the evening, you take an or write to them at [email protected] • THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 44 | SPRING 2015 The Carpet Cellar “Persian Tehran Carpet” 1, Anand Lok, Khel Gaon Marg, Siri Fort Road, New Delhi - 110049. Tel.: +91 11 41641777 • E-mail: [email protected] • Website: www.carpetcellar.com 348 D, Sultanpur, MG Road, Adjacent to the Sultanpur Metro Station, New Delhi - 110030. Tel.: +91 11 26808777 / 65391777 (Herbal Washing & Restoration also undertaken) OPEN ALL DAYS: 10.30 AM TO 6.30 PM Nappa Dori: gautam Sinha’s leather brand, nappa Dori, has come to be Country Collection: known for its fantastic synergy of craftsmanship with great design. In the block alleys of Hauz Khas Village, the nappa Dori store stands out for its warmth Indian and attention-to-detail evident in the leather-covered door handle, as you Collection step in. Inside, it’s the eye-catching pop colour decorative trunks that one for the lover of all things old and rare. This notices first; but it’s the satchel bags in Ikat, with leather trims, that are to store boasts a massive repertoire of pieces die for. The product line here is focussed and covers bags, in canvas and sourced from every nook and corner of leather, wallets, and a small selection of footwear. the of Shahpur, punit Jasujas’ store has something Chock-atraditional for everyone. Primarily centered around home furniture and accessories, Country décor and accessories, over time, the stores with five is a subcontinent. levels of happy From hunting heavily mantle has grown to include clothing, tableware ground and even perfumery. There’s a truly global feel at play here, with the owners, multicultural background and extensive travel clearly reflected in the eclectic mix of color textures carved and shapes on display. ornate chairs and tables to delicate cabinets Bodice: This year’s Vogue Fashion Fund winner, Ruchika Sachdeva, with inlays in glass and brass details, there’s has a clean, androgynous personal style. Her love for tailoring and a seemingly unending variety of furniture and Nimai: Pooja Roy Yadav has painstakingly chic separates gets beautifully translated into her label, Bodice. The accessories jostling for attention. collected her favourite jewellery brands from store is an intimate and tastefully put together space, with tons of Bodice It’s hard to come across a store that can please both the connoisseur and the amateur. Shiva Oriental Rugs does just that. Country Collection around the country and put them under one quirky, vintage accents. Located on the first floor, it is perfectly suited All Arts: This carefully hidden gem is tucked into roof, at her store Nimai. Something like a life-size for an afternoon of quiet browsing, with its hidden treasures, like the a basement in a quiet corner of the Village. Walking jewelry box, Nimai has shiny sparkly things draped collection of excellently crafted bows, in one of the several quirky shelves down the stairs, towards the entrance, massive everywhere! But don’t be mistaken, it’s all cutting scattered around the space. Bollywood-art posters from every major period of Indian cinema, framed edge contemporary work by the country’s best known jewellery designers. and displayed, create a dramatic sense of nostalgia, while inside there’s Case in point: the Mumbai Art Deco-inspired fashionings of Akaliko, and the stunning dull gold cuffs of Hyderabad based designer Suhani pittie. The Delhi Art Gallery: The Delhi Art gallery, or DAg, as it’s known, is stacks of unframed goodies. Everything from Raja Ravi Verma prints, to one of India’s premier galleries, with its specialised focus on 20th century vintage maps and genuine lithographs are stacked neatly, right from the Indian art, has, under the directorship of the young entrepreneur Ashish floor up. Smaller items like ancient matchboxes and other packaging give Sahiba Singh: Elegant and clean, the Sahiba Singh boutique is in Anand, firmly positioned itself at the forefront of the art scene in the country. a fascinating glimpse of pop art from earlier days. It’s easy to get lost and complete harmony with the aesthetic of the label it houses. White DAg’s vast collection includes pre-Independence legends like Raja Ravi lose track of time while sifting through these mementos of times gone by. vintage furniture with an uncluttered display, it’s the perfect setting for Varma, Rabindranath Tagore and Nandlal Bose, to the likes of Ambadas, the designer’s ladylike style. pleats and tucks on her pastel georgette Himmat Singh and gogi Saroj pal. The myriad artworks on display are Shahpur Jat and chiffon pieces are perfectly complemented by impeccable finishing. incredible, but it’s the experience of viewing works by stalwarts like M Second Floor Studio by Punit Jasuja: A fascinating array of products Easy chic tops and tunics give way to gorgeous evening dresses in longer F Husain, S H Raza and S n Souza that is a visual treat beyond compare. makes up the second floor studio roster. Situated in one of the inner lanes lengths, all of which are classic and timeless. Nappa Dori Delhi Art Gallery THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 46 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 47 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE Shiva Oriental Rugs: It’s hard to come across a store that can please both the connoisseur and the amateur. Shiva oriental Rugs does just that. They have a massive inventory of rugs and carpets sourced from the farthest corners of Asia, and in a wide variety of sizes and dimensions. The staff is friendly and patient, and is proud of their stunning collection of kilims or tapestries with intricate traditional weaves. Some of these date back to the 1800s, lovingly restored and truly spectacular to behold. The Wishing Chair: The whimsical name sums up the happy, fairytalelike vibe of this playful store. It’s not easy to categorise The Wishing Chair as a home store since everything here has a slightly magical touch to it. Beautiful ceramic vases, pastel colour blocked table accessories and fairy lights nestled in wirework cages look as if straight out of a picture book. And just to give you that extra incentive to loiter in this little playground, they have this cute little café called the Mad Teapot. I can’t think of a The Wishing Chair better accompaniment to a day of shopping than the perfect cupcake! AMALYA W ithin the serene environs of The Leela Palace New Delhi lies a lovingly curated luxury boutique. Literally meaning ‘the work of the Lord’, AMALYA is an ode to fine craftsmanship. Keeping the global traveller in mind, the boutique offers handpicked items that are a testament to centuries of exquisite workmanship. The regal heritage of India is reflected in the fine jewellery, woven textiles and signature souvenirs that have been placed here. Naturally, this also translates to patronage of the dying art forms of India, and is a sign of The Leela group’s commitment to the cause of restoration and revival. But it’s not just the grandeur of tradition that is at play here. Samyukta nair, who heads the Design and operations portfolio at The Leela palaces, Hotels and Resorts, has also put together offerings for younger Samyukta Nair Head - Design and Operations, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts audiences: realising that there’s a wealth of new talent in the country, she has thrown in an eclectic selection of younger designers, specialising in beachwear, jewellery and home décor. This brilliant mix of old and new, the traditional and the modern, is what ultimately makes AMALYA a destination in itself for the global traveller. • THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 48 | SPRING 2015 CRAFTSMANSHIP Made in Milan The fashion capital of the world has more to offer than jewellery, bags and haute couture. Milan’s artisan shoemakers were once jewels in their city’s crown, and the tradition of making customised shoes has carried forward. This legacy may be the antithesis of fast fashion, but the demanding art of shoemaking is no longer restricted to hidden ateliers in narrow winding cobblestone paths. It is keeping up with the times, finding itself perched on the shelves of swanky stores, for a global audience. By Naina Hiranandani Antonio Pio Mele F or 36-year-old Antonio Pio Mele, the business of making shoes artisans in Italy and England. He recalls the importance of perfection is almost an inheritance, but he opened his own atelier only drilled by masters such as Di Martino. “If he [Di Martino] didn’t like the in 2008. While the previous generations of the Mele family shoes I made, he would cut them with a knife and force me to start from had worked in the furniture business, his father ran a factory of the beginning. He was so great in his work that he always finished the women’s left shoe first, then the right — without comparing them. They would be shoes in Seventies’ Italy. The traditional mass manufacture set-up had a hundred workers, laboriously toiling day and night. Antonio introduced new systems like creating prototypes Mele’s charming boutique allows a customer to feel like a kid in and improving smaller production processes to increase the a candy store, where their wish is his command. From polo boots to efficiency of the factory. Joining the family career became “the most ballerinas, sandals, classic shoes and sneakers, Mele’s fine products natural thing to do”, but he picked a distinct role in shoemaking — that cater to adults and children, and come in materials such as the noble of an artisan. French favourite, calfskin, to the coveted hide of the Porosus crocodile. Before he trained as a bespoke shoemaker 15 years ago, Mele spent considerable time apprenticing with different master shoemakers and THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 50 | SPRING 2015 perfectly equal.” SPRING 2015 Mele has used the exotic skins of ostrich, lizard, snakes, turtle, and frog. “I can’t only use human skin,” he jokes. | 51 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE Each pair of shoes can take up to six to eight months from start to end. The first step is to study the feet of the client and take measurements, after which a customised shoe last (a mechanical form to represent the anatomical information of the foot) of Birchwood is created. The trial shoes take another two months to craft, and can be made more than once, depending on the client’s peculiar foot patterns. The final upper styles of the shoe are decided during the fitting. The final result, Mele believes, is “beauty, comfort, quality and uniqueness”. Mele crafts about 220-240 pairs of shoes a year, each design a reflection of his customer: “It all depends on his age; job; habits; ideas. Each creation is one of a kind.” For instance, a British client requests Mele for a pair of classic shoes with the upper in black French calf, but with lining in alligator leather. A Russian customer preferred crocodile monk strap, with buckles made of solid gold. The “crazier choices” are for women: towering high heels, plateau covered in Swarovski or natural stones or sandals with pearls or initials in solid gold or silver. With plans of expansion in London and St Tropez, Mele wishes to remain an “artisan” for select clients. Next on his list is Lidia Pellecchia a trunk show in Bangalore, which will take place in in July 2015. Antonio Pio Mele, Via Soncino, 3 20123 Milan, Italy. W Inquiries: +3902 39663680. From Artisanal su Misura Emmanuele Treccani Bonasia I hile growing up, Lidia Pellecchia always had an imaginative eye towards apparel, design and art. Pellecchia, armed with a degree in art history, now owns Artisanal su Misura, a store for exclusive handmade From Antonio Pio Mele men’s accessories. Even Pellecchia’s artistic photographs on Instagram (@ artisanalsumisura) beautifully showcase the day-to-day developments of a striking pair of shoes in the making. Pellecchia’s passion and curiosity for footwear (she is the first in the family to step into the industry), stemmed from her work experience at a THE LEELA MAGAZINE Pellecchia’s passion and curiosity for footwear stemmed from her work experience at a well-known French historic house n 2012, Canadian screenwriter David Shamoon walked the red carpet at the Academy Awards ceremony in LA, wearing handcrafted tuxedo shoes by Treccani Milano. On this day, Emanuele Treccani Bonasia was beaming with pride; the co-founders of the Italian luxury brand Treccani Milano (founded in 2010) are husband-wife duo Bonasia and Nicole Branicky (who is also creative director). “Coming from Milan, you’re instantly immersed in the world of fashion — it’s in our DNA,” says Bonasia. He grew up amongst his family’s well-known French historic house. The Maison, rich in tradition, focused sartoria, constantly surrounded by fabrics, designs, patterns and sarti on bespoke shoes. It was here that Pellecchia developed her strengths (tailors). While Bonasia’s first brush with the outside world was in sales and skills, and learned the “rules of elegance”, as she calls it. “Most of mostly works with the best calfskin, mostly French and very soft suede, and economics (he worked in management roles for 12 years in various my training came from my contact with male clients from all around the but “everything can be customised, so the client can choose freely, even MNCs), he soon returned to his roots. “I spent plenty of time in the bottega world. They were very big spenders. Yet it was not their wealth that was from precious and rare skins.” (shop) with the artisans from mornings till evenings, learning everything the key element. It was their charm, self-confidence and strong sense of To create a pair of bespoke shoes takes about three to four months, about leathers, stitching, cutting, finishing…. These experiences have power to make the difference. These, for me, are the essential features starting with the measurement of the feet and definition of the style, helped me thrive in the business of fashion,” he says. With time, he of an elegant man,” says Pellecchia. She was able to absorb the minute graduating to leather models. Between the first and second models, the mastered trade secrets, the value of luxury handmade products and the technical facets of the art, thanks to her close interactions with some very shoemaker prepares a wooden form, based on the measurements to exquisite craftsmanship behind shoes and leather goods. fine master shoemakers. create the ‘maquette’ (preliminary pair of shoes). Pellecchia believes the Today their brand offers a wide range of bespoke shoes for men, Apart from made-to-measure and bespoke shoes, the store, founded star quality of her creations is the “freshness” of design and technical including ankle booties, golf shoes, lace-ups, loafers, monks and tuxedo in 2010, offers brands like Artisanal (Pellechia’s own line of ready-to-wear finesse, steering clear of rigid patterns in shoemaking. “By method, our shoes. For women, there is a bespoke service for flats, golf shoes and shoes), Edward Green, Trickers, Geo T. Trumper Parfumes, SuperDuper shoes are made traditionally, but they are also contemporary in design — riding style boots, as well as ready-to-wear ballerinas and pumps, Hat and Max Poglia Bags. Lidia describes the philosophy of her store as thanks to the hands of passionate, young shoemakers. This is the Italian including high heel platforms, closed and open toe. A stunning array of “contemporary classic”. In essence, you will find a versatile pair: shoes way of fashion, the real essence and culture of my country,” she grins. hides is at the customer’s disposal, including alligator, ostrich, stingray, that are perfect for a sartorial suit, but also suitable for a less formal look. Artisanal su Misura, via Santa Marta 15, 20123 Milano, Italy. calf, suede, iguana, deer, shell cordovan, tejus (lizard) and so on. They can With a team of four master shoemakers (who work on order), Pellecchia Inquiries: +39 02 36752541 be combined with fabrics such as cachemire (cashmere), silk, velvet, etc. | 52 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 53 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE “Coming from Milan, you’re instantly immersed in the world of fashion — it’s in our DNA,” says Bonasia in the instance that someone wants to match their shoes with their suit. And it’s worked in their favour. Earlier in 2014, Madonna collaborated with For bespoke shoes, the style of the shoe, type of leather, stitching style, Treccani Milano to create limited edition pumps exclusively to mark the leather finishing and monogramming are decided in the first meeting grand opening of her global luxury fitness brand in Toronto. itself. They are delivered in two stages; the first try-on pair is delivered By the time you read this, Treccani Milano will have probably launched eight weeks after the first appointment. Here, the client tries the shoe and a new retail store in Milan, and with it, a new collection of leather goods any necessary adjustments are made. The final shoe is delivered about 8 for both men and women, to complement their line of custom golf leather weeks after the second fitting. What’s interesting is that Bonasia mentions bags. Their prime challenge has been tackling what Bosania calls “unlike- that one of the most pressing needs for some clients to go bespoke is us competition” — competing with unique products that are not the result sheer comfort. “They could have very wide feet, a high bridge, very narrow of mass production. He adds, “One of our main challenges is educating our ankles, different foot size between the right and the left, or the need to clients on the value of making a piece that you can not only call your own, embed an orthotic plantar,” he explains. but one that has also been made using the highest quality of materials The brand wisely chose to operate from Toronto (while manufacturing took place in Milan) for its proximity to most major markets in North America. THE LEELA MAGAZINE and expert craftsmanship directly from artisans in Italy.” www.treccanimilano.com; [email protected] | 54 | SPRING 2015 ART Anish Kapoor’s Descension is a water vortex Japanese artist Ryoto Kuwakubo T he 108-day mega art event that promises to showcase the works of 42 artists from India and 52 from 30 other countries, the second edition of the Kochi Muziris Biennale (KMB), has been titled ‘Whorled Explorations’. Jitish Kallat’s decision to don the curator’s hat may have put his own work on the backburner, but he does not regret the decision. “When the members of the selection committee, which included several individuals I respect, called and urged me in one voice to take up the curatorship, my instinctive response was to accept , and I did so in an instant,” recalls Kallat. A year later, amid concerns about sponsorships promised and not yet forthcoming, the frenzy was palpable — even at the curtain raiser to The mind of a curator Jitish Kallat, one of India’s the KMB, which was held in Mumbai. With less than a month to go for the most renowned artists and art festival to begin, Kallat was a much-harried man. But the artist deftly artistic director of the 2014 Kochi Muziris Biennale, talks about the similarities in creating and curating art and the themes at the festival. fielded questions, and was his affable self in interviews. What did you feel about putting your own work on hold to take up the role of the curator? The main shift from making art to curating was, perhaps, a shift in ambience from the solitary reflections in one’s studio to a space of dialogue with numerous artist colleagues. As disciplines go, curating art and making art Interviewed by Maria Louis could be seen as versions of the same intention. At the fundamental level, Photographs courtesy Kochi Biennale Foundation the work one makes as an artist or through dialogue with several artists isn’t it all an attempt to understand reality? One can do this either through when one curates. In the studio, you set afloat questions in solitude and converse with your inner voice; as a curator, you conduct the inquiries through an expanded format along with fellow practitioners — thereby co-creating the project in dialogue. Jitish Kallat THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 56 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 57 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE echoes the very creative properties of ‘art making’. My letters to artists There were no such stipulations. In the final list we have 42 from India and would often vary from one another and were not dispatched as curatorial the rest from across the world. concept-notes — but as a sharing of intuitions in the form of ideas and Tell us something about the locations selected for the display of text that invoked imagery. I began with a small, core group of artists, whose work, for me, art and installations. became the nucleus of the project. The process began as a solitary The Kochi Muziris Biennale 2014 has largely returned to the same venues journey in November 2013. By March 2014, I had invited more than half as the first edition, to develop its narrative and vocabulary by letting the participating artists. Thereafter, the process of inviting artists has residues of memory from the previous edition filter through. For a young been primarily one of responding to the biology of the project which is biennale like ours, I felt it was necessary that its relationship to place and The Venues Aspinwall House, Fort Kochi Cabral Yard, Fort Kochi Pepper House, Fort Kochi David Hall, Fort Kochi CSI Bungalow, Fort Kochi Vasco Da Gama Square, Fort Kochi A painted and carved brick wall by artist Unnikrishnan C Kashi Art Gallery, Fort Kochi From Unmarked, a collateral event at the Kochi Biennale Durbar Hall, Ernakulam Do you think Kochi is the best place in India for an art biennale? changed rapidly in the 1500s, with the arrival of navigators at the Malabar a shifting field, and every invitation greatly alters this constellation of community is deepened by its re-emerging in several of the same spaces. Kochi, with its history and unique location on the southern tip of India coast, seeking spices and riches… And within the revised geography were signs. The whole endeavour involved six months of incessant travel and There are a total of eight venues, almost all of them colonial era residences — away from the organised art worlds of Delhi and Mumbai — is an sharp turns in history, heralding an age of conquest, coercive trading and dialogue with artists and scholars in various places around the world. The and warehouses that are being reset to receive art. There is also Durbar interesting observation deck from where to reflect on the world through colonialism, animating the early processes of globalisation. biennale is a snapshot of this journey in a sea of possibilities. Hall, a state-of-the-art art gallery that the Kochi Biennale Foundation put the discipline of contemporary art. The local audiences here are citizens A reflection of this navigational history, as well as a shift of one’s actively engaged in cultural, social and political processes — which more gaze deliberating on the mysterious expedition of our planet Earth Were you given a brief about how many Indian and how many than compensates for their relative lack of exposure to contemporary art. hurtling through space at over a dizzying 1,00,000 kph, where none of us international artists [and from which parts of the world] you Maria Louis is the editor of Architect and I would even say that their unfamiliarity could help draw a differently rich experience this velocity or comprehend its direction, were two prompts could include? Interiors India, published by ITP experience of art, free of preconceived notions. made in my letter to artists. The seemingly unrelated directions of these suggestions were intentional; one was a gaze directed in time, the In what way is the second edition of KMB different from the first other in space. Drawing a cluster of signs, images and metaphors from one? What innovations have you introduced? these references, allusions to the historical and the cosmological recur I might say that this edition of the biennale is conceived as an observation throughout the exhibition. One could say that the exhibition exaggerates deck hoisted in Kochi. The ideas are catalysed by this historic site and, gestures we make every day, when we try to see or understand hence, it is ‘site-responsive’. Kochi, in this instance, is the viewing device something. We either go close to it or move away from it in space to and not the vista. see it clearly; we also reflect back or forth in time to understand the present. Whorled Explorations draws upon this act of deliberation across What were your curatorial intentions and ideas for the event? axes of time and space to interlace the bygone with the imminent, the Two chronologically overlapping, but perhaps unrelated, historical terrestrial with the celestial. episodes in Kerala became my points of departure for this exhibition, titled ‘Whorled Explorations’. The 14th to 16th centuries was a time What considerations did you keep in mind while making your when the Kerala School of Astronomy and Mathematics was making some selection of artists? Did you specify what you wanted them to transformative propositions for locating human existence within the create and display? wider cosmos. It was also the moment when the shores of Kochi were From the start, I felt that the biennale must produce themes rather than closely linked to the maritime chapter of the ‘Age of Discovery’. The maps reproduce a pre-meditated curatorial theme, where ‘exhibition making’ THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 58 | SPRING 2015 in place in the run-up to the 2012 biennale. 100 artworks, 94 artists T he exhibits are up at the eight different at the Aspinwall House, a large sea-facing Kader Attia who takes a poetic and symbolic venues in Kochi, while a series of heritage property in Fort Kochi, the primary approach to exploring the repercussions of concurrent exhibitions, stage programmes venue of the biennale; video and installation Western cultural hegemony and colonialism. and interactive sessions grace locations in artist of Palestinian origin, Mona Hatoum, who Iconic contemporary artists Anish Kapoor and the city and in neighbouring Thrissur District. has earlier been part of the Venice and Sydney Yoko Ono, who have recently exhibited in India, There are also parallel shows celebrating the biennales and Documenta X; the first winner of are exploring their experimental practices country’s traditional yet evolving music, dance, the prestigious Artes Mundi Prize, Xu Bing from through their work for the biennale. percussion, theatre, cinema and ballet. China, whose artistic practice is an exploration The international line-up of artists Among the Indian names at the event are of language; and probably the world’s most Bharti Kher, Dayanita Singh, Gulam Mohammed includes Italian contemporary artist Francesco famous electronic artist, Mexican-Canadian Sheikh and Surendran Nair, as well as young Clemente, whose installation is showcased Rafael Lozano-Hemmer; and French-Algerian artists Sahej Rahal and Manish Nair. • The Kochi Muziris Biennale 2014 will go on till March 29, 2015 SPRING 2015 | 59 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE CONNOISSEURSHIP India’s Textile Heritage T he history of India’s achievements in the city for his collection: Ahmedabad was a textiles is long and much-celebrated. trading centre for textiles, where the Mughal Accounts of fabrics and finery can be emperors, too, had their clothes made. “A spark found in Hindu epics such as the Ramayana didn’t start a forest fire; there was already a and the Mahabharata; in the 13th century, India large exported cotton to China through the Silk Route, inheritance, which had been passed on through and silk was exported to South Asian countries several generations,” he says about his treasured such as Indonesia; Surat, one of the oldest textile collection. Umang Hutheesingh centres of trade in cotton textiles, attracted both cauldron of historic reference and In the past two decades, he has added another 10-15 per cent to the collection that the Dutch and the English in the 17th century… Unfortunately, many of the country’s textiles, such as Patola includes pieces from early and late Mughal period, with textiles ikat silk of Patan and Rogan printing of Kutch of Gujarat, Eri silk of Orissa, and costumes from the 18th century Raj period constituting a the Lambani costumes of Karnataka and the hand-woven Jamaver face significant part. “Acquiring a piece is not the tough bit, preserving the threat of extinction — only a handful of craftsmen know how to and create these — in today’s world of homogeneity. And many others, adding how most textile need to be kept in climate-controlled such as the Banarasi brocade, Chanderi, Zari work, Pichwai paintings on conditions. He, however, relies on age-old measures such as cloth, bandhni dyeing, etc., face a present and future fraught with challenges from the ubiquitous white shirt, blue jeans and the conserving it is the real challenge,” says Hutheesing, storing textiles in termite-resistant wooden cupboards made of rosewood or camphor. His textiles are stored painstakingly among muslin lined with cloves, and tobacco and neem little black dress. leaves. Once a year, the collection is aired and sunned In this context, collecting and preserving ancient to ensure no bacterial growth takes place. textiles is, it goes without saying, very important. We spoke to four collectors who are doing their bit “For me, preserving the collection is not to save this heritage from the ravages of time — about storing them in cupboards alone, but taking from taking their collection to foreign shores for them around the world — preserving it in the creating awareness to encouraging young brides minds of the people,” he says. The efforts he to wear the masterpieces. has undertaken have been many. In 1997, for instance, Ralph Lauren asked him to show the An intricately embroidered Chinese collar top by Umang Hutheesingh From Ahmedabad-based royal family scion Umang Huthiseeing to Mumbai-based interior designer Kavita Singh — collectors of ancient and rare Indian textiles talk about how they’ve acquired the fabrics and what they are doing to promote them. By Prerna Raturi Umang Hutheesingh collection at an exhibition at the Metropolitan Umang Hutheesing remembers his childhood Museum of New York. In 1999, Anna Wintour days when his clothes were being made right did a 22-page story on his costumes in the at home by in-house tailors and craftspeople. American Vogue. “The issue had John Galliano, Gucci, Chanel and other top designers, and put “The entire process would take place in front of our eyes; we grew up wearing beautiful clothing,” Indian design and craftsmanship on the world map,” he says. he says. In 2010, Hutheesing took his collection to Paris at the request of Pierre Berge, Yves Saint Hutheesingh’s family is one of the most privileged in the region and had a business in Laurent’s partner, and it opened a year of India in luxury goods such as jewelry, furniture and Paris. In the pipeline are exhibitions in culture capitals such as Spain, Italy and the US. textiles. But Hutheesing is also quick to credit Mughal-inspired velvet achkan by Hutheesingh THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 60 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 61 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE rarest collections that need to be shared; we truly believe that the culture of Jaina Mishra and artisans from old royal families, who work does have some favourites among her “babies”, and talked about,” says however, Radhika. proud of her extensive pichwai Jaina Mishra collection. Her net pichwais, for Textile art collector, curator instance, have been painstakingly and gallery owner Jaina created by embroidery on the Mishra can’t remember if delicate fabrics. She also has a rare it was her love for textiles piece of patchwork pichwai, which that fuelled her passion has everything patched on to the for travel or if it was the fabric — from the eyes of figures other way round. “I like to to the patterns on their clothes believe it was the former,” and their jewelry. “It is more tribal she says. For Mishra, who is and one of the most beautiful and is particularly Kavita Singh things to look at,” she says. And while her one-year-old Interior Store in Mumbai does have a textiles was an organic process that part of the collection on display, Singh would like to exhibit her entire started with her noticing them in art collection in an old house that can be turned into a museum. “The local markets in India, flea market love of labour is lost in today’s times and the younger generation will and even on the internet. as preserving. So, he supports craftspeople Singh — and she likes to call it that — for Radhika and Abhishek Poddar “I tell my friends’ children who are to take them,” she says. India needs to be shared now based in Singapore, the obsession For Hutheesing, patronage is as important with their treasures and I offered For Singh, it was a different, story, however, since she grew getting married to wear whatever they want is only a small part of it — up in the textile capital of India, Ahmedabad, where art and craft to from my collection, but you know how the real thing is to meet the was not only displayed in museums but was also present in the with him and restore old costumes. They also girls are today — they prefer bling,” says people who make it and have clothes people wore and the houses they designed and decorated. make new pieces inspired by the old ones, thus Radhika, who also owns a large collection of a close look at their lives,” Her sensibilities were most responsive to Indian aesthetics — and her giving a new lease of life to traditional art. brocade saris that she has been collecting From Mishra’s antique textiles collection collecting probably never see art such as this,” she says. textiles for 20 years. “But she reveals. journey continues. She has been documenting her travels and the stories behind the Radhika Poddar and Abhishek Poddar textiles textiles (some of which are about to go extinct) through her website complements her husband Abhishek’s vast wovensouls.com (and wovensouls.org). “The costumes of Lambadi tribe Growing up with a mother who was obsessed collection of Indian art (Abhishek is director are a generation away from extinction — it is only the 40-year-old with Indian textiles and works with weavers of Tasveer, a pan-Indian gallery dedicated women you will see wearing bright mirror-work clothes and hair tied from Madhya Pradesh, it was only natural for to photography). Being from Kolkata, he has with bold silver jewelry,” she says. Radhika Singh to fall in love with it all. “Living a vast variety of kantha textiles with motifs Recently, some part of Mishra’s collection has made it to Singapore’s in Indore, my mother would buy textiles from that are hard to come by today. “You will see Esplanade - Theatres by the Bay, and she was recently approached by all over and had a large collection of the an English soldier, a cat — something very the acclaimed textile magazine Hali, where she contributed an article Benarasi brocade, which I fell in love with,” random created as a work of art,” she says. on head dresses of Ladakhi people. Radhika’s for Abhishek’s latest passion is pichwai says Radhika, who is co-owner of Cinnamon, a design store in Bangalore. passion An antique shawl from Radhika Poddar’s collection paintings and kalamkari. Kavita Singh Radhika says she has lost count of the number of ghagras she The couple has special boxes for their collection, which has been Kavita Singh expresses her love for her textile collection aptly when she has in Benarasi brocade, all in vibrant colors, with motifs varying from photographed, labelled and documented. Also, Radhika displays some calls them “my babies”. The art collector has been adding to her vast elephants, aircraft and gramophones. Her most prized ones include of her pieces at her Bangalore design store, Cinnamon. collection for the past 40 years and even took the pains to acquire them a map of India pre-partition, which has been woven along the entire length of the piece. THE LEELA MAGAZINE Abhishek is keen on donating to a museum in the city and is in and register them during the Emergency, when any such item of value talks with the state government about the same. “He has some of the had to be declared. “It was then that a lot of people were doing away | 62 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 63 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE From Singh’s Pichwai collection WheeLS The legendary luxury marque is enjoying its most successful revival since its heyday Bentley in the early 20th century. Meraj Shah recounts Bentley’s milestones and traces its unique sporting heritage. through the years F or the very first time in its 95-year-existence, Bentley Motors has sold over 5,254 cars in six months — in the first half of 2014 — and is on track to recording its highest sales figures for a year. Fuelled in no small measure by the soaring popularity of its cars in China — popular Bentleys like the Continental GT are a common sight on the streets of Beijing — Bentley’s fortunes have soared in the aftermath of the global recession. And even more tellingly, these sales have not come at the expense of its historic bête noire — Rolls Royce — which, too, has had a record-breakingly spectacular year. For the first time ever, two of most pedigreed luxury car brands in the history of automobiles — and which share a complex and intertwined history — are seeing unprecedented success. For Bentley, which has traditionally been considered a notch below Rolls Royce in the luxury sweepstakes, it has been a stunning return to the top. And as the carmaker unveils plans to launch, for the first time ever, an SUV, as well as a clutch of electric-hybrid cars, the countdown to 2019, when Bentley enters the rarefied club of century-old automakers, has begun. Bentley’s genesis is steeped in typical British sporting tradition, rather than luxury. In 1919, W.O. Bentley, a racing enthusiast and aeroengines manufacturer, struck by the novel idea of using aluminium (instead of cast-iron) for engine pistons to reduce weight and create automobiles, created the first car bearing his name. The ‘three-litre,’ the first Bentley to receive critical acclaim for its durability, acquitted itself admirably in the well-known Brooklands Races and even inspired a bunch of wealthy racing enthusiasts who famously came to be known as the ‘Bentley Boys’. The crowning glory and the final mark of approval to the three-litre’s calibre came when John Duff and Frank Clement won that ultimate test of car and driver, Le Mans, in 1924. It was to be the first of five victories at that race for Bentley: the ‘Bentley Boys’ piloted subsequent models, including the iconic 4.5 litre (which was also Ian Fleming’s original ride for James Bond), and Speed Six to consecutive wins from 1927-1930. Bentley’s star was in its ascendancy, with other models like the Blower No. 1 and the 8-litre becoming immensely popular with enthusiasts. But, perhaps, nothing captured public imagination like the real-world race which pit a Bentley against the ‘Blue 1925, Bentley Supersport THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 64 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 Train,’ all the way from Cannes to London. William Barnato, one of the | 65 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE The 1970s were the bleakest period for Bentley. Shorn of individuality and labelled the ‘poor man’s Rolls’, sales fell dramatically, only to be revived by the launch of the Bentley Mulsanne, in 1980, and later with the Mulsanne Turbo, in 1982. Named after the straight at Le Mans, the car reprised Bentley’s sporting heritage, which was further reinforced by the renaming of the Bentley Corniche to the ‘Continental’. The ascension continued when the first ‘original’ Bentley after 1954, the Continental, debuted in 1991. Bentley equalled and even outsold Rolls Royce in the late 1990s. Considering the tenuousness of their relationship, it’s no small feat that Rolls Royce and Bentley stayed under the same roof for half-a-century. The divorce finally came about in 2002, when BMW bought the rights to the Rolls Royce name and Volkswagen announced that it would invest nearly $1 billion (in today’s dollars) to revive Bentley. The hunaudieres concept car debuted in Geneva in 1999, and led to the new Continental. In 2001, Bentley returned to Le Mans, and five years later, the 2006 Bentley Azure became the born-again Bentley’s flagship luxury sedan. Above: Bentely R-Type; Below: Bentley Arnage Above: Bentley Blower; Below: Bentley Speed 8 Bentley Boys, and then-owner of Bentley, drove his 6.5 litre Speed Six on public highways, and, inspite of a channel crossing in a ferry, won. That was to be the last of Bentley’s sporting achievements for half a century. Popularity aside, Bentley’s struggling finances led to it being surreptitiously acquired by arch-rival Rolls Royce, in 1931. The Bentley model most evocative of the 1950s remains the gorgeous R-type Continental — the first Bentley to carry the Continental branding which was to become, and remains to the day, the carmaker’s most enduring franchise. The straight-six engine ‘fastback,’ like other Bentleys of the time, had custom bodywork — the most-sought-after specimens were built by the legendary h.J. Mulliner. hugely popular in the vintage car market, mint-condition R-type Continentals regularly fetch anywhere between half- a-million to two million dollars today. The R-type was the last Bentley without a Rolls Royce equivalent. And thus began a long period scoffed by CORBIS Bentley purists as ‘badge-engineered,’ during which all the Bentleys were THE LEELA MAGAZINE based on chasses sourced from Rolls Royce. During this period, Rolls Royce and Bentleys were constructed side by side, simply with different badges. | 66 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 67 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE Another Bentley series that enjoyed a dream run during the 2000s Paris hilton’s Bentley is all pink. The heiress apparently splashed out was the Arnage, which outsold its Rolls Royce equivalent, the Silver Seraph; an additional $200,000 to transform her Bentley into a Barbie dream car it was discontinued in 2009. The Arnage, powered by a BMW V8, was, for a back in 2008. Kim Kardashian drives around in a black Bentley Continental short period, the fastest and most powerful four-door saloon on the roads, GT with monogrammed seats. Closer to home, the sporty Continental GT appears to be most popular despite weighing a leviathan 2.5 tonnes. Today, the Bentley Continental lineup has expanded from one very with Bollywood actors. Amitabh Bachchan prefers it to all the other rides in fast sedan to seven even faster sedans and convertibles, including one his garage, while two of the Khans — Aamir and Shah Rukh — are regularly flex-fuel vehicle. each has the 6-litre W12 engine, but the Continental seen at the wheel of their own bespoke versions of the car. even Virender Supersports, as part of Bentley’s commitment to reducing its carbon Sehwag, who likes to keep a low profile, couldn’t resist the allure of a fully footprint company-wide, can run on either gasoline or biofuels. With loaded Flying Spur... the introduction of the Bentley Mulsanne in the summer of 2009, though, Bentley was back on firm ground with a long, luxurious sedan. Perhaps nothing exemplifies Bentley’s ethos more than the fact that, even today, all its cars, without exception, are still manufactured at the same factory in Crewe, where the first large production facility was first set up in 1938 (by new owner Rolls Royce). The Bentley factory in Crewe has become something of a pilgrimage site and continues to produce the flagship Mulsanne, the brand new Flying Spur, and the hugely Above: Bentley Continental GT Flying Spur; Below: Bentley Mulsanne successful Continental GT and GT Cabriolet. The differences in these cars, more than anything else, lie in the number of man-hours and detail involved in their production. even though Volkswagen’s ownership has infused modern manufacturing techniques into the production, these cars are still largely hand-built and Bentley goes to incredible lengths to source the best materials. For a Mulsanne, for example, the company sources 17 full bull hides for the upholstery. These Bulls are sourced from barbed wire or insect bites. Bentley’s attention-to-detail is second to none. Paris Hilton’s Bentley is all pink Sticker price is just a number for Bentley owners, THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 68 | SPRING 2015 as the cars often end up costing twice as much, on account of individual At the end of the day, decadent luxury aside, Bentley’s second customisation which cover every conceivable detail. Back in the day, Ralph coming has everything to do with its heritage — the sporting one. Lauren reportedly asked for ‘Black Chrome’, on his car which Bentley had Today’s Bentleys whether it’s the unabashedly quick Continental GT, to invent, since it didn’t exist. And then there’s the incident of Queen or the more nuanced Flying Spur, and the Mulsanne, are considered elizabeth, who requested that her state limousine’s doors include part of ‘cooler,’ than Rolls Royce on account of their racing credentials. When the Bentley’s roof, so that she could stand upright before exiting the car. the Continental GT was launched in India, Bentley invited the motoring Bentley has also clearly stolen the mantle for the most popular car journalist fraternity, not for some sedate coastal drive, but to put the in the A-grade celebrity set, whether it’s rich Arab princes, top business car through its paces at the Buddh International Circuit, in the capital- magnates, hollywood celebrities or American pop stars. The list of famous region. Luxury and racing performance have traditionally been, and people who own a Bentley includes the likes of rap stars Jay-Z and Ludacris, largely continue to be, mutually exclusive. Unless you’re behind the who often rap about their GTs, and David Beckham. wheel of a Bentley, that is. SPRING 2015 | 69 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE CORBIS specific locations where they are not exposed to either SnAPShoT Safety meets K LAUnChPAD luxury amal by The Leela Palace New Delhi is a unique customisable butlers, and concierges. She can, as a Kamal guest, also use the services package meant exclusively for single women travellers. It all of a personal shopping assistant. There’s a personal chef who curates The circus comes to town A The famous new York restaurant gets a presence in the IT city — here’s what food connoisseurs can expect at Le Cirque Signature at The Leela Palace Bangalore. include the fragrant saffron risotto, the tuna tartare featuring begins with the lady guest being ushered to the hotel from the airport gourmet experiences, including gluten-free and healthy lifestyle menus, in a chauffeur-driven BMW sedan. At the room, she gets to enjoy a specially for Kamal guests. In addition, they can take advantage of a slew of F&B offerings, luxury toiletries, styling accessories, lifestyle unique range of on-request services, including exclusive offers on spa hosting celebrities, politicians, artists and the social elite of the of Swiss almond ice cream and vanilla sponge cake, and the magazines, books, Wi-Fi, etc. She also gets to experience personalised treatments at ESPA, a private yoga session, on-call make-up artist, and a US. Frank Sinatra, Sophia Loren, Woody Allen, Martin Scorsese — mille foglie (an Italian version of the French classic mille round-the-clock service delivered by a team of female housekeepers, guided day-tour to Taj Mahal, in Agra. . • Le Cirque had/has been a favourite of these personalities at one feuille), comprising white chocolate mousse, hazelnuts fter it first opened, in 1974, in new York, Le Cirque went on to become one of the world’s most celebrated restaurants, ahí tuna with mango coulis, the baked Alaska, an assemblage and delicate eggplant wafers. needless to add, Le time or another, as also of so many others. Cirque Signature at The Leela Palace Bangalore, like The restaurant brand’s India partner is, as you may already know, The Leela Group, and 2013 saw the unveiling of Le Cirque Signature its Mumbai counterpart, will also offer guests an at The Leela Mumbai. The cosy restaurant, which has won a lot of interesting selection of fine wines. The fine dining restaurant is located on the critical acclaim, was helmed by the very creative Chef Matteo Boglione. Boglione recently shifted his base to The Leela fifth floor of the gorgeous hotel, and its interiors Palace Bangalore, where he oversaw the launch of the IT bespeak refined elegance — subtle tones of beige, ebony and ochre, with Murano glass chandeliers. city’s Le Cirque Signature, in november 2014. There’s also an alfresco seating area. Just after Boglione and co. are giving Bengaluru’s food lovers the entrance of the restaurant, you will find wire the flavour of some of Le Cirque’s most famous signature dishes. highlights of the drawings, illustrated by Denver-based artist Tim Flynn, menu, depicting scenes from the Indian circus (Le Cirque which is an eclectic mix of translates to ‘The Circus’). French and Italian cuisines, The private dining room at Le Cirque Signature at The Leela Palace Bangalore Le Cirque Signature at The Leela Palace Bangalore remains open from 6.30 pm to 11:30 pm every day. For reservations, please call +91 (80)30571540 /41 KAMAL services can be added to an accommodation category of choice at an introductory price of INR 2000 per night only, plus taxes. To book, call The Leela Reservations Worldwide 1800 1031 444, or send an email to [email protected] THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 72 | SPRING 2015 THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 73 | SPRING 2015 mInI-CITy luxury of a C hotel at home The ombining the best of luxury and design, Bhartiya City is a A perfect example of great design, this massive space is aptly Be it for business, leisure, or fitness, these homes have something beautiful township sprawled across 125 acres near Hebbal, named the ‘City of Joy’ and showcases world-class architecture. The for everyone. 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To achieve the right measure of luxury and comfort for The The City of Joy is precisely what its name suggests Leela Residences, the Bhartiya Group has partnered with the The Leela Living in the lap of luxury gourmet restaurants manned by master chefs from across the world, — find out the details of Bengaluru’s most Palaces, Hotels and Resorts. The Leela Group, after the brand unveiled The Leela Residences are apartments comprising the finest furniture truly taking Indian luxury to the next level. prestigious integrated city project, featuring the its first hotel around 25 years ago, has been an important part of the and fittings. These exclusive residences have been designed for the luxury hospitality story in India. By being associated with projects such discerning luxury-lover: for those who love the finer things in life. Relish the finest in style as Bhartiya City, it is playing an even more significant role in shaping the These are available in variations of four-bedroom, three-bedroom, two- The heart of Bhartiya City, apart from the residences, comprises plush luxury and hospitality industries in the country. bedroom, one-bedroom and studio apartments. restaurants, a sprawling High Street, a dedicated area at the piazza to limited edition Leela Residences, in partnership with The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 74 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 75 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE soak up the sun, La Ramblas-inspired boulevards. The fashion space park in Bhartiya City. Services galore out to them felt like a natural step.” Vivek nair, Chairman and connoisseurs can meet like-minded folks at the various art galleries, All roads lead home Apart from umpteen regular services, The Leela Residences also managing Director, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts, is cinemas and the Centre for Performing Arts. Bhartiya City is strategically located and is easily accessible both by offers many that exemplify luxury. A dedicated valet, butler, equally enthusiastic about this project: “Since its inception, The will feature some of the world’s biggest names and labels. And culture road and air and the proposed Peripheral Ring Road will make it even limousine on call will make your life super convenient; you can Leela Group has been at the forefront redefining Indian luxury A world-class lifestyle more accessible to the rest of Bengaluru. The Kempegowda International show your family a good time with the on-call in-house fine dining by providing unique experiences derived from the riches, art and not only are the residences equipped with a state-of-the-art gym, Airport is a mere 25-minute drive away. service; the residences also offer a crèche facility; make full use history of India. The Leela Residences at Bhartiya City are the they also house a spa offering relaxing and rejuvenating therapies. of the secretarial and business services to keep up-to-date with newest addition to this legacy.” The residents-only bar and clubhouse stock some of the world’s finest work; call over your personal yoga trainer for a relaxing session. drinks. For the lovers of sports, there are swimming pools and tennis Snehdeep Aggarwal, Founder and Chairman, Bhartiya Group, courts. The interiors of the integrated city have dedicated cycling A stunning view says, “One can’t cycle or even walk in the best Indian cities; tracks as well as pedestrian-friendly walking tracks. P Landscape Wake up at The Leela Residences with a breathtaking view the quality of life is poor. It is my dream to change this through from Thailand, another collaborator on the project, has manicured the of four acres of absolute green called the Central Park. Bhartiya City. I envision it as a place of culture, commerce, a pristine lawns and terraces at Bhartiya City. Its team of horticulturists, Located in the heart of Bhartiya City, this open area is ideal place that delivers international standards of life.” About the landscape architects and designers have worked keeping in mind the for an early-morning stroll or an evening picnic with friends collaboration with The Leela Group, he says, “We want our fact that Indian urban areas will be twice their current size by 2030 — and family. The uniquely designed Centre for Performing guests and residents to feel like kings. And who can facilitate which is to say, they have planned for the environmental necessities of Arts is another upcoming landmark located in this park. that better than The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts? Reaching the future. The Leela Residences overlook the lush landscaped central THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 76 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 77 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE CHEF’S CORNER MIXOLOGY Vijayan Parakkal Cocktails with a twist Kinshuk Parnami, assistant manager of F&B at The Leela Palace Udaipur, has been fascinated by the heritage of the Rajasthan city. Here he gives us the recipes of his The Leela Kovalam executive chef on signature cocktail, which has a local touch, and another Martini variation. what distinguishes Kerala cuisine, and the must-trys at the resort property. What’s your favorite The thin-crust multi-grain pizza balanced, which really stokes who have never been to a type of cuisine? and the baked gnocchi with your appetite. Not many other hotel school, but who have Italian. It’s simple and light, and, spinach and walnut. And, of cuisines in the world can boast the ability to create great food to a certain extent, healthy, too. course, Kerala cuisine. of this. using ordinary ingredients, and I respect those chefs. Our Royal Travancore Thali When did you first decide showcases the best of the Which chefs do you you will become a chef? state’s culinary heritage. admire most? What’s your favourite Chef Auguste Escoffier (the midnight snack? since childhood. At community What is the chief Frenchman was known as ‘the Mini tandoori weddings, I saw people preparing distinguishing aspect of king of chefs’). He upgraded chicken wraps. food in large quantities, without Kerala food? French cooking methods, and compromising its identity and It combines a variety of flavours restaurant menus, and brought What are the three taste. This was the initial spark. — spicy, sour, sweet and salty; professionalism into the ingredients you can’t when you have a SADYA (served management of the kitchen. do without? Tell us the must-try dishes on a banana leaf) dish, you have His favourite motto was ‘Keep Butter, demerara sugar, and at The Leela Kovalam. the various flavours excellently it simple’. Every city has chefs lots of fresh herbs. Cooking has fascinated me ever The Palace Martini Pomegranate & Ginger Martini This is our signature Martini based on old recipes of erstwhile royal households, and garnished with saffron strands floating over silver leaf. Vijayan Parakkal An alumnus of the renowned Institute of Hotel Management, Ingredients • Vodka: 30 ml • Royal Kesar Kasturi (Heritage liquor): 15 ml • Southern Comfort: 15 ml Mumbai, Chef Vijayan has worked for some of the world’s finest luxury hotel brands. At The Leela Kovalam, the award-winning chef has spearheaded the successful • • • • Method Pour all the ingredients in a cocktail shaker. Add a little sugar syrup and some ice Shake it nicely and strain into a cocktail glass Carefully rest the silver leaf on the drink and let it float with some silver strands onto it. • • • • Ingredients Whole Pomegranate Freshly cut and peeled ginger Vodka: 45 ml Orange liqueur: 15 ml Method • Muddle the freshly peeled ginger pieces and the pomegranate seeds into a shaker • Pour a generous measure of vodka and the orange liqueur. Add some sugar syrup and lime juice, according to preference. • Shake it with some ice and strain it into a cocktail glass. implementation of HACCP & ISO 22000 quality standards. He frequently travels abroad to conduct food promotional events, and writes columns for various industry-related trade publications. • THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 78 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 79 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE OENOPHILIA A taste of South America An insight into Chilean wine and why it is so popular among connoisseurs. By Aishwarya Nair C A wine from Patagonia Chile offers a beautiful array of white wines as well: Chardonnay, Riesling, Viognier and Sauvignon Blanc, among others 35 South Carmenere 2013 variety of terrior, making for the most beneficial vine growth. Chile offers a beautiful array of white wines as well: Chardonnay, New World wines category. Known especially for Having the Andes Mountains on the east, the Pacific Riesling, Viognier and Sauvignon Blanc, among others. Sauvignon Blanc Originating in the picturesque Central Valley, this wine is made from their value-for-money produce, Chilean winemakers have Ocean on the west, and the Atacama Desert in the north is the most critically-acclaimed of these. The Chilean Sauvignon Blanc is 100 per cent Carmenere grapes. It has a deep dark purple colour and set high standards for their competitors. Good quality and presents a great setting for irrigation, despite the dry best served as an aperitif or paired with lighter-style foods like seafood is firmly robust. The tannins are well-rounded, and fruit notes are ever weather. And the country has very few constricting and blue and goats milk cheese. It is know for its salient refreshing present, with gorgeous ripe black cherry and plum. It is completely full- characteristic, with pronounced citric and mineral notes. bodied with a heady scent on the nose. Its finish is rather voluptuous hile has surely become a force to reckon with in the nominal prices have fuelled the growth of viticulture in regulations on viticulture and production of wine. the South American country. The red wine varietals produced in Chile are Wine making was introduced in Chile in the and satisfying. RECOMMENDED WINES wake of the Spanish Inquisition. The industry’s a pastiche of those found in the Bordeaux region recent progress has been through innovation and of France, predominantly consisting of Cabernet an industrious use of its natural resources. It is Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Syrah, Malbec, Vina Tarapaca La Isla Sauvignon Blanc 2012 A seductively dark violet coloured wine that is very revealing on the the only country to have enjoyed a phylloxera Carmenere and also Pinot Noir. Pinot Noir, though Made by Christian Molina at the Tarapaca Estate, known for its Sauvignon palate. On tasting this wine it certainly benefits from decanting with (a pest that grafts itself to the root of the vine)- not a traditional Bordelaise varietal, has seen a blanc, which has a very fresh, zesty character. Owing to the high altitude and evolving nose of dark berries, spice, to more tertiary aromas such free terrior. Chile has become an investment recent surge in the Chilean wine market owing to at which the estate is positioned, the vine benefits from the cooling as vanilla and tobbaco. On the palate, it is well-rounded, with subtle Aishwarya Nair its cool climate. Carmenere is really the varietal effect of the climate. This wine is young, vibrant, fresh, with notes of tannins, bright acidity. Food & wine merchandising, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts Chile can take full credit for, for bringing it back orange and lemon. It also sports a flint-like nose, which is typical of a from the dead; it was nearly extinct in European well-made Sauvignon Blanc. opportunity for mega-wine producers such as Chateau Lafitte, Rothschild, Pernod Ricard, Torres and Bruno Prat. Blessed with a bounteous climate, Chile Santa Rita 120 Sauvignon Blanc 2012 vineyards. Found locally grown between Merlot vines, Carmenere is deeply hued with an intense provides a perfect setting for oenology, for organic Castillo de Molina Carmenere 2013 This ripe and lively wine is blended with 2 per cent Semillon, Vina Tarapaca El Rosal Pinot Noir 2012 which gives it a base and weight. Quite roaring with notes of green wine to thrive. Being largely influenced by a beneficent Mediterranean purple, with spicy yet dynamically fruit-forward nature. Carmenere Made in the famous Maipo Valley, this wine is a true treat in terms of rip fruit, grapefruit and a more tropical nose. It is gentle, has a smooth climate accented by the cool and moderating winds of the Humboldt wine, which is available in the Indian market, goes very well with spiced pricing for Pinot noirs in the world. It is soft, supple, with curious floral finish and bears traditional lemon-lime qualities in its essence. A good current, the Chilean terrain is a cornucopia of conducive climate. With Indian foods such as curry or stewed meat. The pleasant and cohesive notes and a bit of spice. I would pair this with a fish like salmon or lighter wine to pair with salad — even with an Asian-themed lemongrass such an abundance of diversity in climate the natural terrain offers a tannic structure of the wine makes it most appealing. styled meats. It is a good aperitif wine as well. scented fish. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 80 | SPRing 2015 SPRing 2015 | 81 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE JET SET GO ACCOLADES T he Leela Palace New Delhi was rated one of the Conde Nast Traveller Traveller India Readers’ Travel Awards 2014 in November, while The Leela UK Readers 2014’s Best Overseas Business Hotels, and was one of Goa was runner-up Favourite Leisure Hotel in India. Today’s Traveller the top 25 Business Hotels in Asia, according to Smart Travel Asia 2014. Awards in September voted The Leela Mumbai as Best Business Hotel in The hotel’s rooftop swimming pool was featured among the loftiest hotel Mumbai and The Leela Kovalam as the Best Wedding Hotel in South India. rooftops around the world by Wallpaper Online 2014. The Leela Palace The Leela Ambience Gurgaon was declared the winner for India’s leading Udaipur’s ESPA was voted Favourite Hotel Spa in India by the Condé Nast Hotel Residences by the World Travel Awards in September. feast A of awards GUEST SPEAK Le Cirque Signature What did you find most interesting Signature. Le Cirque there has a gorgeous room about Bengaluru? and two beautiful outdoor terraces. The food Bengaluru is probably the most international is as good as that of its sister restaurant in of all cities I have visited in India. It’s the one Mumbai, and probably better than that of many with the best weather, and where everyone restaurants in Italy and France. understands American culture. Any interesting food dish/drink you particularly enjoyed? How was your stay at The Leela Palace Bangalore? I love The Leela Palace Bangalore because it really delivers an authentic Indian palatial experience. It’s a stunning hotel. There is so much character. The rooms are sumptuous and modern Carlo Mantica Managing Member, LC International LLC (parent company of Le Cirque, Circo, and Sirio Ristorante) lobster risotto and crème brule, I really enjoyed the ravioli carbonara and the lamb chops. The place also has a good selection of wines and spirits. I liked Chianti Castellare, which pairs options and the easy access to a luxury mall. What are some of your What are some of the must-dos must-pack items? at the hotel? A swimsuit, an elegant Italian suit, running gear, For sure, a trip to Jamavar and Le Cirque and my iPhone 6 Plus. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 82 | SPRING 2015 Tommy Hilfiger Michael Trim Kenneth Chenault Kailash Purryag Fashion designer Hollywood director, and producer for HBO Actor and former governor of California The Leela Palace Chennai The Leela Palace New Delhi The Leela Palace Udaipur The Leela Mumbai Thank you so much for your extraordinary help and service. I will be back! Thank you so very much for a great stay. I love the hotel, the room, the spa, the food, the service, and, most of all, the people, you have trained so well! I loved my stay! I will return! The most wonderful hotel in the most wonderful place. The Leela Palace Bangalore CEO and Chairman of American Express President of the Republic of Mauritius At Le Cirque Singature, besides the classic well both with pastas and meats. at the same time. I like the diversity in restaurant Arnold Schwarzenegger SPRING 2015 | 83 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE Thank you for a most enjoyable stay. The service was outstanding. This must be the third time that I have been staying here over the last year. I must say that the welcome, the service and courtesy of the staff have been excellent as usual. EVENTS International Foray T he Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts recently signed a MOU with Summit Group to collaborate on the first of the four hotels it plans to launch in Nepal; present on the occasion was Sushil Koirala, Prime Minister of Nepal. The Leela Kathmandu, which marks a new era of partnership in tourism between the two countries, is expected to be completed within 36 months. Summit Group, which has extensive interests in real estate, hotels and allied businesses, will develop the property, while The Leela Group will market and manage it. Said Vivek Nair, Chairman and Managing Director, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts, “We are delighted to foray into the international market with Kathmandu. Given the potential of global tourism, we look forward to expanding our footprint both in India and overseas.” The hotel in Kathmandu, which is located close to Narainhit Museum, will be followed by a property in Lumbini, the birthplace of the Buddha.. INSIDER’S GuIDE What to do in Kolkata Priyanka and Prateek Raja, the co-founders/ directors of the art gallery Experimenter, share their insights on food and shopping in the city. What do you think really sets Kolkata apart from the other metropolitan cities of India? The two things that are completely unique about the city are its food and the people. Every celebration in this city is related to food in some way. And the people here have a certain depth that you can’t quite figure out. Marble Palace, Kolkata It’s so easy to make conversations with strangers on the streets. Could you recommend a few restaurants for visitors to the city? Prime Minister of Nepal, Sushil Koirala (centre), witnesses the agreement-signing and exchange ceremony between Vivek Nair (left), Chairman and Managing Director, The Leela Palaces, Hotels and Resorts, and Amrit Shakya (right), Chairman and Managing Director, Summit Group, to establish four hotels in Nepal, at PM’s Official Residence, Balutwar Celebrating Fashion Most of the older restaurants of the city continue to do well. We’d recommend Mocambo, for the old-school Continental food, Peter Cat, and 1658, which, too, serves Continental food. For biryani, it’s either Royal or Arsalan for us. If you want Bengali food, you must eat at Kewpie’s, and that is if you can’t get yourself an invite to a Bengali household. Two more places we’d recommend are Bohemian, a small place that does interesting fusion food, and The Corner Courtyard Café, for its European menu. You can also dine at Golden Joy at Tangra (China Town). And if you call them a We’d definitely recommend travellers to try one of the heritage walks, which take you to places that are hidden What are some of the places one should visit? The architectural elements of Kolkata cannot be missed — from New Market, and College Street, with the Indian Coffee House, to monuments such as the Indian Museum and Marble Palace. The past really comes alive at these places. We’d definitely recommend travellers to day in advance and place an order for the specials, you can experience an exceptional meal there. try one of the heritage walks, which take you to places that are, so to speak, hidden. You can also visit Kali Temple, Kumartuli, where idols are made, and Chitpur, where one can see the dying What about street food — that’s a separate culture craft of quilt making. altogether in Kolkata, isn’t it? Any shopping tips? Oh, yes! For kebabs, there’s Zachariah Street, and Sphere’s Lane (near the Central metro station). For clothes and accessories: there’s Kanishka near They come up only in the evenings. Decker’s Lane Gariahat for saris, Chamba Lamba in New Market for has all kinds of joints — from places that silver jewellery, and Dakshinapan for handloom serve lunch during office hours... kebabs, B and other things. Nizam’s is one of at Dolly’s Tea). Also, make an appointment our favourite places to grab rolls, but I with jewellery designer Eina Ahluwalia recommend that you tell them how to make lue-chip business titans and daring young designers mixed with top Attendees were welcomed with Grey Goose cocktails at the celebrated it for you. Kusum on Park Street, too, offers models, fashion entrepreneurs and talented creatives from across Le Cirque restaurant, where they dined on exquisite Langoustine cutlets, decent rolls. And if you want to try fruit pulp India to celebrate Business of Fashion’s second annual #BoF500, an index Scottish Salmon ‘bouchon’s and French madeleines. Guests included kulfis, head to Pathakji on Theatre Road –— of 500 people shaping the global fashion industry. The event, supported Manish Malhotra, Manish Arora, Tarun Tahiliani, Anamika Khanna, Bandana their kulfis are beautiful. And then there’s by Gemfields, was hosted by actor Sonam Kapoor and Imran Amed, BoF’s Tewari, Anaita Shroff Adajania, Cecilia Morelli Parikh, Kalyani Chawla, the quintessential Kolkata puchka that founder and editor-in-chief, in November at The Leela Palace New Delhi. Rahul Mishra, Sunil Sethi and JJ Valaya, among others. everyone must try. THE LEELA MAGAZINE | 84 | SPRING 2015 products (one can also grab a lovely tea there Before venturing into the world of art, Priyanka was a part of the media division at Procter & Gamble and Prateek was working in Tanishq. Both of them have a management degree. Before they inaugurated the gallery, they travelled across the world to do research on art shows and did the South Asian Contemporary Art course at Sotheby’s London. SPRING 2015 | 85 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE — she makes some exquisite jewellery. There are a lot of people who buy antique furniture from Kolkata, and would be a good place to check out. — Interviewed by Priyadarshani Nandy PERSPECTIVE Guilt-free yogawear SOCIAL INDEX Welfare of the animals Mumbai-based Lauren Adelman narrates the story of Human Revolution Clothing, which creates Wildlife SOS is one of the country’s most yoga gear using GMO-free cotton. I had a minimal understanding of garments and textiles; I had worked as a sous chef back in Hawaii. I spent months in India travelling to remote villages, from Begampur and Howrah in Kolkata, Bagru in Rajasthan, Auroville in Pondicherry to Rajkot in Gujarat, learning about Indian RHONDA FORSBERG craftsmanship. escuing a four-foot cobra that had wandered into an ATM, a monitor lizard that accidentally strayed into a school, or a deer that landed up on a golf course — the NGO Wildlife SOS, which runs helplines in the capital region and Agra, rescues animals from the trickiest of situations. The organisation is best known for its work for the welfare of sloth bears that were used for It’s been a journey of sorts since then, working with people who have Mathura. This age-old practice was endangering the species, for mother bears were being killed never met a white person and don’t speak English. What amazes me is the in order to kidnap cubs that would be trained to perform as “dancing bears”. In 1995, a report was kindness: I have been invited to farmers’ homes who had been reeling submitted to the government of India to rescue these bears under the Wildlife Protection Act, under poverty but who still found means to offer me a humble meal. It’s 1972. By December 2009, after 14 years of perseverance, the last of these bears were rescued like they were saying, “Here, I have nothing, but you can have half of the from the streets. The NGO has also, it is worth noting, rehabilitated about 3000 of the Kalandar little I have”. families, giving them assistance for alternative livelihood sources and seed funds to start small Speaking of food, I love Indian cuisine. Chai, lassi, dal fry, mutton curry and masala dosa are absolute favorites. Offer me any of your spicy and flavored foods, I will not say no! entrepreneurial endeavours. Like sloth bears, captive elephants in India have endured a cruel fate — being used for begging, held in temples for giving 'blessings', forced to perform in circuses. Wildlife SOS rescues injured when I see some artisans advise their children to give up the family trade, — Mahatma Gandhi R entertainment by a nomadic community of gypsies called the Kalandars, in Rajasthan, Agra and I wear a nose ring and some traditional jewellery. I’m dismayed "There is no beauty in the finest of cloth if it causes hunger and unhappiness." By Ritu Goyal renowned animal rescue organisations. and sick elephants working in oppressive conditions. The NGO helps in preventing the capture and trade of wild elephant calves. because it doesn’t fetch any money, and pursue more lucrative careers. A total of 627 bears have been rescued and housed in four centres, across India, where they The Indian handloom is a fascinating invention and takes an entire day’s have been given excellent medical care, nutritious diet and the freedom to roam in large natural worth of complicated work to assemble. Making handmade cloth enclosures. Similarly, 11 rescued elephants is complex and intricate. You should work hard to preserve your have found a home in the NGO’s two Elephant culture and heritage. Consumers should help prevent Indian Conservation and Care Centers, in Haryana t all began with the quest for the perfect yoga undergarment. I was a student of Ashtanga Yoga back in Hawaii, and was constantly searching for gear that would allow me to flow through my asanas effortlessly. SHWETA MAZUMDAR handicrafts and craftsmanship from becoming obsolete. I in India in due to draught and economic distress. I also researched the increase of cancer, diabetes, heart disease, fertility problems, birth defects, etc. from the use of the chemical fertilisers and insecticides sprayed on cotton farms around the world. That’s when I realised that my life’s calling was not only to create the perfect yoga gear, but also to create a brand that supports organic farming and community fair-trade. I was toying with idea since 2008, but created HRC in 2012. When I arrived here for the first time, and Mathura. These centres are the first to As you may have figured out by now, I am a yogini. It’s provide protected contact enclosures for the funny how Caucasians are so passionate about yoga, whereas bull elephants, and doing away with training most of the Indians I’ve met don’t do it all. I guess we all My moment of truth was in 2009, when I read about the mass suicides committed by cotton farmers methods that involve inducing fear or pain. take the things we have for granted. Also, America has Wildlife SOS also works for the welfare such a strong craving for culture and spirituality that we of black bears, leopards and tigers, species have to carve a niche for it into our lives. India has so that are embroiled in conflict situations much ritual and tradition that it is often overlooked. I with humans, particularly in Kashmir and began practising Ashtanga Yoga as a form of exercise, Maharashtra. Rapid response teams rescue the but over time, I have come to the realisation that creatures that wander into human habitation, life is meditation in motion. I have integrated the and the organisation has also conducted philosophy of the Patanjali Sutras into my daily living. extensive awareness campaigns to sensitise Lauren Adelman, 32, is the founder of ‘Human Revolution Clothing’, a Hawaii-based nonprofit that harnesses the expertise of thousands of Indian farmers and craftsmen to create organic yogawear, among them, tank tops and pajamas. The firm uses organic cotton from Chetna Organics and Rajlakshmi Cotton Mills. www.humanrevolutionclothing.com Back home in Hawaii, we believe in the spirit of ‘Aloha’, which translates to the urban residents. ‘Greet everyone you meet with the shining spirit of love’. The Indian spirit isn’t very different, considering your warmth and hospitality, which is why I feel at home here. Aloha! For contributing money to the NGO, check out www.wildlifesos.org/donate Kartick Satyanarayan co-founded Wildlife SOS in 1995 Call them: 24-hour Reptile Rescue Cell in National Capital Region (NCR), Hotline number: +91 9871963535. General helpline: +91 9560011875 — As told to Nolan Lewis THE LEELA MAGAZINE Wildlife SOS has two elephant conservation and care centres in India | 86 | SPRING 2015 SPRING 2015 | 87 | THE LEELA MAGAZINE by LIKE THE ‘SHE’ IN YOU... FOREVER UNIQUE
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