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Recursion

(56,582 posts)
Wed Sep 25, 2019, 01:42 PM Sep 2019

Mumbai's Britannia restaurant loses its Kohinoor

Such sad news.

https://www.cntraveller.in/story/mumbais-britannia-restaurant-loses-its-kohinoor/




No longer will patrons at Mumbai’s Britannia & Co be told that they’re too skinny and they must eat more. No longer will they be persuaded into ordering ‘something sweet’ to end their meals. No longer will they hear tales and be shown photographic evidence about how the Queen herself has written Mr Boman Kohinoor a letter. Mumbai’s most beloved nonagenarian, Mr Boman Rashid Kohinoor, senior partner at the iconic Britannia & Co restaurant passed away earlier today at 4.45pm, after being in the ICU for over two weeks. He was 97 years old.

Boman Kohinoor was 20 years old when he took over the reins of Britannia & Co, that was founded by his father, Rashid, in 1923. During WWII, young Boman and his father spent nights at the restaurant, worried that it would be attacked, owing to its proximity to the city’s ports. Under his leadership, Britannia has gone on to become one of Mumbai’s most sought-after eateries for Parsi and Irani cuisine. Its berry pulav, sali boti and dhansak attracts hungry office goers (including Condé Nast staff) and tourists from far and wide, but it wasn’t just the food that made patrons want to return. Kohinoor personally visited every table, taking orders and sharing stories with diners.

Known for his incredible hospitality—“Try the Berry Pulao, it’s my wife’s recipe.” “You’re having only one Berry Pulao between two people? Are you sure?”—Mr Kohinoor will be remembered for his love for Queen Elizabeth and the royal family, whom he had the chance to meet in 2016, thanks to a little help from the internet.

Three years ago, when Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge Catherine Middleton visited Mumbai, they invited Mr Kohinoor for an out-of-schedule meeting at The Taj Mahal Palace Mumbai, after this video went viral.


So sad to hear of his passing. One of the greatest restaurateurs ever. To keep a restaurant alive anywhere for 70 years is impressive; to do that in Bombay is beyond words.

I love this cafe and hope it survives his passing. This is truly a piece of Old Bombay that is now gone forever.
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