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Indian Food Festival

Going to a proper restaurant is quite nice. You are greeted at the door, are allocated to a table and then you can sit down and study the menu. You wait for your food, you enjoy it alone or with your chosen company, pay and then leave.

But sometimes it’s nice to enjoy food in a more relaxed, informal way. Where you can sit at one table for your starter, pick up your main dish at another stand and sit down at another table with a bunch of people you’ve never seen before. That’s what happened to me this weekend, when I decided to visit the Indian Food Festival, attended by the Indian ambassador herself!

indian festival

The motto of the food stands at the festival was to prepare the food as their mom’s would’ve cooked them, but slightly different. The choice was huge, from restaurants offering chicken Tikka Masala, different curries and stews served with rice or homemade Naan bread, to little stands, where you could buy homemade fried shrimps and Pakora (different veggies fried in a batter with Indian spices).

After I had chosen Pakoras, fried shrimps and potatoes as a starter and a spicy chicken stew as main, I sat down at one of the many benches, dug my fork into the food and enjoyed the Indian music and dance performances that were going on at the stage…

Kaja Hengstenberg

When asking Kaja for her nationality it is "European". Being half German and half Polish and after having lived in many different places it is hard for her to decide for a single one. She moved to Brussels in the beginning of November 2016 to become a part of the Bubble. Although she has studied European studies and Public Policy, her other big interest is: food - a hobby she shares on her blog 'The Recipe Suitcase', where she writes either about food prepared by herself or recommending one of the many restaurants she visits around Europe.

Kaja Hengstenberg has 91 posts and counting. See all posts by Kaja Hengstenberg