Monday, 20 February 2012

John heads to Africa to film with tigers?




John Abraham may spend more than a month in the jungles of the US and Africa to shoot with real pythons and tigers for Mike Pandey’s docu-drama, Return of The Tiger. The filmmaker says, “John is a conservationist and protector of animals. He agreed to do the film so that we could attract more eyeballs and try to sensitise people towards the tiger. Laws alone are not enough.” 

The director reveals that the actor has dedicated 10 days every month until June to the initiative. The film will show re-enactments of close encounters that Pandey has had with tigers and pythons while making other wildlife documentaries. Recounting one of the incidents that will find itself in the film, he says, “I was waiting in a hidden track near a river all night. We had seen pugmarks and knew the tigers would come there with their cubs. Suddenly at 3 am, I saw a pair of huge eyes glaring, just one foot away. I was too stumped to react. But then the tigress rolled a few feet away, and started feeding her cubs.” Pandey admits he has to take the film to foreign shores because of constraints imposed on working with wild animals in India. “In our country, we cannot use tigers for filming purposes. There are no trained tigers here. So we will either use animation or film the wildcat sequences with John overseas.” 

With his docu-drama, Pandey hopes to show the audience the softer side of the endangered species. He says, “Tigers attack only to defend themselves, not to compete with human beings. It’s only when we understand the animal that we can respect and protect it.”

Free the dancing bears

Like Baloo, the character from The Jungle Book, bears feature as important characters in many of our favourite stories. But, have you seen the images of bears abused so that their owners can make a living out of it?

The horrible practice of dancing bears and the rescue and rehabilitation projects to check this was one of the issues discussed at a symposium held in the city recently attended by many animal welfare organisations in India. Dr. Arun Sha, veterinary officer at Wildlife SOS's Bannerghatta Bear Rescue Centre, in his presentation explaining the projects carried out by the organisation to prevent this practice, said that sloth bears were mainly poached for this purpose. Wildlife SOS with the support of the Government and other organisations had rescued 600 dancing bears. According to International Animal Rescue, the last dancing bear was saved in December 2009.

The practice of using dancing bears for entertainment in India dates back to the Mughal era when Kalandars were employed in courts. Though it was banned by law in 1972, studies found that as of 2002, there were more than 1,200 dancing bears all over the country. 

Sold as cubs
Bears were caught at a young age and trained to perform. The sale of sloth bear cubs was common even in the highways of Delhi, Agra and Jaipur. They were poorly fed and suffered from many physical difficulties. The nocturnal animals were made to walk long distances in harsh daylight and made to live solitary lives.

According to Dr. Sha, the rescue and rehabilitation projects required a holistic approach involving rehabilitation of the Kalandar community who depended on tamed bears for a living. They received money for surrendering their bears and were given help to set up small businesses. In return, they were asked to sign a legally binding contract promising never to capture bears or torture them.

The bears at the rescue centres, after health check-up and treatment were gradually let to socialise with other bears in the centres. They take time to get used to their new world of freedom. If they were pronounced fit by veterinary doctors, they were released into a wider forest area.

Pet-iquette

By Maneka Gandhi
 
Q: Is it okay to give pets food that contains salt and sugar?A: Eating too much salt can cause excessive thirst and urination and lead to sodium ion poisoning in pets. Symptoms of too much salt include vomiting, depression, tremors, diarrhoea, elevated body temperature, and seizures. It may even cause death. Sugar can have the same effect on pets as on humans. It can lead to obesity, dental problems, and possibly the onset of diabetes.

Q: Horses being used in wedding processions, walking in the middle of the loud band music are common sights. Is a horse not affected by the loud sounds?
A:
Horses are extremely sensitive to loud sounds. It is extremely painful for them because a horse in the wild is a prey animal — like a deer — it can hear things at a higher pitch than humans. Chronic exposure to loud noises can cause hearing loss as it does in humans.

Q: Should a female cat be allowed to have a litter before she is spayed?
A:
No. There is absolutely no benefit to the cat in doing this. Spaying a cat before her first litter, or better yet, before her first heat, is easier and safer. Recent evidence also suggests that spaying a cat before six months significantly decreases her risk of mammary (breast) cancer.

Q: When I bathe my dog should I scrub his head and face as well?

A: It is very dangerous for water to enter your dog’s ears or for soap to enter the eyes. So it is better for you to sponge the dogs head carefully with very little water.

Q: Is it okay to keep a St. Bernard in India ?
A:
It is as okay as your having to wear a fur coat and standing in the sun the whole day. St Bernards are meant to be in the snow bound Alps. They have no tolerance for heat at all. They will be miserable, hot, and their coats will attract fleas and ticks. Get a St. Bernard if you like, but it will die in less than two years after you have been stripped of all your money by a local vet. And be prepared for a huge air-conditioning bill and lots of hair on all the furniture.

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Little Italy plans to expand Soul Kitch outlets




“The demand for tasty vegetarian food along with choicest wines and best Scotch in India is increasing rapidly and we want to aggressively tap this segment,” Raj Mehta, founder, chairman and managing director, Little Italy Group of Restaurants told Financial Chronicle. He said the company had planned to launch 6 to 7 restaurants in financial year 2012-13 each requiring an initial investment of Rs 75 lakh – Rs 1 crore.


The chain that opened its first restaurant in Pune last week will launch one each in Jaipur and Thane, near Mumbai in June and in Bangalore in September. “In Bangalore, we already run three Little Italy brand of restaurants and the business has leapfrogged in the garden city,” Mehta said.


He said Soul Kitch brand offers Indian, Continental, Chinese, Japanese, Thai, Lebanese, Mongolian under one roof. “Vegetarian is our USP and strength and we offer bigger and better buffet, with an array of 70 items to choose from and unlimited helpings of salads, soups, starters, accompaniments and disserts. There is also live kitchen for those who want combination of items to be cooked and served,” Mehta said. The buffet lunch along with a glass of complimentary wine is priced at Rs 599, working lunch for professionals at Rs 499 and buffet dinner at Rs 699, inclusive of all taxes.


He said the company has also identified Hyderabad, Kolkata, Vashi, near Mumbai where it will open at least one Soul Kitch brand. “There is a demand to open at least one Soul Kitch in Dubai which we are planning in October,” Mehta said.


He said half of the 20 Soul Kitch restaurants planned will be company owned and the rest will be run and managed for the franchisee on commission basis. “Our partner will invest the entire money,” Mehta said.


Little Italy group, which has been in business for the last 22 years, last fiscal year clocked sales revenue of Rs 50 crore. “We are a debt free firm, investing in new launches from our own internal accruals. Our business is growing 22-25 per cent year-on-year,” Mehta said.
http://www.mydigitalfc.com/companies/little-italy-plans-expand-soul-kitch-outlets-616

Health in a box

Food delivery service: Check out what these entrepreneurs have to offer.

 Skip the monotony of the dabba and opt for vegan, macrobiotic and detox gourmet foods served in new-age bento boxes

At the office, the package arrives right on time. It's smartly packed and holds a surprise. There's no telling what may be in it. For the past ten weeks, there has been no repetition of its contents. This afternoon, it holds a Moroccan meal. This one consists of organic brown rice, Moroccan spiced lentils and veggies cooked in the herb paste charmoula. For dessert, there's a sugar-free granola bar. Each day, this meal box carries different dishes and elements from multiple cuisines. Repetitions rarely occur, perhaps once in three months.

The mind behind this meal is a certified macrobiotic food nutritionist, chef and instructor. Shonali Sabherwal has been making lifestyle and dietary recommendations and supplying meals for more than four years in Mumbai. It all started, she says, with her attempt to help her father fight cancer. "I chanced upon the macrobiotic philosophy and travelled to the USA to be able to help my father," says Sabherwal about her venture, Soul Food.
Mumbai's new dabbawalas cater to all tastes
Whether it's a whole wheat sandwich or just a grease free serving of flavourful Indian food, Mumbai's new dabbawalas cater to all tastes
Vegan and macrobiotic meals are extremely rare to find. Sabherwal claims she is the only caterer in Mumbai who provides such meals. Her offerings read like a dieter's dream menu. They are all gluten-free and contain no dairy, no sugar, no artificial sweeteners, no yeast, no processed or preserved foods and no genetically modified ingredients. In fact, Sabherwal says her meals are 85 per cent organic and diabetic friendly. "Even the ingredients and cooking styles provide digestive enzymes and restore pH balance of blood," she says. Choice and quality comes at a 

price. She is the most expensive 'dabbawala' in the city with each meal costing as much as Rs 300

Entrepreneurs in Mumbai are offering a new spin on the old dabba service. One of them, Pratik Jain , realised the monotony of the dabba during his Bschool days. "My idea was to fill the gap between a restaurant and tiffin service provider," says Jain. As India's first online customised tiffin service, the critical part of the Yummy Tiffins concept was to build a website that was user-friendly.

Clients can register for free on the Yummy Tiffins website. They then either customise their meal from the extensive, largely Indian menu, or opt one of the many meal plans created by the team. These include diet, mini meal, big bite, jumbo fest and Jain meal (all-vegetarian without onions, potatoes, ginger and garlic).

The concept works as a pre-paid service. Each users' account balance reflects on their homepage. For each meal, they can choose from five food items from the menu. "The balance in his account reflects his day's choices," explains Jain. Clients can 'make' their own meals for up to three weeks in advance. If they change their mind, all they have to do is cancel or modify it online a day in advance.

The other distinguishing factor about Yummy Tiffins is that the food has a homecooked feel to it. The chefs ensure that the food is cooked in a healthy medium and there is minimal use of oil, salt and spices. They also steer clear of pre-cooked gravies, preservatives or artificial colours in the meals.

Unlike other competitors, Sushi and more, as the name suggests, is a Japanese takeaway. Its owner says this is India's first take-away Japanese food store. "The idea behind opening Sushi and more in 2011 was to take forward the successful promotion of authentic Japanese ingredients and food through catering," says Anuj Jodhani who heads this venture.

Jodhani says that the years before the take-away store's opening were a learning process. "Though Japanese food has still not become an everyday preferred meal, many of our customers order regularly," says Jodhani. "We deliver 50-80 Japanese food boxes a day which include sushi, tempuras and curry-rice food boxes. Our aim is to popularise Japanese cuisine and also to make it more accessible and affordable." Considering they use authentic Japanese ingredients, Sushi and more's prices of Rs 120 for a soup/ appetiser and Rs 450 for a bento box don't seem outrageous.

What's common to the macrobiotic meals, easy-to-customise tiffins, and Japanese food delivery venture is the changing trend of executives' preferences for healthy meals that combine taste with the right calories. In fact this slimming trend is even visible in the shape the new tiffins take. Bulky, three-tiered carriers have now made way for flattened, airline-style food trays.

They now arrive on ready-to-heat microwaveable trays, folded in cardboard boxes and with a customised calorie count. The dabba has arrived.


Featured: This year’s 10 hottest food fads


 From food allergy conscious menus to healthy children's meals to culinary cocktails with fresh ingredients, restaurants are undergoing a paradigm shift in the way they Supriya Kutty gives you a heads-up on the top 10 food trends that are likely to make eating out an experience worth relishing even more


1. More wine please
Despite the giddily high excise duties that wines attract, wine drinking continues to surge upwards. According to the "Indian Wine Industry Forecast 2012", wine drinking in India is expected to grow by 25-30 per cent annually. The not-so-sporadic sprouting of wine-tasting clubs, societies and tasting workshops and the easy access to Indian and world wines are all reasons why we should raise a toast to this happy trend.

2. Cooking global, buying local
A National Restaurant Association survey estimates that more and more chefs will source produce locally instead of importing them this year. This idea is likely to gain wider acceptance as more and more high quality produce used for all types of global cuisines becomes locally available, cutting huge shipping costs and giving a big fillip to the freshness factor.

3. Modern Indian
Last year's saga of new age Indian will continue to excite food lovers with its innovations, small and light portions and sophistication. The foundation of this movement laid by the likes of Vineet Bhatia's Ziya, Hemant Oberoi's Varq, Manish Mehrotra's Indian Accent and Marut Sikka's Kainoosh, will be strengthened as customers delight in the fine compositions of India's growing tribe of maverick chefs.

4. Healthy menus, no kidding
Health-conscious menus for kids have already taken seed in India with parents becoming more aware of child obesity and the nutritional needs of their children. Movenpick Hotels and Resorts set the ball rolling this year by creating the 'Power Bites' brand of menus featuring healthy but attractive dishes for children. Low in sodium and sans saturated fats, these delicacies incorporate plenty of fruits and veggies.

5. Vegetarian and loving it
As people adopt healthier lifestyles and become aware of their bodies, vegetarianism and veganism are proving to be more than passing fancies. Moving beyond the ubiquitous matar paneers, menus today are exploring new frontiers of vegetarian produce with intriguing vegetarian items like almond pea tikki, mushroom khichdi, saffron upma, beetroot curry.

6. Technology talk
Restaurants like Koh at The InterContinental, Escobar and Royal China in Mumbai and Setz and FU-Better than China in Delhi were the pioneers who sought to talk tech to their clientele. iPad menus with luscious pictures and sexed up descriptions of dishes are becoming more popular with time. Even online home delivery services and websites that promise gourmet fare are mushrooming all across major Indian cities.

7. Cocktails from the barrels
Tipplers are welcoming the all new barrel-aged cocktails where vodka, rum, sherry, whisky or even port wine is used as the base flavoured with a variety of liqueurs and other ingredients and aged in barrels. These cask-aged cocktails are wonderfully versatile and every mixologist and bartender can create their own in-house barrel-aged specialty spirit.

8. Deli delights
The concept of delicatessen cum cafes is proving to be a big hit with customers. Delis are enticing foodies with their own preserves, spreads, dips, cold cuts, flavoured butters, whole grain baked goods and more which are infinitely more interesting than mass produced branded fare. Most delis run cafes serving gourmet sandwiches, pies and salads, that appeal to all age groups and are all-occasion dining places.

9. Health first
Healthy, MSG-free, preservative-free, organic, low-fat... these terms are being increasingly seen on food packaging. Iron-enriched breakfast cereals, fruit-packed low-fat yoghurt and multigrain biscuits are just the beginning with companies realising the changing trend. In the coming months, many companies are slated to launch products that will capture the imagination of the new, healthy snacker.

10. The great Indian experiment
The Indian food scene is a vast, rapidly evolving food lab ripe for new flavours, unions of European and Asian cuisines, innovations, inventions et al. Possibly the biggest trend in the larger picture will be about expatriate chefs bringing their skills to this new frontier, fusions of techniques and unlikely ingredients and flavours, presenting staggering food choices like we never had before.