We discarded the Tandoor oven and the naan (white flour
bread) on Feb 16th 2015 at Nirmal and let me share some of the
reactions from our patrons during this one month period. It took us almost a
year to make this decision. No surprise we may be the only Indian restaurant
with full offerings without naan out of 3500 or so in the US. There are some
like Udipi or other restaurants offering south Indian fares or Nehee (in Canton,
MI) who offers Indian street food, don’t have naan.
- Very first day someone orders
Garlic Naan, the most popular kind of bread and we tell we don’t have naan as we made
switch to only whole wheat bread (roti or chapatti) and we have Garlic
roti. He says I care about Garlic flavor and don’t care about the type of
bread.
- One regular patron who visits us
2-3 times a week for the food box ($5 for 5 items), a far better
substitute of the buffet for the people who wants to eat Indian food
regularly. He was kind of disappointed as he liked naan. He mentioned how
his family adopted the whole wheat spaghetti after lot of discussion and
2-3 months of switch-over time. And he is eating roti now.
- One patron ordered ‘Lentils Roti’
and got fond of it. No surprise there is no stuffed bread concept
specially with lentils or green peas or chickpeas in any other cuisine.
Lentils or other legumes are very good source of protein as well as
dietary fiber.
- One patron started arguing that
Roti is not soft like naan and she was right. All Indian restaurants with
naan offering make roti also in the Tandoor oven and it makes it hard or
crisp. We make roti on Tawa like we do at home. And trust me Tawa roti
stays soft even for 5-6 hours. The naan gets chewy and hard just after an
hour. She ordered only entrees without breads.
- So far we have missed 2 orders
due to naan and it is very heart warming. When we stopped doing the
buffet, we lost almost 50% of the sales. No change in the sales so far
now.
Our reasons for discarding the Tandoor oven and the naan were
very simple. Very few may know that the naan is made by pasting the flat bread
on the walls of Tandoor oven which maintains the temperature of 900 F. And the
oven remains continuously ON to maintain its wall temperature. Tawa operates at
500 F max. Normally Tawa is a circular iron pan of 10-inch diameter but we use
normal non-stick pan at the restaurant.
- Tandoor oven consumes 3 times
more energy than Tawa as evident from the savings of $200 for the monthly
gas bill of the kitchen.
- We have had huge turn-over of
Tandoori chefs (who works at Tandoor oven) as we used 8 persons during the
last 4 years, job duration varying from 8 days to 8 months. Let me admit the
working condition for the Tandoori chef is very tough as one is putting
his hands inside the oven to paste the bread on the walls and basically
your whole body is near 900 F for the better part of the working hours of
8 hours or more. I know it first hand as I learned to make the naan in
Tandoor oven during the switch-over between the tandooris. You can’t take
naan out of the menu if you lose the Tandoori chef.
- And this turn-over is not only
in Michigan. Indian restaurants in the US advertize and hire the personnel
from the India Abroad, the weekly magazine. And 8 out of 10 ads is for
Tandoori chefs. You can imagine the
hassle of hiring the tandooris. And naturally they command a salary of
$800-$1000 a week. Tawa is easy to operate and with no Tandoor oven, we
need just 2 persons for our kitchen instead of 3.
- I was aware of the research that
just switching over to the whole wheat reduces the risk of the heart
disease by 20%. What hastened our decision was a commentary on NPR
(national public radio) in which an expert was telling that eating white
flour bread of any kind is as good as eating nothing. It just spikes your
blood sugar, gives you a feel of full meal for a while and again makes you
hungry. And you go on eating again and again. The whole wheat bread or any
food items with low glycemic index makes your meal more fulfilling and
helps in the weight loss too.
So the big question is why something not good for health, not
good for the working personnel and not good for the business (saving the
utility cost as well as the cost of Tandoori chef) is still synonymous with Indian
cuisine here in the US. On top of that 60% of the population in India eat roti
or chapatti at home, 30% don’t eat bread (mostly in the eastern India) and 10 %
eat some kind of naan at home or in the restaurants.
Basically we are differentiating from all other restaurants if we offer only whole wheat bread. Go to Chipotle or Taco Bell, they have while flour tortillas. Mediterranean restaurants have white flour pita breads. Go to Kroger or Meijer, you would find 10 options for white flour whereas whole wheat flour would be tucked in some corner or on the back of the racks. It baffles me why people have to make an extra effort to eat whole wheat bread. Yes whole wheat flour costs 20 cents per pound more if you buy 20 pound bag. But the benefits of eating whole wheat any day is worth spending more.
For an Indian restaurant, this extra cost would easily be covered with the savings of almost $3000 per month on the account of gas bill and the tandoori chef.
Basically we are differentiating from all other restaurants if we offer only whole wheat bread. Go to Chipotle or Taco Bell, they have while flour tortillas. Mediterranean restaurants have white flour pita breads. Go to Kroger or Meijer, you would find 10 options for white flour whereas whole wheat flour would be tucked in some corner or on the back of the racks. It baffles me why people have to make an extra effort to eat whole wheat bread. Yes whole wheat flour costs 20 cents per pound more if you buy 20 pound bag. But the benefits of eating whole wheat any day is worth spending more.
For an Indian restaurant, this extra cost would easily be covered with the savings of almost $3000 per month on the account of gas bill and the tandoori chef.
Have you ever wondered why there is no Indian food chain
anywhere in the world? At least I don’t know anyone having more than 50 odd
locations if you compare with Panda Express (Chinese, 1200 locations), Chipotle
(Mexican, 1700 locations) or Olive Garden (Italian, 800 locations). I am not
mentioning Subway with 35000+ locations or Domino’s Pizza with 8000 locations
globally. In India it is hard to imagine in the sense that for every 100 miles
or so, we have different food and the different language.
We
started our journey in 2009 with the pursuit of making an Indian food chain and
we believe Nirmal could prove to be the basic building block, devoid of 2 main
impediments ~ the buffet and the tandoor oven and with a message of ‘disruptive
eating.’ With no Tandoor oven, we can
convert any closed American or Mexican restaurant with 10 ft kitchen hood into
Nirmal franchise. And now we can envisage all women staffed Nirmal –a first for
any restaurant chain. Please see ‘Franchise’ tab on our website www.nirmalindiancuisine.com. If you have entrepreneurial streak, you believe in making positive difference while earning profits, we would like to hear from you. The 'disruptive eating' is best suited for Indian cuisine but we are open to other cuisines if it fulfills our basic criterion.