While Shirin was writing this story, enthucutlet reached out (with fingers crossed) to Pallavi Nirula Nath. Pallavi is Mr. Lalit Nirulaâs daughter, and an entrepreneur in the primary education space. With her father, they mined their albums for archival photographs of the familyâs restaurants. The posters and photos they found, and generously shared with us, are such treasures that we decided to make them into a photo essay.
So we went back to Mr. Nirula, and asked him to share his notes on each of these never-seen-before images. Even for folks who have never been to Nirulaâs or Chinese Room, these stories are a rollicking trip down decades of Indian dining.
Nirulaâs printed a calendar every year with the flier for each month showcasing one flavour. âEvery month, we came out with a new flyer and an ice cream; we put the month up in the front, and the back of the sheet had the list of ice creams and our locations,â says Mr. Lalit Nirula. âThis one is from our Republic Day project. On the 26th of January every year there is a huge parade in Delhi and we put that on our calendar.â
Nirulaâs offered mango ice cream only in season. And it wasnât only just one mango through the season. âIn April we got Alphonso from Mumbai,â says Mr. Nirula. âLater in the season we got Dussehri from Lucknow, and in August, we would finish the season with Chausa from Delhi.â
âWe had 16 to 17 steady flavours and about five to six kept changing through the year,â says Mr. Nirula. âThe hope was that someone would keep our fliers on their table with the flavours visible. This is another one from our Republic Day project.â Mr. Nirulaâs daughter Pallavi, like the rest of us, thought that Nirulaâs 21 Love came from the brandâs 21 flavours and the affection associated with them. â21 Love was introduced during the Davis Cup matches in Delhi,â says Mr. Nirula. âIt is a tennis reference.âÂ
âThis is the Chanakya Cinema restaurant,â says Mr. Nirula. âIt was on the ground floor of the building, which was a classic cinema building of those days, a good architect had designed it. We didnât want people to come to a plastic dining situation. This restaurant had a lot of greenery and plants, and these bamboo chairs. The restaurant also overlooked a pond and Chanakya fountain, which never worked. It was very popular with the convent school nearby, lots of schoolgirls would come to this restaurant.â
The fans we see in the image go back a long way with the Nirula family. âThese are old fans with two wooden blades,â says Mr. Nirula. âWe picked up from the boarding school my brothers and I went to in Dehradun. Theyâre very expensive to run. We told the school that we would give them free new ones, if they gave us these old ones. We had to change the motors in them before we installed the fans. We used these fans in Chanakya and in Connaught Place. This was in 1981 or â82.â
âMr. Chang designed this revolving door for us, and it was done entirely in-house. It was the first of its kind in India. We donât see anything of its kind any more.â â Mr. Nirula
âWe got this Laughing Buddha statue for the Chinese Room from Bombay,â says Mr. Nirula. âLots of kids would come and rub its belly. The crockery in the foreground is rice pattern or rice grain crockery from China. We used [this dinnerware] from day one in 1950 until the Chinese Roomâs closing.âÂ
This is one of Nirulaâs later FSRs, with standing room in the front and seating at the back.Â
âOur Defense Colony restaurant was built under a flyover, so we got this height,â says Mr. Nirula about this iconic ceiling. â We had seen ducts in Hawaii, and we thought it was a very cool idea. We painted them and converted them into a design element for Nirulas. With exposed ducting, you donât need a false ceiling, and you donât need to insulate them because the condensation evaporates. Itâs cost-saving design.”
âThese thick black spiral columns, and the brass railings â everything was made inhouse for Pegasus Bar at Nirulaâs Hotel in Noida,â says Mr. Nirula. âWe had a poster here which showed the various beers of the world on a map. Weâd brought it from the US and it got us into trouble. It showed Kashmir as part of Pakistan, a lawyer complained and we had to deal with a police challan.â
A smaller Nirulaâs FSR, in Noida.
âPot Pourri ran from 7am to 11pm. We had two specials for the day, and a salad bar as our USP, serving prepared salads, like chicken salad, and German potato salad. We thought, if it doesnât work, weâll make it into a dessert parlour. The younger generation got it but the older ones had no idea.Â
But it worked. It was a first in India, one of our many other firsts, like an ice cream parlour, and a coffee shop.Â
You can also tell from the menu that we wanted to duplicate usage of raw material from other restaurants.â
âWhen kids who were seven or eight visited Nirulaâs they wanted burgers and other western food. When they became 22-23 they came back to wanting Indian food. Nirulaâs menu had something for all generations.â
âThe menu was started and designed by Chinese Roomâs first chef Li Wo Po. He had come into India with Chiang Kai-shek, and stayed on and got married to a south Indian lady. It was a very happy marriage because he didnât speak Tamil, and she didnât speak Mandarin. Chef Li died on the job, quite literally, in the mid 1960s.
Chinese people order food at restaurants [not by names but] by numbers, so Chinese Roomâs menu was by numbers. We had 90 items until the main course. With beverages and dessert, it went to 116.
Our servers at Chinese Room were not literate, but they could take orders for tables of eight people, and sweet talk everyone in the room, asking, âaaj kya haal hai bachhon ka?â
Chinese Room ran from 1950 to 2006-7. Once I had five generations of a friendâs family come to the restaurant.â