Delhi’s dotted with Mediterranean restaurants, ranging from middling to excellent. Among the best of the lot is Olive Beach, in Hotel Diplomat. The Diplomat—very aptly named, since it’s in Chanakyapuri, Delhi’s diplomatic enclave—has never been one of Delhi’s plushest hotels. Even today, though it’s been through a facelift and is smart and minimalistic, it’s an unpretentious and quiet place. Its big draw is Olive beach, and that’s so popular that you shouldn’t even think of arriving here without a reservation.
My sister Swapna has booked a table for the four of us—herself, her husband Gourab, Tarun and I—for 9 PM, which (by Delhi standards, and on a Friday night) should’ve meant a fairly empty restaurant. We’re surprised, therefore, to find Olive Beach already pretty full.
The décor is understated and unintimidating, from the frosted glass door (on which the name of the restaurant is etched in letters so small we first don’t notice it) to the white textured walls. The wooden tables and our comfy cane chairs are painted (white? I can’t tell, the lighting’s too muted). The curtains at the large windows are flimsy, pale greenish-blue, a colour that matches the cushions on our chairs. There’s a large flower arrangement of white gladioli in one corner, and odds and ends—a silver candelabra, a tiny vase—in a couple of niches in the walls. Someone has obviously, in the past, placed lit candles in these niches, because some of them have soot-blackened interiors that look vastly out of place in an otherwise elegant restaurant.
But, to get down to business. We’re so hungry that we quickly read through the menu—appetisers, entrées, grills, pizzas—and place our orders for the appetiser and the main course. After much battling with a meat-loving conscience, I finally settle for chargrilled mushrooms, followed by a meaty main course: foie gras crusted tenderloin with roesti potatoes and blue cheese sauce. Swapna orders Mediterranean dips and chips to start with, followed by a braised pork belly with a mustard and honey sauce. Tarun orders the same main course as Swapna, but has chicken on a spit as an appetiser. Gourab gets adventurous and orders a foie gras brulée to start with, followed by an Olive special paper thin pizza. We also order a bottle of Château Mouton-Rothschild to go with it.
While we’re waiting, our waiter comes by to place a basket of assorted breads on our table, along with some herbed butter. Nice, but a little inadequate for a quartet that’s ravenous. We also discover that our table’s rather cramped: what with our cutlery and glasses, the breadbasket and butter, and a little vase of pink carnations, it’s a very tight fit. There’s also a fat, low candle burning in the centre, so reaching across for the bread requires some manoeuvring and lots of caution if we don’t want charred cuffs!
Our appetisers arrive after about ten minutes, but before that, we’re served complimentary soup: tiny cups (about the size of a coffee cup) of a delicately flavoured purée of corn. It’s at just below room temperature, and very nice. Once that’s over, the appetisers arrive, all on interestingly shaped white china plates: mine has a scalloped edge, Swapna’s and Gourab’s are rectangular. Tarun’s order is served interestingly: a delicate metal stand is fitted over a large soup plate full of mixed greens tossed with dressing; and from the stand, like clothes on a line, hang two thin skewers on which pieces of lightly spiced smoked chicken are threaded. Eye-catching!
Swapna’s plate comes with a bowlful of chips—what looks like triangles of baked filo—and three different sauces, each in substantial quantities. There’s a deliciously garlicky yoghurt dip; a hummus; and a pale green dip which appears to have coriander in it. My chargrilled mushrooms (eight of them, and not too big either) are served with two tart sauces drizzled over them: good, but not exceptional. Gourab’s foie gras brulée, lightly seared and served with thin wedges of brown bread, along with mixed leaves, gets a thumbs-up from him.
Our main courses are served within a few minutes of our finishing the appetisers. The pork belly both Swapna and Tarun ordered is rich and delicious (I can vouch for it: I tasted some). Each helping consists of three thick rectangles of meat, with fat and rind, juicy and very succulent. Not recommended if you can’t bear fat, but tasty—especially with the very mustardy sauce that accompanied it.
My meal consists of two `islands’ of roesti potatoes, topped with wilted spinach, which in turn is topped with a hunk of just-so tenderloin (I’d asked for medium, and it’s perfect). On top of that is a wedge of foie gras, topped off with a sprinkling of alfalfa sprouts. Around the `islands’ is a pool of blue cheese sauce. Very good, but the name, I think, can be misleading: the tenderloin is hardly crusted with foie gras, just topped with it. And getting a forkful of the entire lot—potato, spinach, tenderloin, foie gras, sprouts and sauce—is impossible, because it’s very precariously balanced. The sauce, though good, doesn’t taste much of blue cheese: more like good old melted Cheddar.
Gourab’s pizza is the last to arrive, and we have to do a lot of juggling to fit in the large wooden spade-like plate on which it’s served. This is a really thin crust pizza: the crust’s just slightly thicker than paper, and is topped with mixed green leaves, thinly sliced parmesan and Parma ham. It’s huge too, and takes a while to finish off.
While serving our main course, the waiter had asked us if we’d like to have some more bread, but we’d refused. Main course over, we’re glad we didn’t fill up on bread: we have just enough space for dessert. Swapna, whose willpower is commendable, orders a cup of Darjeeling tea, but the rest of us succumb to temptation. Gourab orders the trio of sorbets (today’s sorbets are lime, strawberry and wild berry; the menu also offers a trio of gelati). Both Tarun and I order the baked avocado cheesecake. Our desserts are served up within the next few minutes: Gourab gets a scoop each of the sorbets, with one little twirl of chocolate sticking jauntily up from each scoop.
The baked avocado cheesecake is creamy, the piecrust just right. There’s a large dollop of a lime sauce—with strips of rind in it—on the cheesecake, and there’s a spoonful of a berry sauce on the side. Between them, they effectively drown out any mild flavour the avocado may have imparted to the dessert! There’s also a scoop of vanilla ice cream in a little `basket’ of caramel along with it.
All in all (despite the minor problems—the so-so chargrilled mushrooms, the low-on-taste cheesecake, the foie gras crust that wasn’t a crust), this was a delicious, luxurious meal. The ambience is great for chatting with friends or family, and though the food is definitely fine dining, the aura is more relaxed than you’d expect. The staff, too, is good: efficient, knowledgeable and unobtrusive.
It’s very expensive (expect to pay about Rs 1,500-2,000 per person for a three-course meal without alcohol): in my opinion, overpriced. Note that the portion sizes are small, too: this isn’t one of those places where a main course and a cup of coffee will be enough to fill you up—unless you opt for a pizza, perhaps.
But yes, they have a good cellar. Our Mouton-Rothschild was sublime, mellow and gloriously smooth.
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