This is cooking with heart - nothing is wasted, since the kitchen also provides complimentary sustenance to people who require it (a sign outside reads 'Free food for the needy, not the greedy'), often sending nourishment to neighbours as well. So while South Asian eateries are abundant in this area, Mr. Naan & Mrs. Idly stands out as a love letter to the lushness of Indian fare, a match made in paradise for fans of this gastronomic genre.
Note that some of these food photos are for illustrative purposes, as this visit was in March 2020.
Start with snacks to whet the appetite - crave-worthy chaats (savoury treats) like bhelpuri (spicy puffed rice, fluffy-crispy to the bite, enriched with onions and tomatoes, enlivened with pomegranates and sour mangoes, with tangy chutneys on the side).
Classic staples are accounted for - pani puri (a DIY experience here - crack the hollow puri to fill it with the chickpea mix), plus an array of samosa and kachori (the latter stuffed with yellow lentils soaked and parboiled for creaminess, laced with fennel seeds, coconut and coriander, with pronounced masala spice notes).
Indecisive folks, beware: The selection is head-spinningly wide and long.
Even Indian-inflected sliders and sandwiches hit the spot here - vada pav might be nicknamed 'the poor man's burger,' but there's nothing impoverished about its rich taste and textures, courtesy of the plump potato dumpling at its core between house-baked bread.
The aloo tikki burger is also alluring, with a garlicky, masala-spiced potato cutlet as its patty, while the the cheese-layered aloo chutney grilled sandwich rounds out this carb-loving triumvirate of potato-with-bread pleasures.
Lip-smacking enough that you won't even miss the meat, from ladies finger-loving bhindi masala to eggplant-ecstatic bhaingan bharta and cashew-creamy, spinach-with-fenugreek methi masala. Other possibilities include the paneer butter masala (with house-made cheese, the vegetarian's alternative to chicken tikka masala) and never-boring dal (tadka or makhani? order both!).
Remember when we said MNMI boasts a long menu? If size matters to you, take on the challenge of the four-foot dosa, a paper-thin, two-arms-length delight, served warm from the hardworking kitchen, completed with a potato filling and plenty of sambar and chutneys.
Of course, with Idly in the eatery's name, the idli rice cakes are also a scrumptious should-order, tinged with pure ghee for easier digestion, made flavourful with bowls of sambar lentil stew, coconut chutney and tomato onion chutney. If you prefer a fluffier, doughier delicacy, order the bhatura, fried bread rounded out with white chickpea chana masala.
MNMI's menu takes inspiration from multiple corners of India, from North to South, bringing together beloved classics that generations have grown up on. The khichdi is the subcontinent's ultimate comfort food, considered one of the first solid foods that babies consume - a congee-like concoction of rice and lentils, gently spiced, partnered with yogurt-based kadhi chickpea flour gravy. Also soulful is the vada, dunked with vegetables in a light, mellow stew.
Surprise! Even pizzas make a special appearance at MNMI, though not quite in the quintessential Italian fashion. We particularly like the larger one, featuring a crunchy dosa base, a light-crusted novelty that's prepared on a massive tava griddle, showered with grated cheese and chopped vegetables. If you like creative fusion inventions, bookmark this one-of-a-kind Indian-Italian pizza.
At RM15 per person, this is sumptuous value, popular with the nearby office crowd. The selection changes daily, showcasing at least a starter, salad, two curries, two vegetables, one lentil dish, rice, chapati, chutney, dal, pappadum and rasam. Build your own lunch platter with tasty temptations that might span jeera aloo to palak corn, black chana to onion curry. Fridays are particularly notable, since you'll find additional sweets to celebrate the end of the workweek, as well as special vegetarian dishes like gatta sabji (dumplings in yogurt sauce) and kheer (flavoured pudding).
Beverages are also reviving, in varieties like mint with coriander or dates with tamarind. But if you want a cross between dessert and drinks, falooda is the ultimate quencher, layered with rose syrup, vermicelli, sweet basil seeds and ice cream.
Many thanks to Mr. Naan & Mrs. Idly for a lunch that could be legendary.
Mr. Naan & Mrs Idly
190, Jalan Tun Sambanthan, Brickfields, 50470 Kuala Lumpur. Daily, 11am-11pm. Tel: 019-261-7070This post first appeared on eatdrinkkl.com