There is not really a fixed menu, but she posts the items she will be making the night before on her Facebook page.
Some of the dishes which stand out are the Manchurian, which is lightly spiced with an aftertaste of green chillies and, just like homemade Manchurian, sets the traditional recipe aside to include a variety of vegetables.
The stir fry is not rich in oil and is packed with protein. It includes toasted cashew nuts, grilled chicken, baby corn, green beans, carrots and whatever other vegetable is in season.
The pastas come with a choice of red and white sauce. The red sauce is very reminiscent of a mother’s version of pasta, with an overpowering tomato flavour, while the white sauce also does away with traditional recipes to include a hint of jalapenos.
Sattar Buksh
With its quirkily named dishes and truckers’ restaurant ambiance in Islamabad’s swanky F-7 sector, Sattar Buksh is a not-so-surprising competitor in our search for light, affordable, deliverable iftar meals.
Their orders are also delivered faster than most other restaurants’, usually under half an hour, and, more importantly, if you order drinks, they are packaged to prevent spillage.
Their bun kababs are just as flavourful as they are affordable. The dumdaar qeema bun kabab is marinated in papaya, while the Peshawari chapli kabab bun kabab is a bit spicier.
They come without the nuisance of French fries, which makes it easy to watch the waistline in Ramazan.
Sattar Bukh also serves everyone’s favourite dish, daal chawal, and a variety of chai, including elaichi chai and cheeni rok ke patti thok ke, which is delivered piping hot.
Published in Dawn, June 4th, 2018