Rarely does a restaurant offer its customers unusual, innovative, avant-garde food. A little bit of experiment wouldn’t hurt any food business and not go after run-of-the-mill options entirely; without a signature you’re as good as everyone else around.
Last week, I finally headed over to a much-hyped restaurant that had been on my mind ever since I saw beautiful pictures of their food on social media. Rivoli is located in Z block, Defence surrounded by a host of other known and lesser-known restaurants. At lunch time, the small, two-storey bistro brightens up with sunlight seeping in through the glass window; a black and white mural covers one of the walls, while the other sides and some portion of the ceiling are lined with brass pipes and light bulbs. The overall ambiance is cool, neat and refined.
The menu is compact, but almost everything on it makes one curious and attracts instant attention; it’s creative, it’s unique and looks beautiful in pictures. I ordered small portions of a handful of dishes to get an idea of what Rivoli is all about.
For starters, I first had the Nourish Bowl, which is a salad comprising fresh vegetables, bits of feta cheese, lettuce, minced beef, dollops of yoghurt and a subtle mustard sauce all placed side by side; the pomegranate and peanuts mentioned on the menu were missing. The DIY Lettuce Wraps are presented on a tile with crunchy lettuce leaves served with tender chicken chunks and peanut, cucumbers in a sour green chilli sauce, corn and bean sprouts in a tangy tamarind sauce and a punchy peanut sauce on the side; wrap it all up in a lettuce leaf and take a bite: it’s a riot of texture and delicious spicy, sour flavours, but all balanced.