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Chef Meherwan Irani | Chai Pani | Global Indian
Global IndianstoryJames Beard Awards: Chef Meherwan Irani’s Chai Pani named ‘most outstanding restaurant in the US’
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James Beard Awards: Chef Meherwan Irani’s Chai Pani named ‘most outstanding restaurant in the US’

Written by: Darshana Ramdev

(June 16, 2022) “Restaurants are so much greater than the sum of what’s inside the four walls. A restaurant has the power to transform the people that work there, the people that come in, transform the communities we are in, transform society,” said Chef Meherwan Irani, as his restaurant, Chai Pani, was named the US’ most Outstanding Restaurant at the James Beard Foundation Awards in Chicago. Born in London, chef Irani returned to India when he was a child and grew up in Maharashtra. An MBA program brought him to San Francisco and he has remained in the United States since, spending over a decade in car sales before giving it up to follow his dream.

Founded in 2009 in Asheville by Chef Meherwan Irani and his wife, Molly Irani, the Chai Pani Restaurant Group quickly garnered quite the reputation with its desi street food favourites, like aloo tikki chaat, vada pav, pav bhaji and chicken tikka rolls. Customers looking for a traditional meal won’t go home disappointed, there are several thalis on offer, including a Chettinad Thali from Tamil Nadu. Those with a more fusion palette can try the sweet potato chaat and the kale pakoras. “From Bombay to Buncombe and Asheville to Atlanta,” reads the ‘about’ page of the Chai Pani website. Today, the team is over 300 strong and Chef Irani is a prominent voice in the conversation around cultural exchange through food. In 2018, the Indian-origin chef was named as one of the ’31 People Who Are Changing The South’ by Time Magazine. Much of the inspiration came from Irani’s own longing for home-cooked food – he would wander through Indian stores in South Carolina, picking up all the spices he could find and trying, unsuccessfully to create a blend that compared somewhat with what he remembered from back home. When Chai Pani began, Irani’s mother arrived in the US to train the staff for two months, teaching them the complex, exacting art of working with Indian spices.

Meherwan Irani | Molly Irani | Chai Pani | Global Indian

Chef Meherwan Irani and his wife, Molly.

In 2012, the group opened the MG Road Bar & Lounge which has received media attention from around the world. Chai Pani Decatur came in 2013 in Decatur, Georgia. Known for its Pani Puri nights, it has been a staple on the ‘Best Restaurants in Atlanta’ list ever since it opened up. At Botiwalla, in Ponce City Market and Charlotte, Chef Irani returns to the kabab houses from his own childhood, as well as the many grills and rotisseries that pop up in Indian cities after sundown, where spicy stir fries and rolls see brisk business.

Chef Irani also branched out into Spicewalla, to supply fresh Indian spices across North Carolina, paying homage to his own childhood. At his grandmother’s house in Mumbai, the family would sit together in winter to make their own dhansak masala. “Whole spices were brought to our home, often in jute sacks from the spice merchants,” he says. “For days, the air would be heady with the scent of roasting coriander, mace, cumin and cinnamon. After the spices were roasted and cooled, we would blend and grind them in our old, large hand grinder using recipes written on scraps of paper that my grandmother would keep in a box in her dresser.” In 2019, Oprah Winfrey added Spicewalla to her list of favourite things. “That was full circle,” Irani said in an interview.

Chef Irani’s earliest lessons in the kitchen came from his mother. Growing up, he was exposed to a versatile mix of cuisines, from pastas and casseroles to chicken cutlets served with tomato ketchup – all homemade. “We never knew what would be on the table for lunch and dinner each day. She could make potatoes taste like masala, with mustard seeds and fresh limes, or roast them with rosemary and olive oil… She applied Indian spices to dishes without changing the DNA of it,” he told bon appetit.

Meherwan Irani | Chai Pani | Global Indian

Chef Meherwan Irani. Photo: Instagram @meherwanirani

After graduating with an MBA from the University of South Carolina, Chef Irani moved to San Francisco. There, he began working at Lexus dealership, spending over a decade selling cars. In 2009, Irani quit his sales job to open his first restaurant – Chai Pani, in downtown Asheville where he lived with his wife. Today, he has five James Beard nominations for Best Chef in the Southeast under his belt and his restaurants have been featured in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, GQ, Men’s Health, USA Today and Bon Appetite.

By Chef Irani’s side from the very start is his wife, Molly, who, unlike Irani, grew up in the restaurant business. Her parents owned a restaurant in the south-east (America) and Molly is no stranger to kitchens, chefs and restaurants. Having travelled to India for many years, she has brought rich and diverse experiences to the table at the Chai Pani Restaurant Group, where she is Hospitality Director & co-founder. Incidentally, Molly’s family restaurant is where the two first crossed paths. Chef Irani said in a 2020 interview with Garden & Gun that his first job was “waiting tables in Myrtle Beach at a French patisserie. I married the owner’s daughter, Molly.”

As is evident by now, Chef Irani’s food comes wrapped in stories, which are consumed with equal gusto. Through these stories, Chef Irani finds his own connection between Southern India, from where he hails, and the American deep South, where he now lives. Despite the fact that his restaurants have expanded to other states, Asheville is his home: “What if we did what we really wanted to do,” he once asked his wife, before the Chai Pani Restaurant Group began. “I honestly believe because we were in Asheville, we were able to answer that question, and Chai Pani was born.”

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  • Botiwalla
  • Chai Pani
  • Chai Pani Restaurant Group
  • James Beard Foundation
  • Spicewalla

Published on 16, Jun 2022

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Economist Aaron Chatterji: Elevating America’s trajectory to new heights

(August 22, 2023) Within the realm of global finance and commerce, the United States has consistently held a prominent position. And among the many shaping this giant's future is an Indian American who is working behind the scenes to get the US to new heights - Dr. Aaron "Ronnie" Chatterji. The economist, who has previously worked in the Obama Administration, serving as a senior economist at the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers, also served the current US President, Joe Biden as a key adviser to overcome the global microchips shortage. [caption id="attachment_43971" align="aligncenter" width="632"] Dr. Aaron "Ronnie" Chatterji at The Fuqua School of Business at Duke University in Durham, NC[/caption] Having managed several important projects under the Biden leadership - including the CHIPS and Science Act’s historic $50 billion investment in the semiconductor industry - Dr. Chatterji will now be returning to his post as a business professor at Duke University. The Global Indian, who has been solely responsible for making major strides in bolstering USA's supply chains, strengthening their national security, and creating good jobs across the country, has spearheaded novel approaches to comprehend entrepreneurship, formulated inventive policy concepts to harness technology for a more promising global landscape,

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en solely responsible for making major strides in bolstering USA's supply chains, strengthening their national security, and creating good jobs across the country, has spearheaded novel approaches to comprehend entrepreneurship, formulated inventive policy concepts to harness technology for a more promising global landscape, and chronicled the ascent of CEO activists and their influence on governance.

Aiming for the stars

A self-proclaimed 'nerd', Dr. Chatterji was an enthusiastic kid who loved numbers. Growing up as an immigrant, the economist always dreamt of making a career in the field of commerce. Talking about his growing up years in Upstate New York, the economist shared, "I didn't really think much about how fortunate my parents were. They were both teachers working for the state, which meant they had good healthcare. Looking back, this played a big role in why I decided to enter the world of public office in North Carolina."

Economist | Dr. Aaron "Ronnie" Chatterji | Global Indian

After completing his school, the economist went on to earn a B.A. in Economics from Cornell University in 2000. Later, he pursued his Ph.D. from the University of California, which he received in 2006. His main area of research focussed on entrepreneurship, innovation, and corporate social responsibility. The results of his scholarly efforts have been featured in leading publications within the fields of strategic management, economics, finance, and organisational studies. The same year, Dr. Chatterji moved to North Carolina to teach at Duke’s business school, where he worked at the intersection of academia, policy, and business, investigating the most important forces shaping the economy and society.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Jcqk-JCZM4

With prior experience as a financial analyst at Goldman Sachs and a term membership with the Council on Foreign Relations, Chatterji's accomplishments have garnered several accolades. Among these, he has received the Rising Star Award from the Aspen Institute, the Emerging Scholar Award presented by the Strategic Management Society, and the prestigious 2017 Kauffman Prize Medal for Exceptional Research in Entrepreneurship.

Right at the top

While he was enjoying his time teaching and grooming the next generation of economists, a turning point came when he was appointed as a senior economist on President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, in 2010. The economist shifted to Washington, D.C. to work out of the White House, where his work concentrated on policies concerning entrepreneurship, innovation, infrastructure, and economic growth. It was around the same time that Dr. Chatterji held the role of Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and also that of a visiting Associate Professor at The Harvard Business School.

During his first tenure at the White House, the economist authored numerous op-ed articles in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, among them influential essays that introduced the notion of CEO activism in collaboration with co-author Michael Toffel. He composed extensively for both management and policy readerships, with a series of recent contributions to the Harvard Business Review and the Brookings Institution. He is also the author of the acclaimed book, Can Business Save the Earth? Innovating Our Way to Sustainability.

[caption id="attachment_43973" align="aligncenter" width="621"]Economist | Dr. Aaron "Ronnie" Chatterji | Global Indian Dr. Chatterji with his family[/caption]

Dr. Chatterji became the chief economist at the Commerce Department only a few months into Biden's term and transitioned to the NEC (National Economic Council) the previous year, assuming the role of White House Coordinator for CHIPS (Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors) Implementation. He also oversaw the implementation of the Science Act, which aims to boost domestic research and manufacturing of semiconductors in the United States to give the country a competitive edge on the world stage. "I oversaw the tasks of the CHIPS Implementation Steering Council, collaborating closely with the National Security Council, the Office of Science and Technology Policy, the Department of Commerce, and the Steering Council itself to guarantee efficient interagency synchronisation," the economist said.

The economist, who lives with his wife Neely and three children in Durham, now plans on spending a few years teaching at Duke University, while also working on a new book.

  • Follow Dr. Aaron "Ronnie" Chatterji on LinkedIn

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Meet Nadiya Chettiar, the Indian-origin writer creating stories for Young Sheldon

(February 28, 2024) If you're a fan of The Big Bang Theory fan and are currently hooked to the spinoff, Young Sheldon, you have likely heard of Nadiya Chettiar. The actor-turned-screenwriter is an executive producer on the hit television show, and has been around since Season 5, contributing to twists like Sheldon's (Ian Armitage) meemaw buying a laundromat with an illegal gambling room in the back, and his strictly Southern Baptist mother, Mary, discovering a sudden penchant for lotto scratchers. Although Season 7 is likely to be a wrap for the show, given what we already know about Sheldon's early life, the series has continued to peak, winning the National Television Award (NTS) for Most Popular Comedy Programme in 2023. She has worked on a number of hit Netflix shows, including Kim's Convenience and Working Moms and received a Leo Award nomination in British Columbia, under the Best Screenwriting in a Youth of Children's Program or Series category for her work on Some Assembly Required. Just like Sheldon Cooper, going from his modest beginnings in Texas to win a Nobel Prize, Nadiya Chettiar has come a long way. The half-Indian, half-Irish writer grew up in Grand Falls, New Brunswick, in

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f-Irish writer grew up in Grand Falls, New Brunswick, in Canada, had originally intended to be an actor and even found some success in her early career path. "Growing up in a small town, I was bored a lot. My dad was a technophile and we had one of those big, white satellite dishes in the 80s," Nadiya says. "Most people had only 13 channels back then, but we had a lot more. I watched a lot of TV." While there weren't too many shows for kids, there were sitcoms, and Nadiya watched them all. It sparked an early love for television, and for acting.

[caption id="attachment_49509" align="aligncenter" width="493"]Nadiya Chettiar Nadiya Chettiar[/caption]

Life as an actor

Nadiya Chettiar decided to try her luck as an actor in Canada, and appeared in Little Mosque on the Prairie and The Best Years. She decided to take the leap and move across the country, from Toronto to Vancouver. "I had seen some success as an actor in TO, and thought that I could ride that wave all the way to Vancouver. Well, the wave crashed on the pacific shoreline, leaving me without any job prospects, and wondering what the h*ll I just did," she said in an interview. Her timing couldn't have been worse - she moved just as the writers' strike had hit LA and also dried up work in Vancouver. "It was a terrible career move," she admits.

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That wasn't all. "I had spent nearly 80% of my acting career wearing a headscarf (because I look vaguely Muslim, sorta Eastern European," Nadiya recalls. "I was getting frustrated with rarely getting to represent people like myself in the parts I was auditioning for." Also, her intution had been telling her that "there was something out there in the world that I thought I would be better suited for, but I didn't know what that thing was."

Finding her calling

It turned out that "thing" was writing. Back in Toronto, Nadiya Chettiar had been involved in a long distance relationship with a guy she "really admired, and who happened to be a great writer." For nearly two years, they stayed in touch through writing, and Nadiya loved reading his emails. "I felt challenged and it made me want to write better, more creative, more funny letters," she says. They stopped keeping in touch when she moved to Vancouver, but Nadiya realised it "wasn't just love I was pursuing with my 'creative and funny' love emails. I wanted to learn how to be a better writer."

Her first attempt at a writer was for a radio play, which she calls "an obvious first step." This grew into a desire to write for TV - after all, she had spent her childhood hooked to sitcoms. Using the radio play as a writing sample, she applied for an online writing course at the Humber College, in Toronto. "That was the beginning of me practicing to write for TV," she says. "I wrote a few TV scripts in that program, which were terrible. From there I continued to write and take classes and grow."

Nadiya had stayed in touch with her TV contacts and when it was time to find work, she reached out to them. One showrunner in Canada connected her with other young women writers in Vancouver. She had also worked on building a solid portfolio. Then, she met Jennica Harper, who helped her get her first job as a script coordinator / junior writer on a kid's multi-cam sitcom, called Some Assembly Required. That was followed by Package Deal, where she worked with Andrew Orenstein, of Third Rock from the Sun and Malcolm in the Middle fame. Not only was this sitcom for adults, it also shot before a live studio audience. "We got to rewrite on our feet and pitch new jokes between takes and let the audience decide what worked," Nadiya said. "It was so much fun and immediately rewarding."

Relocating to LA

Nadiya's first job in LA was as the Executive Story Editor on Life in Pieces, a 2015 USA sitcom that ran for four seasons.

From there, she joined the team at Mom, another Chuck Lorre show set in Napa Valley, California, about a dysfunctional mother / daughter duo. In fact, Nadiya was so inspired by the show when she first watched it, that she even wrote a spec script (speculative screenplay) on Mom for an extension class she happened to be taking at UCLA. So actually making it to the team of writers was a big moment.

"This was my first experience with group writing and they had a really unique way of working," Nadiya recalls. This was during Covid and although the team worked in person, the writers were in their own part of the building. "Normally you would be on set, in a 'video village' where you're nearby watching it happen," she explains. "But when they were shooting the last episode of the show we did get to be on set. It was just mind blowing to have studied the show eight or nine years previous and and to actually be there as they're shooting the last episode."

She then moved on to Housebroken, an American sitcom starring Lisa Kudrow and Clea DuVall. The reviews were "generally favourable" according to Metacritic but the series wrapped up after Season She joined Young Sheldon in 2022, for Season 5.

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"In some ways, it's very different and in others very similar to what I have done before," she says, about Young Sheldon. "Similar as in you begin with a blue sky, you're just starting to think about what happens." The best part, she says, "Is getting approvals from Chuck Lorre. He's very much involved but he's involved also with a lot of other shows." On a show as big as Young Sheldon, the job involves working in a boardroom with a team of other writers.

[caption id="attachment_49510" align="aligncenter" width="525"]Nadiya Chettiar Photo: Write Your Voice[/caption]

Advice to young writers

Striking an emotional connection with people, and being able to make them laugh or cry is never easy. "The biggest challenge is that trying to make people laugh involves putting yourself out there," Chettiar says. "You're showing people what you think is funny, what you think period, and that's revealing something about who you are."

The key to being a writer, though, she feels, is to keep at it anyway. "Perseverance is key. Don't worry if you don't feel talented enough - you never will," she says. "My biggest challenge? Not giving into thoughts that I'm a terrible writer and just carrying on."

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Aishwarya Sridhar: The 24-year-old documentary filmmaker who became the first Indian to bag the Wildlife Photographer Award

(October 24, 2021) The wilderness is her office, Nature, a constant companion. The first Indian to win the coveted Wildlife Photographer Award in 2020 for her photograph on fireflies Lights of Passion (chosen from 50,000 entries from 80 countries) Aishwarya Sridhar’s entry held pride of place in the august halls of the National Museum of History in London at one time.  For a girl who grew up in the hustle and bustle of Panvel, the outdoors entranced her as she pranced along with her father on treks – who as a life member of the Bombay Natural History Society instilled a love for wildlife in her. Spotting a colourful dwarf Kingfisher or awed at the luminous glow of fireflies flitting in the Western Ghats, Sridhar found the power of the medium, with a conservationist spirit.  “Every day is a new adventure. I look forward to spending time in the wilderness,” says the preservationist, who cherishes all those moments in verdant landscapes but feels most fortunate to have seen a tigress training her cubs to hunt in the wild. Sridhar is also the winner of Sanctuary Asia’s Young Naturalist Award, the Princess Diana Award, and is a Jackson Wild summit fellow

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s a life member of the Bombay Natural History Society instilled a love for wildlife in her. Spotting a colourful dwarf Kingfisher or awed at the luminous glow of fireflies flitting in the Western Ghats, Sridhar found the power of the medium, with a conservationist spirit. 

“Every day is a new adventure. I look forward to spending time in the wilderness,” says the preservationist, who cherishes all those moments in verdant landscapes but feels most fortunate to have seen a tigress training her cubs to hunt in the wild. Sridhar is also the winner of Sanctuary Asia’s Young Naturalist Award, the Princess Diana Award, and is a Jackson Wild summit fellow (considered the Emmy of wildlife filmmaking). 

[caption id="attachment_13810" align="alignnone" width="1080"]An eagle An eagle clicked by Aishwarya Sridhar.[/caption]

The intuitive soul 

This Global Indian is now working on a two-part TV series showcasing the survival stories of the seven endangered primates of India and the folk that protect them. 

Each project engulfs Sridhar into a verdant world and its creatures. Straddled with a Canon 1Dx mark ii and Canon 5d mark iii, she sees wildlife with an intuitive soul. Queen of Taru, a film she researched, scripted and directed started off as a passion project in pursuit of the wild Bengal Tigress Maya in the forests of Tadoba, and her struggle of survival in a male dominated world. “After six years of tracking her, I finally gave her a celluloid salute. I learnt that animals are capable of strategy just like humans, and they are capable of feeling emotions, When I got to know that Tiger Queen of Taru would be airing on Nat Geo WILD, that felt fulfilling, I was grateful,” says Sridhar. 

[caption id="attachment_13805" align="alignnone" width="1080"]Maya A tiger in the wild.[/caption]

Art with a cause 

Going into unexplored territory led her to Panje, a wetland she has been visiting since childhood. Witnessing a gradual loss of habitat at Uran, her connect with the local fishing communities helped her in research which she presented in a 14-minute documentary on DD. “The most interesting finding was that the so-called ‘illiterate’ (local tribals) know the value of our ecosystem and its role in our survival more than the educated who so easily give orders for destruction. The film and photo-story helped bring a Bombay High Court Order protecting Uran, thus saving the livelihoods of around 2,500 fishermen. The Panje wetland is now recognised as a satellite wetland, and will soon receive the status of a ‘conservation reserve’,” says the eco warrior, who is also an emerging fellow at International League of Conservation Photographers, working towards policy-level protection for the wetlands in Mumbai. 

Sridhar was selected to feature on My Place on Earth – a digital series by BBC Earth in 2021, and is ecstatic about the episode filmed online with some on-field content pre-shot by her. A self-taught photographer, her initiation with the camera began with her father showing her the basics. A course by acclaimed wildlife photographer Sudhir Shivaram added context, though she giggles saying, “every trick I have learnt is from YouTube and by experimenting.” 

[caption id="attachment_13808" align="aligncenter" width="442"]Aishwarya Sridhar Aishwarya Sridhar[/caption]

A multi-hyphenate 

Even with filmmaking, Sridhar learnt by watching films on National Geographic, Discovery and Animal Planet. She has since self-taught, edited, presented, and directed an eight-part web series for World Wildlife Fund India. She also did a film for the state forest department and the Deccan Conservation Foundation on the unique and endangered wildlife of the Deccan Plateau. “During the lockdown, I ideated on inculcating the love for Nature in children using origami for WWF-India. I brought Nature indoors with the series titled Fun-Crafts with Aishwarya (digital),” says the shutterbug, whose series helped further with a collaboration with Discovery Channel. It partnered in another unique live show that focused on spotlighting endangered species in India through interesting conversations with India’s top wildlife photographers, filmmakers, and scientists. “I am one of the youngest presenters to have hosted a live show on Discovery,” says the girl, who loves to write poetry in her free time, no doubt inspired by her lush office. 

Her upbringing has instilled a deep conservation mindset with focused hard work. “From the age of eight, I have explored India’s wilderness. My parents have always encouraged my curiosity, and raised me with a lot of outdoor exposure which helped immensely,” she says, thrilled that she finally has incredible mentors. 

[caption id="attachment_13807" align="alignnone" width="1080"]Wasp A wasp clicked by Aishwarya Sridhar[/caption]

Believing staunchly in the power of self, her transition from photography to filmmaking was game-changing. “I never thought of becoming a wildlife filmmaker initially. As I got older, I knew I would never be happy at a desk. So, I chose mass media for graduation though Mumbai University doesn’t offer any filmmaking specialisations. It was daunting. But I worked on myself every day, and still do so,” says the filmmaker, who now wants to try filming with 360-degree VR. 

A path peppered with milestones 

Each award is a milestone leading her to the next. For instance, for the “BBC Wildlife Your Shot Competition, the pictures of a bonnet macaque alpha male, flamingos in Navi Mumbai and a baby lion-tailed macaque with its mother were winners. Each picture is special, and documents a moment in nature that is otherwise overlooked”, she explains. 

A part of the award-winning podcasts Eyes on Conservation now titled Earth to Humans, by the Wild Lens Collective, connecting with natural history storytellers from around the globe enthuses her. “I hope to start my own natural history media outlet in India in the next decade,” says the 24-year-old, who is hugely inspired by award-winning filmmakers Beverly and Dereck Joubert, whose Big Cats Initiative and films have her enthralled. 

[caption id="attachment_13806" align="alignnone" width="1080"]Flamingoes Flamingoes of Mumbai, clicked by Aishwarya Sridhar[/caption]

Even though the pandemic has upended much travel, it is slowly opening up. Back to her wilderness address, Sridhar has some great filmmaking projects in the pipeline. She feels travel and Nature teaches one adaptability and patience. “With every animal/bird you photograph the strategy changes. You should be able to adjust to extreme weather conditions and be physically fit to get the maximum out of your trip. Being a Gen-Z kid, I expected instant gratification, but wildlife photography teaches you persistence. There may be times when you don’t see the animal/bird, and you may not get the photograph you have in mind, but it’s important to never lose your calm in these situations,” she advices. 

Mother Nature has been her constant teacher, and she hopes humans learn to protect their habitats. “Whenever Nature gets hurt, she repairs herself and continues on. In the same way, I try to be positive and keep working hard,” she says. 

Follow Aishwarya Sridhar on Instagram

Reading Time: 7 min

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From Mumbai Streets to North Carolina Eats: Chef Meherwan Irani’s Chai Pani

(October 29, 2023) From chaat to vada pav and more, Chef Meherwan Irani's restaurant chain called Chai Pani, is all about celebrating Indian street food with aplomb. Pani puri, sev puri, dahi puri, vada pav, misal, bhajiyas – sounds like just a streetfood restaurant in India. This menu, however, belongs to Chef Meherwan Irani’s Chai Pani, in America’s Deep South, in Asheville, North Carolina. In 2022, Meherwan’s flagship restaurant in Asheville, Chai Pani, was named Outstanding Restaurant by the James Beard Foundation, in the ‘Oscars’ of the culinary world. “It was jaw-dropping, honestly,” Chef Meherwan Irani smiles, as he chats with Global Indian. “To win the award for the Outstanding Restaurant, where the word Indian doesn’t even figure, was a shock. It means a lot because I got nominated five times for Best Chef but never got to the finals.” What’s more, Meherwan has just signed a deal for a cookbook with Penguin Random House’s division Tenspeed Press. [caption id="attachment_46322" align="aligncenter" width="506"] Chef Meherwan Irani[/caption] Born in Ahmednagar, in Maharashtra, Irani went to the US for an MBA, then lived and worked with companies like Lexus and Mercedes Benz in the Bay area for 12 years. A desire to get

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ion Tenspeed Press.

[caption id="attachment_46322" align="aligncenter" width="506"]Indian Cuisine | Chef Meherwan Irani | Global Indian Chef Meherwan Irani[/caption]

Born in Ahmednagar, in Maharashtra, Irani went to the US for an MBA, then lived and worked with companies like Lexus and Mercedes Benz in the Bay area for 12 years. A desire to get out of the rat race made him and his American wife Molly relocate to Asheville in North Carolina, with their daughter Aria. This was way back in 2009, and it was a move that would forever change the course of their lives; and go on to significantly impact that of others as well.

The co-founder and CEO of the Chai Pani Group of Restaurants, says, “Life in San Francisco was too busy and too expensive. So we moved to North Carolina and having grown up at the hotel my parents had in Ahmednagar, I was familiar with the hospitality business. I wanted to start a restaurant; I made a list of my favourite street food based on what I had eaten in Mumbai and other cities. Then I created dishes, ran focus groups with white Americans for feedback and over a couple of hours one night, I created the entire menu for Chai Pani.”

Chai Pani Time 

Meherwan called the restaurant Chai Pani because the phrase has multiple meanings in Indian culture and many layers, much the way the menu does. It literally means tea and water. While the common association is a small roadside snack with friends, or a small tip to grease the wheels, it mostly signifies hospitality and welcome (offering tea and water to guests in your home)!

Meherwan made frequent trips to India to figure out how the hawkers made bhel puri and other snacks. “There is no culinary school for vada pav, pav bhaji or bhel puri; or chai even. Also, I wanted to create food that was different, but not necessarily an acquired taste. The Indian food at restaurants is often too oily, too spicy and greasy and not how we make it at home. We give it a halka sa touch of spice and tadka and don’t drown it in chilli and ghee. I wanted to create flavour profiles that are universal, combinations that appealed, because with globalised palates, there was less fear of people not wanting to try the unknown.”

Indian Cuisine | Chef Meherwan Irani | Global Indian

Elevating Street Food

Chai Pani essentially serves snacks you could get on the streets of  Indian cities and meals you’d be served in someone’s home — what Meherwan felt were the most under-represented Indian foods in Western culture. Diners craved Chai Pani’s stereotype-shattering food, drinks and service, and this first-of-its-kind establishment has been recognised as sparking a revolution in Indian cuisine in America. He also insists that managing people is an art; one that is diligently taught to staff. He avers, “The philosophy at the centre of Chai Pani, which is the purpose of our existence, is that we don’t serve food, but serve people by serving food.”

Word spread and the local, predominantly white populace started frequenting Chai Pani. Now, every Friday through to Sunday, from 5 to 9 in the evenings, they queue up for pani puri and the restaurant averages anything between 3000 to 5000 of them being sold every week! Other popular items are vada pav, sev puri and dahi puri.

Chai Pani and the kebab and rolls restaurant that followed, Botiwalla, have décor inspired by the Irani cafés one sees in Mumbai. Old Hindi film posters on the walls add a dash of Bollywood, as does the music playing in the background. The atmosphere is mela-like, especially during pani puri time!

What makes this restaurant authentic all the way is Meherwan’s integrity and approach to food. He reveals, “We make the sev in-house, we even set the dahi ourselves for the raita and dahi puri; and teach our staff how to do it as well. We buy puris from Atlanta, from an ex-team member who wanted to start his own business.” The puris, he says, resemble “what you get at the Elco Market pani puri stall [a famous street food place in Bandra, Mumbai] and like them, we too serve our pani cold.” The green chutney is Parsi style and the tamarind chutney reminiscent of Mumbai. The vada pav is served with a mix of chutneys and fried green chillies, just like it is sold on the streets of Mumbai.

[caption id="attachment_46318" align="aligncenter" width="532"]Indian Cuisine | Chef Meherwan Irani | Global Indian Chef Meherwan Irani with his wife Molly, the co-founder of Chai Pani[/caption]

I love my India 

Sticking to his Indian roots, Meherwan also serves Kingfisher and Haywards beer – both Indian brands and Old Monk rum, besides Thums Up. The cocktails here too have Indian flavour profiles, like a gin and cilantro cocktail and the Punjabi Porch Pounder which is gin, sage and Indian spices. The Tamarind Margarita is self-explanatory.

What started as one restaurant in 2009, is today a group of restaurants and includes Botiwalla which serves grilled kebabs, rolls, and more, along with the popular chaat items. Meherwan says, “We didn’t have the budget to expand though Chai Pani was self-funded. Family and friends like family came forward and expressed interest in our expansion plans. If you remember that scene in the movie Kal Ho Na Ho where friends come together to relaunch the Indian restaurant, it was exactly the same with us.”

Spicewalla is their retail brand of freshly crushed spices and blends – over a 100 of them and they include spice blends from across the world.  Meherwan leads a growing team across several locations: Chai Pani Asheville, Chai Pani Decatur, Botiwalla Atlanta, Botiwalla Charlotte, and spice brand Spicewalla, which has two outposts in Asheville and Atlanta.

Intriguingly, although Chef Meherwan Irani is half-Parsi, the menus don’t quite include Parsi dishes, nor do eggs dominate the menu, given how much the Parsis love them. An acknowledgement of his Parsi heritage is the raspberry soda [also made in-house] and the Falooda at Chai Pani. He agrees, “Yes, I did think of including Parsi dishes but other than Kheema Pav, others didn’t work out. I do sneak in the Parsi dishes like Egg Bhurji, Akuri, Dhansak and Patra ni Machchi at special events and galas.”

Indian Cuisine | Chef Meherwan Irani | Global Indian

The Gift of Giving 

Through Chai Pani University, Meherwan and Molly provide formal training in leadership and management skills coaching to managers and employees who express an interest in future leadership positions. In 2018, the University launched an annual programme to send several of their employees to India for cultural immersion. Meherwan explains, “We pay for everything – and we take anything between eight to 15 employees twice every year. They love the visits, and many of them have come with us several times. Some have even learnt how to speak Hindi.”

As part of their visit, the team also goes to the hotel run by Meherwan’s parents. And they unanimously declare that meeting his parents and getting cooking tips from Meherwan’s Parsi mum is usually the highlight of the trip. “My mother is the heart and soul of why Chai Pani exists. Her cooking philosophy is all about balance – tradition and innovation.”

The co-founder couple are generous bosses in other ways too. He reveals, “We give away a certain percentage of our business to our staff – the managers and other employees, every year. That is so they have a sense of ownership. Our daughter Aria is now studying law, and we hope to bring her into the business someday.”

The Iranis also created Chai Pani Giving, an internal foundation dedicated to giving back and supporting causes related to hunger, poverty and socio-economic inequalities faced by immigrants, especially in the service and hospitality business. He says, “We believe that since our needs are taken care of, we need to do the next best thing and help the community. We conduct food drives at shelters for the homeless, provide support for education.” They have sent over 50 kids to school in the last seven years, and several to college.

Indian Cuisine | Chef Meherwan Irani | Global Indian

Global Melting Pot 

Speaking on global trends in Indian food, Chef Meherwan Irani says, “Regionality is gaining prominence. Unlike an all is one approach, the originality of each dish is the standpoint. In Mumbai for instance, there is a cultural coming together that is reflected in food. Take bhel puri – the murmura comes from Andhra, the sev from Gujarat, papdi from the North and chutneys from Maharashtra. But, if you look across cuisines, veganism, conscious eating, giving back to the planet through the way we eat is growing.”

  • Follow Chef Meherwan Irani on Instagram

Reading Time: 5 mins

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Dean Rakesh Khurana: Changing the world of education

(November 30, 2022) The official page of Rakesh Khurana on the Harvard College website describes him as "Not just a Dean, but a friend", adding, "When Dean Khurana walks into a room, the energy shifts to a more positive, welcoming environment. Khurana, a former Faculty Dean of Cabot House, exemplifies the mission of Harvard College; he transforms the lives of students daily through the connections he makes and the photos he posts on Instagram." The Dean of Harvard College Rakesh Khurana - an award-winning teacher and widely recognised scholar - has pioneered several changes in the modern education system to make it more inclusive and fun. His innovative methods in pedagogy and practice adaptability have made him one of the favourite teachers of his students. [caption id="attachment_32278" align="aligncenter" width="656"] Dean Rakesh Khurana[/caption] "The faculty needed to act to create a psychologically safe environment for engagement," Dean Khurana had said during an education conference, adding, "Where silence was not interpreted as agreement, where there was no pressure to behave simply to create unanimity, and where people were not judged for raising ideas before they were fully formed." Deeply involved with undergraduates’ daily lives outside the classroom, this Global Indian is changing

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ce was not interpreted as agreement, where there was no pressure to behave simply to create unanimity, and where people were not judged for raising ideas before they were fully formed." Deeply involved with undergraduates’ daily lives outside the classroom, this Global Indian is changing the way educational institutions work, giving the mundane experience a more humane touch.

A man of knowledge

While not much is known about his childhood, Dean Khurana shared that his family moved from New Delhi to Queens, New York when he was just a toddler. Brought up in the largest of the five boroughs of NYC, the young kid was sharp and very observant of human behaviour, and that is what led him to pursue a bachelor's degree in industrial relations from Cornell University. He later earned an MA in sociology from Harvard and his Ph.D. in organisational behavior through a joint program between the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Harvard Business School in 1998.

[caption id="attachment_32279" align="aligncenter" width="632"]Rakesh Khurana Rakesh and Stephanie Khurana at Cabot House[/caption]

Since a young age, Dean Khurana was interested in pursuing a career in the field of education. And soon after he earned his doctorate, he became the founding team member of Cambridge Technology Partners and from 1998 to 2000 he taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. After spending a decade at MIT, Khurana and his wife Stephanie were named master and co-master of Cabot House at Harvard University, and the couple still holds the position.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgSy72QVBLA

Later the same year Dean Khurana became the Marvin Bower Professor of Leadership Development at Harvard Business School and professor of sociology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. "Most of the significant challenges and opportunities we face in the world are not things that anybody faces alone. They require building a foundation of trust and understanding, while also finding common ground with others. It’s hard for me to separate students, faculty, and administration — and while I know different people play different roles, ultimately I believe we are all 'Harvard'. How we work together and how we share our diverse perspectives have led to a deeper understanding of each other. This type of capacity-building has been central to creating a supportive and diverse living environment where students can safely embark on their journey of intellectual transformation," the Dean had told Legal Desire magazine when asked about why he includes his students' opinions for every small decision.

At the helm of Harvard

In 2014, Rakesh became the Dean of Harvard College. In his announcement, former Dean Michael D. Smith said, "Khurana brings to the deanship an intimate understanding of the Harvard College experience, a profound commitment to the values of a liberal-arts education, and a warm and compassionate personality that accompanies his belief in the importance of community and an inclusive approach to decision-making."

[caption id="attachment_32280" align="aligncenter" width="758"]Dean Rakesh Khurana Harvard University President Drew Faust greets Dean Rakesh Khurana at a recent graduation ceremony[/caption]

But, even when the students and faculty members were gearing up to welcome their new head, Dean Khurana was working on college policies to ensure that diversity and inclusion at Harvard. "Our diversity is our strength. To me, diversity of intellectual thought, which is deeply enriched by people who bring different cultural perspectives and lived experiences, is what is most valued here at Harvard College. We are educating our students to be citizens and citizen-leaders in one of the most diverse societies in the world, one that is becoming even more diverse, and the challenge for the American experiment — the challenge for the global experiment — is how we continue to thrive in that world, rather than retreat into tribalism, conformity of values, and closed-minded thinking," the dean had said during one of his initial speeches at the University.

[caption id="attachment_32281" align="aligncenter" width="645"]Dean Rakesh Khurana Dean Khurana with President Joe Biden[/caption]

A strong leader, and a dear friend to his students, Dean Khurana has been working hard so that Harvard students and faculty members find the opportunities to ensure the mission of the college is accomplished in a way that is both consistent with its values and meaningful within the current educational landscape. Even during the global pandemic, when other educational institutions were struggling, Harvard, under Dean Khurana's leadership, reported increased levels of participation among their students by the third week of online classes.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJKAGC6nvXA

“Leadership, ultimately, is the ability to be comfortable with being uncomfortable,” adding, "It's the willingness to adapt and change to circumstance, but be steady in your values," the dean believes.

  • Follow Dean Rakesh Khurana on Instagram and LinkedIn

Reading Time: 7 mins

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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