Masala Restaurant

Only five miles north of downtown Boston, in the hip town of Somerville close to the Tufts University campus sits a special restaurant: Masala. It is special not only because of its food but also because of its ethnic origin. In a city where Italian and Irish restaurants abound, Masala is one of only a handful of restaurants in the the entire Boston region serving Nepali food. Founded in 2011 by Binoj Pradhan, an entrepreneur active in Boston, the restaurant now serves both Indian and Nepali food. Its popularity has only gone up since its establishment 6 years ago and today draws alike both connoisseurs looking for a dip into exotic Nepali food and amateurs just looking for a hearty meal.

Masala Restaurant Interior
General Seating Area
Bar at Masala Restaurant
Bar

Masala owes the success of its menu to one person: Dammar Thapa. Although he did not have a hand in the restaurant’s initial opening, Dammar was recruited and made co-owner by Binoj in 2013. Dammar subsequently gained full control on all matters related to food. What followed was an escalation in foot traffic into the restaurant that Dammar and his staff wake up every morning relishing to satisfy!

Owner of Masala Restaurant
Dammar B. Thapa (Head Chef, Masala Restaurant)

Early Potential for Cooking Nepali Food

It was in 1994 that Dammar, still a young aspiring chef in Kathmandu, Nepal, decided to apply to a culinary training program organized there by the Australian government. Entry into the program was surprisingly tough: only 25 out of 2000 applicants were invited to enroll. Dammar was one of the lucky 25! For the next nine months, he applied himself tremendously to come out of the program a well qualified chef. He spent the next several years hopping between chef roles at some of the finest five star hotels in Kathmandu among which were Hotel Radisson and the Soaltee Crowne Plaza, arguably the biggest hotel in all of Nepal.

Coming to America

After highly successful stints in Nepal, Dammar decided to take a plunge into the unknown. In late 1997, he decided to to leave the country altogether and work for Carnival Miami Cruise, however his path there was anything but straightforward. He was denied a US employment visa not once but twice. His talent proved to be the real winner when a representative from the cruise personally flew to Nepal to ensure Dammar’s visa. The third time was the charm and Dammar flew to Miami in 1999. For the next full year, he deftly served tourists visiting on the cruise, significantly broadening his experience in the process.

Striking It Out on His Own

He later decided though that a life in the seas was not for him. In 2000, he left his job at the cruise and determined to strike it out on his own as a chef in the American market. By 2001, he had moved to Boston where he has been ever since. His first major project in Boston was the Himalayan Bistro Restaurant, one of the earliest Nepalese restaurants in all of Massachusetts. At a time when Bostonians, or Americans anywhere else for that matter, were wholly unaware of Nepali food, Dammar was a pioneer. He claims to have designed one of the very first Nepali food themed menus anywhere in New England and oh boy did customers love it! While many of his customers had prior exposure to Chinese or Indian food, virtually nobody had ever tasted Nepali food and some, needless to say, didn’t even know it existed. But Dammar, operating out of the West Roxbury neighborhood of Boston where Himalayan Bistro is located, started to change that.

His work at the restaurant was soon covered in favorable light by both the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald. Nepali food, once unheard of anywhere in Boston, was soon on the map and although still not as widely known as some of its Asian counterparts, began its inexorably upward trajectory in the city in part due to these early efforts from Dammar’s side. After serving at Himalayan Bistro for a couple of years, he zeroed in on another opportunity in Sharon, Massachusetts. The result was a new restaurant by the name of Coriander Bistro where Dammar continued to display his skill for pure culinary magic, spreading the word about Nepali food even further afield in the state. A few years there and Dammar was ready for what is likely his most successful stint so far: Masala.

Success at Masala Nepali Restaurant

In 2013, Dammar became the head chef and co-owner at Masala Restaurant. Only two years old at that time, Masala was still a young enterprise with a rapidly growing customer base. It was Dammar who has since overseen a dramatic increase in both the daily number of visiting customers and delivery orders. For its size, Dammar explains, Masala has an unusually large menu. The onus of doing justice to every item in it while keeping expectant customers satisfied is a balancing act he accomplishes with aplomb on a daily basis.

He passionately toils at the restaurant morning, noon, and night. Each new day starts with opening the restaurant around 11 in the morning, followed by routine inventory checks and a litany of other tasks that normally comes with operating a restaurant. He is in charge as well of the entire kitchen staff and plans out the whole day while expertly handling any moment to moment contingencies. Having worked here for a good four years now, he is well aware of the ebbs and flows of the business throughout the day and throughout the year. But he is ever vigilant of unpredictable spikes in the flow of people, especially on the weekends when large groups prefer to munch on the scrumptious all you can eat lunch buffet during the day and students from the nearby Tufts campus arrive for the restaurant’s famous $3 Margaritas and snacks at night.

Masala lunch buffet
Lunch Buffet Section
Masala Margarita
$3 Margarita

The Food 

Located just a brief walk away from the subway station in Davis Square, which in many ways has evolved to be the cultural heart of Somerville in recent decades, the restaurant is fairly convenient to reach from anywhere in Metro Boston. Once inside, customers are often awed by the soothing Himalayan music reverberating against walls filled with the finest Nepalese paintings. But as with any restaurant, Masala is Masala because of its food.

Masala offers all major food items conventionally served as part of Indian cuisine in North America. Whether it’s the famous chicken tikka masala and its close cousin the chicken korma or the stimulating Indian biryani and the curry-themed Vindaloo, Masala has it all. Dammar has worked hard to optimize the dishes to cater to American tastes. He explained that the vast majority of Indian dishes are simply too spicy for the American market. He admits therefore that the food served is somewhat modified to tone down the spiciness but he maintains that he will never compromise on taste.

Nepali Food - Goat Curry
Curry made with Goat Meat
Nepali Food
A “Thali” Meal with Multiple Indian and Nepali Items Represented

What makes Masala special though is its additional suite of Nepalese dishes. It can go almost unsaid that Masala serves the famous “momo” which are specialized dumplings widely regarded as a signature component of Nepali food. Not radically different from traditional Chinese dumplings, momos are distinct both for the thinness of their external wheat wrap and the wide variety of sauces that they are often dipped in. The menu offers several varieties of it in addition to the generic steamed variant. The momos are indeed very popular at the restaurant and it is not surprising that the daily lunch buffet also has an all you can eat momo section.

The Nepalese menu at Masala is heavy on cuisine innovated by the Newars who are an ethnic group native to Kathmandu, the capital city of Nepal. The Newars, because of their centuries long inhabitation of the largest urban core in Nepal, are a diverse group who had significant commercial and cultural links to both Tibetans to the north and Indians to the south. Their central role in this cross civilizational exchange gave rise to a bewildering variety of food over the centuries. The Newari themed “Chhoyla” is without a doubt one of the most exotic items in the menu as is the “Sekuwa” which is variety of barbecue traditionally cooked on firewood.

Nepali Food - Chicken Sekuwa
Chicken Sekuwa

While Kathmandu and its urban Newari residents historically formed the cultural center of Nepal, most of the country is actually mountainous and rural. The menu at Masala has not ignored the cuisine of these remote reaches of Nepal. “Tama”, a dish derived from bamboo, immediately comes to mind in this regard. Bamboo is often not considered edible but the denizens of Nepal’s high hills realized long ago that if cut and cooked at a young age, it is tender enough to be chewed and just sour enough to stimulate the taste buds. Just as exciting is another dish named “Sel” which is a slightly crunchy circular loop of wheat, also native to the mountains of Nepal.

Nepali Food
Bamboo-based Tama (Left), Spicy Tofu (Right)
Nepali Food - Fried Fish
Fried Fish Surrounded by Nepali “Sel”

Dammar says that the menu at the restaurant is fairly well established by now. But he is far from complacent. He constantly experiments with new dishes and tweaks recipes in his bid to strike the right formula for a new item worthy of the menu. His trials span the realms of both Nepali and Indian culinary traditions. He offers these experimental dishes for free to customers on multiple nights every week to gauge their response. If they like it, he might even put it on the next iteration of the menu! He also likes to keep pace with the changing tastes of customers and these special dishes he makes, he says, are a guard against obsolescence, always a threat in the food industry.

Traditionally Cooked Nepali Food
Traditionally Cooked Nepali Chicken (Left), Steamed lettuce (Right)

Vision for the Future

Dammar leads an active life outside of work as well. Although he likes to spend time with his family while not working, he is also an avid sports enthusiast. He is passionate about all four sports teams from Boston and especially about the Patriots! He is also a medium distance runner and often participates in community organized runs in addition to occasionally playing soccer with friends. But pastimes aside, he has a very grand vision for the future of Nepalese cuisine.

He correctly assesses that although Nepali food has broken out from its shell in the global market, it is still seen as being a derivative of either Indian or Chinese food. Armed with social media and digital means, tools that were not even available when he started out as a chef, he aims to increase awareness about Nepali food which he hopes will someday have a separate identity in the manner that Thai or Vietnamese food, for example, already have.

According to Dammar, Nepali food has certain peculiarities that are not seen in any other cuisine in the world, including Chinese or Indian. The extremely mountainous terrain of Nepal and the resulting centuries long isolation it caused have made Nepal a petri dish for culinary experimentation. Dammar believes that the time is now ripe for the jewels of this petri dish to transcend their so far insular confines and enter the world at large. He hopes to be an important part of the commercialization of these exotic dishes in the future.

Visit Masala Restaurant
1127 Broadway
Sommerville, MA 02144
(617) 718-0703

Enoteca Maria – Nonnas of the World

 

Two Restaurants, One Address, 40 Well Seasoned Chefs

If you were out for a noonday stroll in downtown Staten Island, one of New York City’s five boroughs (this one a landing point for the famed, free Staten Island Ferry), you’d no doubt pass Enoteca Maria on Hyatt Street.

A small, inviting Italian eatery and wine bar, this intimate enoteca offers a lunchtime menu plump with iconic southern Italian dishes and imported wines and beers. But come late afternoon and Enoteca Maria transforms into a scene so distinct from the lunchtime landscape that it requires a second name: Nonnas of the World. Nonnas? Yep, starting around three in the afternoon it’s as if your own grandmother – had she come from Japan, Syria, Brazil, Argentina, Bangladesh, Egypt or any of another of a dozen or so other countries – had hijacked the restaurant just for the pleasure of cooking for a roomful of strangers.

Italian offerings are a constant at Enoteca Maria, but in the evening there is a parallel menu, global in nature and singular to the native cuisine of that night’s featured nonna.

No age limit or nation bias here, only granny-aged cooks need apply. While they may be untrained chefs, these grannies are hardly unsung: they’ve been celebrated in print from The New York Times to newspapers in Italy, the Ukraine, Germany and more. Too, they’ve been featured in a documentary, on NBC-TV, even in Ripley’s Believe it or Not!

Food = Love + Culture

“Every time one of these nonnas is in the kitchen,” says Enoteca Maria owner and founder Joe Scaravella, “you have a thousand years of culture coming out of their fingertips.”

Joe opened the restaurant in 2008 using a rotating group of Italian nonna chefs. So it wasn’t much of a reach for him to start thinking more globally. And in a few years he sought out a wider array of grandmothers who were eager to supply the kind of kitchen love and culture that his own Nonna Domenica had shown to him.

“Especially in this time when there’s so much divisiveness it’s important to bring people from different cultures together,” Joe says, “I think food and music and art do that very comfortably, I’m proud to be part of that.

Choosing My Nonna

Since I know nothing of Colombia’s cuisine or culture, I chose the diminutive Rosa Maria Ortega from Medellin as my chef for the night. My hope was that I’d learn–and taste–something new and different. Nonna Ortega didn’t disappoint. Shy, and speaking very limited English, Nonna Ortega was clearly in charge of the kitchen, bustling from stove to table, stopping only for a selfie or two with appreciative customers. Like the other nonnas, Rosa Maria Ortega seemed to enjoy the attention and the gratitude.

Since my Spanish is as limited as is Nonna Ortega’s English, I threw myself on the expertise of the pleasant, experienced wait staff to steer me through the menu and to choose an appropriate wine. Here’s what was on the menu:

¿Qué hay en el menú?

Arepas con Carne; Patacones con Guacamole; Sancocho de Pollo; Arroz con Pollo, and for dessert…

The Patacones con Guacamole turned out to be a dinner-plate ­sized patty of warm, toasty, fried green plantains smothered in an herbed guacamole sauce. In other words Colombian comfort food on a cold winter’s night. And since the temperature outside was well below freezing, I warmed at the sight of my next dish Sancocho de Pollo, a soupy chicken stew made with root vegetables and served with a side of cob corn, avocado and rice. And for dessert? Pudin de Coco, a silky, creamy, custardy concoction, similar to flan, but with a subtle hint of coconut.

Nonna’s Story

Nonna Ortega, one of seven siblings, first came to this country in 1985 using her cooking skills to sell Colombian tamales. After several years however, she gave birth to a daughter Michelle and decided to return to Colombia. But worried that Michelle would not excel back home she returned to the US to stay in 1999. She worked two and three jobs here to try to get ahead. And to give her daughter a better life.

In fact, it’s daughter Michelle Restrepo, who shares her Mom’s story. It was Michelle’s father-in-law who introduced Michelle to Joe Scaravella several years ago. And she quickly thought of her Mom, who has always enjoyed cooking for crowds, as one of the chefs. Nonna Ortega lives in Old Bridge, New Jersey in a Colombian community. Her Mom is delighted to be recognized for her skills. “In fact,” says Michelle, “every time she’s asked for one of her recipes, or complimented on her cooking, or asked for a photo, she calls me just thrilled with it all.” And how about you Michelle, are you a good cook? “No, I don’t need to be. I have my Mom.”

Think about:

  • The restaurant — cash only– is open Wednesday through Sunday; reservations are recommended. But in order to choose your favorite nonna food or to try something new, log on to the nonna calendar for a schedule of upcoming cuisines here.

  • The Staten Island Island ferry trip from Manhattan’s Whitehall Station to St. George, Staten Island takes about 25 minutes. If you can, make your dinner reservation around dusk so that in addition to a memorable supper you can enjoy a stunning sunset view of the Statue of Liberty.

Visit Enoteca Maria

27 Hyatt Street, Staten Island, New York 10301
(718) 447-2777

Please note:  Cash only; no credit cards accepted.