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Good Food hat15/20

Abhi’s Indian Restaurant

Updated ,first published

Sundhiya - pulled lamb shoulder with white poppyseed, fennel and crushed cashew.
1 / 15Sundhiya - pulled lamb shoulder with white poppyseed, fennel and crushed cashew.Wolter Peeters
The menu mix-matches northern-style tandoor meats with lighter southern curries.
2 / 15The menu mix-matches northern-style tandoor meats with lighter southern curries.Wolter Peeters
The dining room.
3 / 15The dining room. Supplied
The curries are made from freshly ground spices.
4 / 15The curries are made from freshly ground spices. Wolter Peeters
Tikka nimbuda chicken thighs.
5 / 15Tikka nimbuda chicken thighs.Christopher Pearce
The beef ambotik curry.
6 / 15The beef ambotik curry. Christopher Pearce
Butter chicken.
7 / 15Butter chicken.Supplied
Abhi’s silver-walled dining room.
8 / 15Abhi’s silver-walled dining room.Wolter Peeters
The interiors are modern.
9 / 15The interiors are modern. Christopher Pearce.
Masala dosa.
10 / 15Masala dosa.Christopher Pearce
Crispy cauliflower with fennel and green chilli.
11 / 15Crispy cauliflower with fennel and green chilli. Supplied
Goat’s milk custard with saffron honeycomb, strawberry yoghurt and pistachio praline⁠.
12 / 15Goat’s milk custard with saffron honeycomb, strawberry yoghurt and pistachio praline⁠.Supplied
Skewered meats are cooked in a tandoor oven.
13 / 15Skewered meats are cooked in a tandoor oven. Supplied
Basmati rice.
14 / 15Basmati rice. Wolter Peeters
The street view of Abhi’s.
15 / 15The street view of Abhi’s. Supplied
Good Food hat15/20

Abhi's Indian Restaurant

Indian$$

Pioneering Indian with a big line in comfort food.

It’s hard to imagine Sydney without Abhi’s, and thankfully for the past 35 years or so, we haven’t had to. Kumar and Suba Mahadevan opened the restaurant in 1990, and the cosy, silver-wallpapered dining room has pulled a spice-loving crowd ever since.

All the staples are present and correct, from dark, creamy dhal makhani and fall-off-the-bone Punjabi goat curry, to rose-scented kulfi for dessert, rippling with cardamom. But then it pays to look outside the tried and true.

To a pot of scallops and prawns, perhaps, slick with spice-tinted oil and crunchy with curry leaves, served with wood-fired garlic naan, or to specials that might include fragrant and onion-rich Chettinad chicken, finished with a crack of black pepper.

Big shout-out to the good-value wine list, generous BYO, and to restaurants built from family pride, hard work and a pioneering spirit.

Best for: Going old school, but still finding new favourites.

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Good Food reviews are booked anonymously and paid independently. A restaurant can’t pay for a review or inclusion in the Good Food Guide.

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