Try GOLD - Free
HOME SLICE
The New Yorker
|March 31, 2025
The making of an Indian American specialty.

Indian pizza, pioneered in the Bay Area, reflects an inevitable meeting of traditions.
In 2021, Avish Naran had an epiphany. After graduating from culinary school, in Napa, he’d been cycling through the kitchens of high-end Indian restaurants in San Francisco and New York—Rooh, August 1 Five, Indian Accent—with an eye toward opening his own someday. “And then I realized, like, dude, there’s no fucking way that I’m going to be able to do this shit as good as, like, any of these people,” he told me, referring to his former bosses. “All these guys are from India!” Naran was sitting at the bar of Pijja Palace, the restaurant that he opened in 2022 in the Silver Lake neighborhood of Los Angeles, on the ground floor of a Comfort Inn. He is thirty-three, tall and slightly gangly, with an open, goofy face that belies a deadpan sense of humor. The motel, which is owned by his father and his uncle, emigrants from London, is not far from where Naran grew up, in Echo Park. Before he took over the lease, the storefront was occupied by a podiatrist.
This story is from the March 31, 2025 edition of The New Yorker.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The New Yorker

The New Yorker
THE MAGIC OF “MAFALDA”
How an Argentinean comic strip became an international phenomenon.
11 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
BY THE BOOK
What we learn from reading the fiction touted in our début issue.
13 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE STORY PART
Student days and a search for community.
19 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE SILENCE
A great silence opened up inside her. But that made it sound more dramatic than it was. It happened by degrees, creeping up slyly. And at times, in certain places and situations, it was expected and welcome—on a long walk, or when a person confessed something pitiful, or at a funeral or a party. In all those places, where once she'd had a lot to say—too much, honestly—now there was this silence and she became a far better listener. Not consciously, that was just one of the consequences. It wasn't a Zen silence or an enlightened silence or anything she'd worked to achieve. It was only a sort of blank. Once, on a mini-break, she'd spotted a sentence graffitied on a bridge in Paris: “The world is everything that is the case.” (It was written in English and stuck in her mind.) The silence felt like that: it spoke for itself. But it could also offend and disappoint others, the same way the world itself never seems enough for some people. It was no use on big family occasions, for example, or when one of her adult daughters called her name from another room, or if someone at work asked for her view on the news of the day. It could make other people feel awkward. But when she was alone with it, whenever it coincided with her own long-standing habit of looking upward into the branches of trees—then it didn't really bother her at all.
23 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE COMEDIAN
My father worked nights as the desk attendant at a cheap hotel downtown. It was a thankless job behind bulletproof glass, which was all he had to shield him from demented drunks and screeching prostitutes, from seven in the evening until four in the morning, the poor man.
24 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
IS IT THE PHONES?
The tantalizing power of the theory that screens are harming teens.
13 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
THE END OF THE ESSAY
What comes after A.I. has destroyed college writing?
25 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
EASY MUSIC
How Elmore Leonard perfected his style.
23 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
JUBILEE
A wooden ruler with the etched faces of Henry VIII's six wives running down the middle; ticket stubs from Hampton Court and the Chamber of Horrors, where we walked ahead of our mothers, hand in hand; a few wrappers of Dairy Milk.
34 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)

The New Yorker
PRIDE AND PROVENANCE
The Met's new Rockefeller Wing daxxles—and whispers, “Finders, keepers.”
6 mins
July 07 - 14, 2025 (Double Issue)