As you step inside BANNG, a brand new Thai restaurant in Gurugram's swanky Two Horizon Centre, the deep hues of red and blue along with a glitzy bar catches as much attention as chef Garima Arora, who helms it. A warm smile hardly ever leaves her, even as she makes magic in the kitchen and attends to the guests—all this while being eight months pregnant with her second child.
After opening her first-ever restaurant Gaa, in Bangkok in 2017, this double Michelin star-winning chef is back home with BANNG, which she has opened with Social and Smoke House Deli fame restaurateur Riyaaz Amlani. Running two restaurants in two countries is no small feat, and being a mother to a 19-month-old and expecting a second soon is not easy either, and if Arora, 38, is exhausted, she hardly shows.
“I love what I do. I love being a mom, and a chef,” says the Mumbai-bred, Thailand-based Arora, who “works 16-17 hours a day”.
What’s her take on work-life balance? “Rubbish. It is the biggest myth and nonsense ever. You cannot worry about how much time you spend on work if you want to achieve anything. It applies to motherhood and career,” she says.
'The voice in my head'
For Arora, who received widespread popularity as a judge on season 7 of MasterChef India, the earliest memories of cooking go back to her father. “He used to travel abroad a lot and return with new ingredients and recipes. As a six-year-old, I would sit in the kitchen and watch him cook, and that’s how it all started for me,” she tells THE WEEK. Her father is, in a way, involved in her two restaurants since “he is the voice in my head”, she adds.
Know fundamentals to have fun
This story is from the January 19, 2025 edition of THE WEEK India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the January 19, 2025 edition of THE WEEK India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Lessons in leadership
When I began my career at Hindustan Lever (as HUL was then called), I was deeply inspired by our chairman, Dr Ashok S. Ganguly.
Political colours
One of the greatest fashion statements of recent times was made in the Parliament's winter session by Rahul Gandhi and some opposition colleagues. India's most news-making politician (since his landmark Bharat Jodo Yatra) gave up his signature white polo T-shirt for a blue one.
Chat roam
Vox pop content is seeing an uptick in India, with creators making conversations on current and social issues fun and funny
Back home with BANNG
Michelin star-winning chef Garima Arora, who recently opened her first restaurant in India, on all things food and family
One supercalifragilisticexpialidocious New Year
Once Christmas is over, tension mounts in our home as the little woman and I start ticking off the days. We both remain on edge because we dread the coming of the New Year—a time when the whole world goes crazy and adopts resolutions. We, too, make New Year promises and our ‘list of past resolutions’ is very long and impressive. Unfortunately, we are complete failures at keeping them and our ‘list of resolutions not kept’ is equally long and equally impressive.
Six or out?
Cricket is a quasi-religion in India. And our pantheon of cricketers is worshipped with a fervour bordering on hysteria.
DOWN AND UNDER THE WEATHER
After their flop show in Australia, Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma will have to live on current form rather than past glory
The new in news
THE WEEK and DataLEADS partner to revolutionise news with fact-checks, data and Live Journalism
Hello Middle East
Reem Al-Hashimy, UAE minister of state for international cooperation, inaugurates a special Middle East section on THE WEEK website
BAIT CLICK
Dark patterns fool millions of Indians every day. The government is finally acting, but it just may not be enough