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Chutney Masala – Irvington

Upscale Indian Meal for Two or Four with Appetizers, Entrees, Naan, and Dessert on Sunday–Friday or Saturday (Up to 54% Off)

from$35
Buy
No Longer Available
Mon Jan 07 04:59:59 UTC 2013
Value
$76
Discount
54%
You Save
$41
T460x279
  • Foodie
  • Date Night
  • Girls Night Out

In a Nutshell

Chef Navjot Arora folds local vegetables, free-range meat, and wild seafood into traditional and contemporary Indian dishes

The Fine Print

  • Expires Mar 31, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 1 additional as a gift. Limit 1 per table. Valid only for option purchased. Phone reservation required. Dine-in only. Not valid for happy hour specials. Extra $6 fee for Jheenga dum anaari, Tandoori mix grill, and Adraki chaamp. Not valid on New Year's Eve or Valentine's Day.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Indian food is typically served with naan, a flatbread that some people refer to as "pizza if it didn't have all those gross toppings." Try a slice with this Groupon.

Choose from Four Options

$35 for an Indian meal for two on Sunday–Friday (up to a $76 total value)

  • One appetizer (up to a $12 value)
  • Two entrees (up to a $25 value each)
  • One order of naan (up to a $7 value)
  • One dessert (up to a $7 value)

$38 for the above deal on Saturday (up to a $76 total value)

$85 for an Indian meal for four on Sunday–Friday (up to a $182 total value)

  • Two appetizers (up to a $12 value each)
  • Four entrees (up to a $25 value each)
  • Two orders of naan (up to a $7 value each)
  • Two desserts (up to a $7 value each)
  • One bottle of house wine (a $30 value)

$90 for the above deal on Saturday (up to a $182 total value)

The menu features a shrimp appetizer in a sweet-and-spicy mango sauce, tandoori chicken in a tangy pickle marinade, and free-range lamb stewed in creamy mint-cilantro sauce. Desserts include saffron-infused rice pudding and coconut sorbet.

Chutney Masala

The aroma of mint never fails to take Navjot Arora back to his childhood in Jalandhar, Punjab, when he'd spend mornings scouring his family garden for fresh mint leaves. Navjot would triumphantly bring his findings back to the kitchen, where he was allowed to grind the leaves with a pestle for the mint chutney—the most important condiment. He worked alongside his parents, marveling as they nimbly sliced tender goat meat, throwing it against the wall to test for doneness, and thoughtfully tasted spoonfuls of creamy curry from simmering pots.

Though Navjot would go on to study under master Indian chefs at the prestigious Taj Group of Hotels and work for top restaurants in New York, he never forgot the culinary lessons he learned in his family's kitchen. At Chutney Masala, he still hand grinds fresh herbs and spices to bring out their intricate flavors, adding them to sauces lauded by reporters from the New York Times as "superbly complex." The expert chef then folds free-range meat, wild seafood, and local produce into a variety of contemporary and traditional Indian dishes, from spicy lamb curries to fragrant biryani rice.

Navjot's dining room is nearly as intriguing as the flavors in his dishes, with brick walls speckled with photographs from India's mid-19th century Raj era and rustic antique accents. A mounted deer head overlooks the rows of wooden tabletops and cushy green booths, sometimes sneezing when a waft of cumin floats to his nostrils.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Minimizing Distractions

It’s easy to get distracted from what you’re doing, whether you’re writing an important essay, solving a mathematical proof, or crafting the perfect speech to explain spaying to your dog. Here are some sure-fire ways to minimize distractions and get the job done:

  • Turn off the TV.
  • Hide your video games.
  • Put the TV in a big box so you won’t look at it and imagine which of your favorite shows might be on.
  • Replace the box with a casket. TV is dead.
  • Burn your books: they’re just written TV.
  • Ask your roommate to move out if his life story is distractingly similar to that of classic TV character Mr. Simpson.
  • Close all the doors and windows so you don’t have to hear all the TVs driving down your street.
  • Imagine you’re on a TV show where you’ll win a million dollars if you don’t get distracted. Turn your TV back on so you can watch yourself on TV. Forget about what you were working on before; you’re a TV star now and you don’t have to do anything.

What is Mr. Simpson’s catch phrase?

Chutney Masala

4.02 out of 5

Reviews From Other Sites

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4.5 out of 5
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3.8 out of 5
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Zagat
4.0 out of 5
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3.8 out of 5
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Google

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