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Salsa dancing and steak at Nineteen Twelve in Bangalore

Submitted by itinerant on Tue, 09/05/2006 - 5:23am.

Salsa dancing and steak at Nineteen Twelve in Bangalore

Last Wednesday I found myself near a lounge in Bangalore called Nineteen Twelve.

I went in to a softly-lit expansive room and sat down at the lavish wood-and-brass bar. I looked at the menu that the sharply-dressed bartender handed me and was pleasantly surprised to see an extensive winelist sold by the glass. Then I saw that the menu also had more than one steak on the menu. I confirmed with the bartender that this was beefsteak, not some chicken that was called a steak.

The merlot and steak dinner I had been dreaming about for seven months was about to come true. I thought I wouldn't taste it until I returned to the U.S.

The South African, Chilean, and Australian wines were only available by the bottle. I reluctantly chose an Indian wine. My experience had been that Indian wines didn't taste very good. I chose a Merlot made by Sula Satori in Maharashtra. I ordered a "Steak a la Charles".

The bar was playing salsa music, which immediately brought me back to salsa at Nik's Nightclub and Habana Village in Washington, DC. There was something very comforting in the familiarity of the bar, ordering western food (and wine!), and listening to music that I knew. "I Like It Like That" and Tito Puente played on a fantastic sound system.

The steak was good. Not amazing, but good. Yes, Virginia, you can get a beefsteak in India. I didn't know "a la Charles" was so heavy on the sauce. I should have ordered the tenderloin. The wine was very good, a pleasant surprise.

People trickled in to dance. Bangalore had just finished an International Salsa Festival a week before, so attendance was a little low. I tried a few turns on the dance floor, met some new people, and then left. I went home feeling the comfort of the familiar.

Salsa dancing and steak at Nineteen Twelve in Bangalore

Other foods?

#164 On Mon, 09/25/2006 11:43am Eli Erickson (not verified) said,

Hi Mark,
I am amazed you found steak and merlot in India! It must have been a little surreal to have a choice of wines and order by the glass.

Did you find other foods in Bangalore you liked? My best friend from high school is from that area and I always loved the food her mom and family would make. I especially liked rice pancakes (made with coconut milk and fermented, I think) and stew. Yum!

Hope all is well,
Eli

hi Eli - yes, other foods!

#186 On Tue, 09/26/2006 10:57am itinerant said,

The South Indian food is delicious and I have been eating it. I had a thali (assortment of foods in sauce served with rice) at a place called Nagarjuna. It is served on a banana leaf the size of a placemat and you eat it with your right hand.

Every morning at my hotel in Bangalore the staff would bring to my room mini-idli (spongy rice cakes served with a sauce) or masala dosa (thin pancake wrapped around spiced potato) and really delicious coffee.

The food is delicious and plentiful.... my breakfast cost me 26 rupees, about 50 cents.

Good to hear from you Eli.

Mark

Thank you!

#415 On Sat, 10/07/2006 8:52am Schonali (not verified) said,

Hello Mark,
I was browsing the net to see if anything more had been written about one of my favourite pubs in the whole world, mostly because I used to run it till February this year =), and I came across your very discerning, honest and fresh description of the place. I'm so glad you enjoyed it and wish Bangalore had more well-travelled people such as yourself who walked in that door. I am now back in Toronto (where I'd left to go to Bangalore and take over the marketing and administration of NineteenTwelve two years ago), specifically because I could no longer live in India after having lived on this side of the world for just five years! Sad, but true. Especially as a woman, India hasn't yet caught up with the "independent woman" in every sense of the word. Running Nineteen Twelve though was the best experience of my life and taught me so much. We used to sell Chilean, Aussie and South African wines by the glass and I stopped that because it made no sense, if you think about it =) Anyway, the Sula wines are actually the best that India makes, and I was only especial to those. I found the Grovers and the others too harsh. Do go back to Nineteen Twelve and give them feedback on your experience there, it will help them get better.

Thank you again, it feels so good to read that old is still gold =)

Schonali
PS: Which part of the US are you from? I studied in Illinois for university...

Hi Schonali - great to hear from you

#462 On Wed, 10/11/2006 7:12am itinerant said,

Hi Schonali:

It's so satisfying for me to find a connection to a person and a place through the power of the web. Nineteen Twelve is a very nice place and I enjoyed going there. Finding a good Indian wine was a real surprise and I see it was no accident: you are an expert in Indian wines. I went to school in Indiana, around the corner from you, and grew up across the water from Toronto in New York State.

As I look at that steak from here in Hampi, my mouth is watering.

Mark

Just found your page again!

#4253 On Fri, 01/26/2007 3:45pm Schonali (not verified) said,

Hello again Mark,
I hope you're enjoying the rest of your travels and for me it's always amazing to see just how small the world really is! =)

Happy New Year,
Schonali

Happy New Year Schonali!

#4259 On Sun, 01/28/2007 3:28am itinerant said,

Comment me anytime!

Mark

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