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A little over a kilometre from the Mandaveli Railway station on the busy RK Mutt Road stands a small shop that’s hard to spot if you don’t know what you’re looking for. But just say the name Trouser Kadai, and just about every passerby can tell you just where to go.
The name might instantly make one think of a garment store. But this popular landmark, started in 1977 by Virudhunagar native R Rajendran, is a mecca of food – serving up biryanis, payas, and chukkas that attract people from all over Chennai.
The unusual name came, as these things often do, from customers’ associations with the eatery.
Rajendran, now 73 years old, still keeps an eagle-eye on the restaurant. He says that he came into the food business by accident. He and his family arrived in Chennai in 1977, seeking treatment for his daughter’s mental illness at the Institute of Child Health and Hospital for Children at Egmore. Looking for a way to support his family, Rajendran rented a small shop and began the eatery.
Rajendran says that when he first started the eatery, he didn’t know how to cook any of the dishes on its menu. However, he wasn’t afraid to plunge in and build his skills from scratch, guided by the two cooks he had first hired.
Trouser Kadai is all about substance over style. There is no fancy board to announce itself, and inside the paint peels off the walls and the floor shows ancient cracks. But faithful customers swear by the restaurant’s delicious mutton and fish dishes.
The mutton kola urundai and the fish kuzhambu also have their loyal votaries.
What also has customers coming back is the very modest price of dishes, with most mutton fries and curries still priced between Rs 80 and Rs 120.
However, business at Trouser Kadai is not as brisk as it used to be, says Rajendran.
With restaurants and fast food chains popping up everywhere, he explains, the number of new customers walking into Trouser Kadai has fallen. While he has long wanted to upgrade his modest eatery, he adds, the modest prices he has always charged have left him with little funds to do so.
Despite such troubles, however, Trouser Kadai has a USP that newer restaurants don’t offer – the inimitable taste of traditional, slow-cooked food prepared with care.
No wonder the restaurant still boasts of a loyal fanbase that even includes celebrities like actors Ajith and Kamal Haasan.
(This article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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