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Taj Palace takes tasty Indian fare and pandemic safety seriously - Louisville Eccentric Observer

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There’s no way to put this but bluntly: I don’t think some Louisville restaurants are taking the COVID-19 pandemic as seriously as they should. Why the worry?

You probably saw the news item about 11 Louisville businesses that got inspection blasts from Metro Public Health & Wellness over the Fourth of July weekend for failing to follow COVID-19 safety guidelines.

This matters: When I’m deciding where to dine during this pandemic, I want to have confidence that the restaurant’s management doesn’t slack off on health and safety.

But how can we find out? The internet! It is not difficult to gauge an eatery’s priority on health and safety from its website and social media. I had to browse past a half-dozen local restaurants that did not even mention pandemic precautions the other day before I landed at Taj Palace, an East End favorite.

“Order Online for Curbside Pickup,” read an eye-catching orange button high on Taj Palace’s web page. “Order for Delivery via Grubhub or Doordash,” it added, assuring us that curbside pickup is as close as a quick phone call.

I found all this profoundly reassuring, and once I clicked through to the online ordering page, I was even more impressed. Clear and easy to navigate — it’s a technological dream.

Here’s how it works: Choose a dish, click on its name, and you’ll jump to a new page offering a choice among five meats — chicken, lamb, fish, shrimp or goat — five levels of spice and special instructions. Check the price, add the dish to your cart and go back for more. When you’re done, fill in your payment and contact information, add a good tip, choose your pickup time and even note the color and model of your car so they can find you out front. Yes, they did think of everything, and it shows again in the clear, complete email receipt and directions that shows up in your box moments later.

The extensive menu includes 18 appetizers, soups and salads from $4 to $14; a dozen meat entrees and 24 vegetarian entrees (all $11 to $15); 10 tandoor oven dishes from $12 (for chicken) to $25 (for lamb chops); and five biryani rice dishes from $12 to $16. A dozen Indian breads are $3 to $5 and a bread basket sampler is $10. Side dishes, Indian desserts and a short list of Indian beers round out the bill of fare.

Park out front, call in, and the curbside order you placed online at Taj Palace will be brought right out.

We rolled up out front right on time, and our food came out in sturdy foil containers sealed with cardboard tops, all carefully packed in a brown bag, steaming hot and ready to go. It was still plenty warm enough to enjoy when we got it home and plated it 15 minutes later and everything was delicious.

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Aloo tikki chaat ($8), an Indian street-food favorite served as an appetizer, consisted of thick potato pancakes — flattened rounds of distinctly spicy mashed potatoes, deep fried to a golden crunchy crust — topped with a generous ration of tender chickpeas, spicy red and green chutneys and cooling, thick yogurt, fresh tomato chunks, snipped cilantro and a blanket of sev, Indian wheat noodles broken into tiny, crunchy bits.

Aloo tikki chaat, delicious potato and chickpea street food served as an appetizer at Taj Palace. | Photos by Robin Garr.

Lamb jalfrezzi ($15), described on the menu as “assorted vegetables with mild spices,” was a lamb-and-veggie stir fry with plenty of sauce. Bite-size chunks of tender, mild-flavored lamb were bathed in a rich, unctuous reddish-brown sauce and loaded with long slices of onion and red and green bell pepper whose flavors had melted into the seductive sauce. Ordered mild but not extra-mild, it was warm but not at all fiery. It would be just right for someone who wants flavor but not extreme heat.

Taj Palace’s lamb jalfrezzi, ordered mild but not extra mild, has just enough kick for the wary.

It came with a large container, at least 6 cups, of perfect, fluffy, dry basmati rice with every grain separate, dotted with small, gently aromatic seeds.

Another entrée, bhindi masala ($12), offers a definitive response to anyone who thinks they don’t like okra. A dry curry with its roots in Punjab in far Northern India, it’s a simple but tasty dish of okra cut into short pieces, including the heads and tails, long-cooked with onions, tomatoes and aromatic Indian herbs and spices until the flavors blend. Ordered hot (but not extra hot) it was deeply flavored and spicy enough to smack my taste buds around a bit, but I didn’t mind that.

Bhindi masala, a spicy okra and
onion curry at Taj Palace.

A large round of garlic naan ($4), wrapped in foil for transportation, was soft and chewy, with good char marks from the tandoor, a sprinkle of fresh herb leaves and a strong garlicky flavor from soft chunks of roasted garlic embedded in the bread. A quick run through the toaster oven restored appetizing crispness.

A small dish of yogurt raita ($2) offered a cooling antidote to the culinary fire, and mini-tubs of hot-and-spicy green cilantro chutney and sweet dark brown tamarind chutney made appealing condiments.

The ordering system automatically took 10% off my first order, saving me $4.10, although I felt a little guilty about that since in fact I’m a fairly regular customer.

A huge repast came to $39.11, plus an $8.60 tip

Taj Palace Indian Restaurant
2929 Goose Creek Road
423-9692
tajpalacelouisville.com

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Taj Palace takes tasty Indian fare and pandemic safety seriously - Louisville Eccentric Observer
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