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Odette Mascarenhas and Manu Chandra deconstruct foods from an era gone by
Updated On: 24 September, 2017 02:41 PM IST | Mumbai | Benita Fernando
Food historian Odette Mascarenhas and chef Manu Chandra want you to challenge what the culinary arts can be at the Serendipity Arts Festival

Chef Manu Chandra (left) and food historian and critic Odette Mascarenhas have joined forces to showcase food as art. Pic/Bipin Kokate

Chef Manu Chandra (left) and food historian and critic Odette Mascarenhas have joined forces to showcase food as art. Pic/Bipin Kokate
Where we see a serving of bharlele bhangde, Odette Mascarenhas and Manu Chandra see art at its most ephemeral. Mascarenhas says that the dish, which was historically made in the homes of Goa's Goud Saraswat Brahmins, has all the drama, texture, and sensory appeal as any work of art.
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