- January 29, 2026
- Updated 12:56 pm
Meet veg, the VIP!
Strap: This Veganuary, city’s veg dining grows bolder, proving flavour, technique and experience matter more than labels
Blurb:
Innovation in vegetarian dining today lies less in novelty gimmicks and more in thoughtful execution; ingredient-led menus, refined plating, modern techniques, and experiences that prioritise flavour, texture and storytelling over mere substitution
Byline: Bindu Gopal Rao
When Sakshi Prasad, a PR professional and animal-welfare activist, stepped out to eat in Bangalore earlier, dining came with a dose of anxiety.
“I had to plan in advance, check menus, call restaurants, and be prepared to explain what ‘vegan’ meant. Now, I feel far more relaxed because that extra effort has almost disappeared. I can walk into a café or restaurant and trust that they understand vegan preferences and are happy to tweak a dish without making it awkward,” she says.
The shift, Prasad believes, reflects a growing awareness around food choices, and she hopes it nudges more people to think consciously about what they eat. She is not alone in noticing the change.
Bangalore’s vegetarian dining scene is undergoing a quiet but decisive upgrade, with chefs and restaurateurs treating plant-based food with the same seriousness, technique and ambition once reserved for non-vegetarian fine dining. From thoughtful menus to inventive plating, vegetarian fare is no longer an afterthought.
Fittingly, as January is celebrated globally as Veganuary, several city restaurants have rolled out limited-period vegetarian and vegan menus; offerings that are already finding eager takers across Bangalore’s dining circuits.
New nuances
Innovation in vegetarian dining today lies less in novelty gimmicks and more in thoughtful execution; ingredient-led menus, refined plating, modern techniques, and experiences that prioritise flavour, texture and storytelling over mere substitution.
“The key shift is moving away from compensating for the absence of meat. The focus is on celebrating vegetables, grains, dairy and produce for what they inherently are. Menu creation begins with understanding ingredients deeply – how they behave, how they can be layered, and how they evoke comfort as well as curiosity. In a fine-dining context, restraint, balance and clarity are as important as creativity,” says Nirav A. Rajani, Partner and Founder, Gaia.
That philosophy is increasingly visible across Bangalore’s evolving vegetarian landscape. Amit Sharma, Executive Chef at Hilton Bangalore Embassy Golflinks, says menus are now shaped by ingredient availability rather than excess.
“The menu creation process is driven by ingredients and responds to local and seasonal availability. Instead of offering an exhaustive spread, we introduced a limited, curated menu to ensure focus, precision and quality, reflecting the growing demand for thoughtful vegetarian and vegan dining. Each dish is built around layered textures and flavours, ensuring plant-based ingredients deliver complexity, balance and visual elegance suited to a fine-dining environment,” Sharma explains.
As a result, Bangalore’s vegetarian dining scene is moving decisively beyond traditional formats towards ingredient-forward, experience-led menus.
Echoing the sentiment, Rahul Lunawat, co-founder of Phurr, says the aim was always to broaden the appeal of vegetarian dining. “The idea was to create an elevated vegetarian experience that everyone can enjoy — not just committed vegetarians, but anyone who loves good food. The menu must balance comfort with creativity, combining familiar flavours with thoughtful techniques, ensuring every dish feels both approachable and special.”
Being progressive
Progressive vegetarian cuisine today is rooted in respect – for ingredients, technique and the diner. It blends classical foundations with modern approaches, allowing chefs to reinterpret familiar flavours in fresh ways. The aim is not complication, but thoughtfulness: food that feels relevant, emotionally engaging and, crucially, accessible.
Tarun Sibal, chef and partner at Street Storyss, agrees. “The idea is to celebrate vegetarian cuisine. It’s no longer just a quick snack or a breakfast-only option. Bangalore is finally moving vegetarian cuisine out of the ‘alternative’ category and into the spotlight, with ingredient-first restaurants, seasonal tasting menus, hyper-regional Indian vegetable stories, fermentation programmes, wood-fire cooking, and chef-driven vegetarian counters that borrow the seriousness of fine-dining kitchens.”
Vegetables, once relegated to supporting roles, are now the heroes. They are being treated with the respect they deserve. Even at restaurants that also serve meat, vegetarian plates are finally being given equal billing on the menu.
Global influences, meanwhile, are shaping vegetarian cuisine through technique and sensibility rather than overt fusion. Indian flavours increasingly coexist with international culinary methods, producing dishes that feel familiar yet contemporary. The goal is coherence, not novelty.
“For instance, dishes such as Grapes & Cherry Tomato Chundo draw on Indian chutney traditions alongside Middle Eastern labneh-style elements; Palak Burrata pairs classic Indian greens with Italian cheese in a modern format; and preparations like Mushroom Galouti Pâté on toast and Dal Khandvi Shorba showcase creative reinterpretations of familiar Indian ingredients through global lenses,” says Rajani.
Experience matters
What is encouraging is that vegetarian fine dining is no longer niche or driven solely by dietary preference. Diners are choosing it because the experience itself is compelling. Bangalore, with its openness to new ideas and a discerning audience, is playing a key role in reshaping how vegetarian food is perceived; not just locally, but nationally.
“The vast landscape of our country allows us to look inwards for ingredients, cooking styles and culinary inspiration. That said, international ingredients or techniques can sometimes gel beautifully with an existing Indian signature dish,” says Tarun Sibal.
Restaurants are also digging deeper into regional Indian produce, moving beyond the predictable pantry to revive lesser-known grains, greens and age-old fermentation practices through a contemporary lens.
“There’s a noticeable shift towards experience-led dining. There are menus that unfold as stories, kitchens that engage directly with diners, and formats that borrow the discipline of fine dining without losing warmth. Vegetarian food is no longer treated as an alternative; it’s increasingly positioned as the main narrative. Familiar tastes, textures and dishes act as an emotional entry point, which are then built upon to create something new, unexpected and fulfilling,” say Avinash Kapoli and Sombir Chaudary, co-founders of Kalpaney, Kompany Hospitality.