Billeder
BidrageIngen billeder at vise
Tilbagemelding
Bidrage med feedbackI had the tandoori half chicken. It was decent enough. On another occasion I had the butter chicken which , contrary to other reviewers , I think was nothing special. I give it 4 stars for the tandoori chicken , after all given their name , you expect them to get that right, which they did !
I did not like the kebab. It was dry The raita is OK
I was always striving for beautiful tandoori roti and chapatis as soon as I moved into the khalifa city until the time I found this. later tried their main menus and grills and they were also good, but for tandoori weizen rotis they are the only in khalifa city
If Tandoor Express was a 1980's T.V show it would be the MacGyver of prime time T.V. Not quite the fast food of The A Team, heck Mac hated guns, but then again not the formal dine in of Murder She Wrote as there was still the pyrotechnic based stunt each episode to bolster the action. The freshness of the ingredients in dishes at Tandoor Express and the fact the dishes are prepared on-site, and not at a factory like the mainstays of fast food (McDonalds, Burger King, etc , sets them aside from the fast food classification. While when you dine in you can't exactly escape the feeling of being seated in a takeaway joint, it feels a little out of place like amateur detective Jessica Fletcher the down-to-earth, middle-aged widow using a .45 she refers to as Sherrell, to apprehend the bad guy after solving the mystery. From a taste perspective the Ambitious Glutton can always enjoy the occasional meal at Tandoor Express, much like a nostalgic re-watch of a MacGyver episode. He finds the vegetable content of the food fresh with a crisp texture much like the mullet that Richard Dean Anderson sported in the 80's. Service is pretty good too, not over the top interrupting the meal unnecessary like commercials in the middle of the 3rd act, but more like that welcome commercial break you needed to get to the bathroom. (For those born post 1980....In 1980's The A Team was the fast food of T.V. Easy to watch with overly colorful characters, packed full of action, all at the expense of story line, character depth and plot development. Then at the other end of the spectrum Murder She Wrote was the dine in of prime time T.V. A bit of a blandly packed central character that wouldn't do well on a billboard but given a chance could hold their own, a developing story line throughout the episode reliant on dialog and not automatic gunfire and explosions to stir-up engagement and emotions.
Very tasty eating was the kebab a little too salty for my pleasure, but my naked enjoyed it. also large parts. the delivery arrived on time and was favorable. will definitely order again.