
1481, René-Lévesque Bld. West
http://www.buffetmaharaja.com/
I was told it was one of the more popular places to go.
I really can't imagine why.
Perhaps it's the sheer quantity afforded by a place that charges $14.99 Sunday to Wednesday and two dollars more the rest of the time for an meal unfettered by limitations in any realm but quality. To your left, bubbling, bland saffron curries and bobbing hunks of lamb, to your right, limitless stale desserts and strange cauliflower dishes not short of vinegar. A tandoori counter attendant will force far more skewered chicken on you than you could ever eat and there is no refusing for he has already cooked more than you asked for. The tamarind sauce will be your saving grace. The hot sauce will annihilate all pleasure from whatsoever it touches.
I'd brought my appetite and sampled a wide range of what the restaurent offered. It was, in short, lacking in the essential spiciness and the quintessential magic that makes Indian dining what it is. But we can afford more precision that this
The "lamb and lentil": a complete mystery, not made to impress but certainly palatable.
The Aloo Gobi: one of the more potent selections, and memorable for the wrong reasons. One bite was enough.
The Tandoori chicken: it is racked up unceremoniously as one enters the feeding trough. Mine was too cold and very dry, though the spices seemed about right.
The Butter chicken: more favourable review from Maggie than Etoile Des Indes received, and it was in fact one of the better selections.
The Vegetable Samosas: these large, potato-filled sides were easily my favourite element, despite losing a lot for flavour in apparent fear of the aftermath in washrooms across montreal (this speaks for most of what's offered there). They were ostensibly deep fried, given the transparent flakes, and Maggie and I argued whether this was the correct method. I had seconds with plenty of tamarind.
And all that aside, it must be noted that friendly staff can draw pity from the most dissatisfied diners, just as fine atosphere can convince them they are enjoying themselves. The brusque guidance of the balding caucasion fellow who showed us to our table, the poorly considered lighting, the energy spent attempting to procure a drink, and the pictures of Lord Ram and his escorts against a backdrop of creme-de-menthe bottles; these things coloured the experience in a way the unexciting food could not. It was my birthday, and I was quite dissapointed. A firm 2/10.