Shagun Mehra: Trailblazer in the Kitchen

Shagun Mehra: Trailblazer in the Kitchen

Shagun Mehra was named as one of the top 5 craftspeople in India, in the luxury edition of Fortune Magazine. Shagun is a fifth-generation hotelier, a game-changer female chef, and a trailblazer.  A graduate of Switzerland’s renowned Ecole Les Roches, she fine-tuned her culinary skills at Paris’ Le Cordon Bleu.

Shagun recently cooked with Xavier Pellicer in Spain at his Restaurant Xavier Pellicer which was named the Best Vegetable Restaurant in the World.

Shagun is presently a full-time director at Surya Palace Hotel Vadodara – the flagship property of the Jindal Group of Hotels – having taken the baton from her father. She is also Director of Cuisine at the luxury award-winning resort Coco Shambhala.

shagun mehra female chef

Shagun, I consider it an honor and privilege to have you on my blog.  Help me understand your love for food, wine and joie de vivre. How did it all start?

I’m a hotelier’s daughter. I’m a 5th generation in the business of food. So, I guess it runs in my veins. I’m naturally drawn to it and I feel like ingredients and wine speak to me. The complexity intrigues me in the most natural ways. So, I studied Hotel Management at Ecole Les Roches, Switzerland, and then polished my culinary skills at Le Cordon Bleu, Paris.

I have traveled to more than 30 countries and people always link Indian food to a Balti curry or Butter Chicken. Please elaborate that Indian food is a lot more than that?

Indian food is one of the most diverse cuisines on this planet. Every 100 kilometers is a new cuisine. Hence its complexity lies in the many regional dishes that span across India. So, I think it’s greatly unfair to just narrow it down to a few dishes like Butter Chicken & Balti Curry.

Let’s talk about organic food. What is your take on it and do you use it in your kitchen?

India is a land of villages and agriculture. We grow our own grains, vegetables, and fruits. It is only the bulk supermarket-sourced stuff that is full of fertilizers and pesticides. I serve and eat what the farmer grows for himself and his family. I do my best to source my produce from the farms. I know it may not be certified organic, but India is still heading slowly towards this trend, whereas it is easiest to source fresh produce in villages of Goa and Maharashtra where I live and work.

In Indian culture, becoming a chef is not the first choice. Is that attitude changing?

What you say is true. Especially for a woman. We are expected to be domestic cooks, but the idea of a woman heading a kitchen is still rare. This is changing but still quite slow. Not many well-educated people opt for cooking as a professional chef, because in the past it was a job associated with menial labor. Today you will find a good few chefs going towards a culinary career because it is an exciting space, but there is so much more room for many more.

I want to know three ingredients you do not like to use in your kitchen and three that you love?

Ingredients I don’t like:

Broiler Chicken

Canned or Processed Foods

Free Flowing Processed Bleached Salt & Sugar

Ingredients I love:

Homegrown micro-greens

Seasonal Vegetables & Fruits, indigenous to the area

Fresh Fish & Seafood that come alive into the kitchen

seafood

What does women empowerment mean to you?

When a woman can make decisions for herself that are true to herself. When she is not obliged to cultural and social barriers. Women empowerment is when a woman can stand equal to a man in having ambition and seeing it through. When she can decide exactly what is right for her.

How have marriage and motherhood changed you?

It has made me more sensitive towards the immense inner strength I carry. I have learned to prioritize family and work simultaneously, juggling with them both while living my dream. It is quite a feat. Most men miss this opportunity because pregnancy and motherhood are great lessons on sacrifice but also stealth. This is a big gift that we women are bestowed with.

What advantage does a female chef bring into a commercial kitchen?

Women are natural cooks. We are instinctive by nature. We naturally multi-task hence we can manage better. We are better organized and systematic and because of the years of struggle before us, we are deeply self-driven and motivated to prove a point most to ourselves and then to the others. This makes women great chefs.

You were in Spain recently, cooking. Walk me through that experience what did you learn, what did they learn from you?

I realized how evolved Spanish Gastronomy and philosophy truly is. I learned the importance of respecting the simplest of ingredients and allowing their flavor to shine. I learned to not chase exotic expensive ingredients and take pride in the rich bounty of my own surroundings. I learned about respecting most the people that work for me, and how important they are to my success. I understood that social media is a platform of the future and that it will be crucial for chefs like myself to get the word out through this medium. I learned the art of using restraint in cooking when I want to overpower my food with flavor and multi ingredients. I learned the art of finesse in plating. I learned a world of important food language.

The Spanish learned the beauty of Indian Spices and ancient cooking techniques. They realized the diversity of plates we offer in one meal. They found Indian food a kaleidoscope of robust and delicate flavors marrying together. Most of all they learned how exciting vegetarian food can be!

How important is eating meals together as a family to you?

I love it when my family and friends sit around the table and share food and stories. As a child, I learned most about food by listening to my parents discuss the nuances of a perfect ‘phulka roti’ and how the cumin seeds in the ‘Jeera Aloo’ shouldn’t have been burnt. Its a time of learning, enjoyment, and bonding. It must be done, even if not daily.

indian food

Rapid Fire:

Favorite city – Barcelona

Favorite food -Indian Regional

Favorite dish- Khichdi, kadhi, homemade pickle, eggplant potato bhaji, Rajasthani papad & home-made curds

Best wine pairing with chicken curry – Palo Cortado Sherry

Best wine pairing with Indian veg food – German Riesling

Given a choice to cook for four favorite people who would you pick and why?

Chef Alain Passard – He loves Indian Regional Food and gained 3 Michelin stars mastering vegetables

Leonardo di Caprio – He is a passionate wildlife activist and through my food, I can tell him my story of my Foundation – Ear to the Wild Foundation www.eartothewild.in

Chef Andoni Luiz Aduriz – He is sensitive to serving food that is eaten with fingers. He has an innovative approach to food

Matt Preston – I love his passion for food, his eloquence, and most of all his wardrobe!

You are chosen to go to Mars and can take only 5 things what would those be?

Incense sticks to always keep things smelling good

Meditation Beads because I guess I won’t be having much company there

Binoculars to look for company!

Thepla because I love them any given day and I’m almost Gujarati!

Magic bottle of water that keeps refilling itself

 

(Visited 112 times, 1 visits today)


2 thoughts on “Shagun Mehra: Trailblazer in the Kitchen”

Leave a Reply