Utsav, an Indian restaurant constructed in the overhang connecting two buildings between 46th and 47th, has taken an unexpected path to arrive in New York. Opening in 2000, Utsav came to Midtown by way of Japan, as the American expansion of a chain of nineteen Tokyo restaurants run by Emiko Kothari.
Emiko and her husband, Shivji Kothari, opened their first Indian restaurants in Calcutta in the 1960s. After a short time, the two decided to make the move back to Japan, and begin again in Emiko's native country. They were eager to introduce Bengali cuisine to a new audience in Tokyo.
While she has grown up working in the family business of restaurants, Nandita Khanna, the granddaughter of Emiko, is running Utsav on her own. She wanted to try to expand the family's restaurants to the United States, and to "attempt to enter the more competitive restaurant scene in Manhattan." In chatting with Nandita, we learned that the name choice Utsav means 'festival' in Sanskrit, and it was her desire to try to create an environment that reflected the vibrant festivals from her homeland.
There is multi-level seating in the expansive space of Utsav with a lunch buffet available upstairs alongside the regular menu. While Utsav serves food from all over India and offers many regional specialties, Nandita finds that their most requested dishes are tandoori lambchops and bhuna mutton. In the bar area downstairs, Nandita recommends several innovative Indian twists on standard drinks: the Utsapolitan (a mango and vodka mix) and the pani puri margarita (vodka, tequila, and tamarind water). The bar also serves variations on Indian street food, with bhel puri and an array of chaats.
As we were exiting Ustav, we took note of the well-situated tables just outside of the restaurant, where there was a volume of bankers from a few blocks east, and theater crew from a few blocks west, savoring their Indian meal. This amalgamation perfectly captures the area.