His love for cooking, he says, began right in his own home in Delhi when he was a young boy.
“I lived in a big joint family and all my cousins were girls. I didn’t want to play with them so I would watch the men cook,” he said.
“All the men in my joint family were great Sunday cooks. Almost every Sunday I would sit on the big kitchen counter—the kitchen was bigger than the living room--or Dalda ka dabba and watch my father or uncles cook meat and chicken. Women prepared the rotis. I realised that it was normal for men to cook.
“I would occasionally stir the meat and my father would teach me the names of the ingredients that went in.”
It’s a far cry from being a Sunday cook to making cooking one’s profession, so how did that happen?
Being the only son in a family where all the men were bankers, everyone expected him to be one too. “But I wanted to be different and by then I was inclined towards cooking. So without much thinking, I joined hotel management in Chandigarh and instantly felt most comfortable in the kitchen classes,” Kapoor explains.
Hotel management didn’t have the glamour associated with it today. “It was a job for losers. I got lots of flak but my parents always supported me. My mother said Jo bhi karoge imanadhari se karo (Whatever you do, do it with honesty). It was the guiding force or motto in my life.”
It also got him where he is today: chef at Diya, the specialty Indian restaurant at the Leela Kempinski, Gurgaon. The restaurant has won the best Indian restaurant award and is rated amongst the top five Indian restaurants in Delhi.
Kapoor was recently awarded the prestigious Sir Edmund Hilary Fellowship in the field of Food & Beverage by the Government of New Zealand.
Having been part of all the three seasons of Master Chef, he is in the best position to sum up the show.
“The first season was kind of a start for India, a sample of what a food show can be. The second season was making it bigger and better, and in the third season we have come back to our roots, that it, desi tadka,”
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