Spoon des Îles by Alain Ducasse
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There are biryani vendors across Mauritius, but Briyani House in Rose Hill has been making the real thing for over 30 years, and anyone who grew up on the central plateau has a memory of their first bowl here. The restaurant is a no-frills canteen on the main road: fluorescent lights, formica tables, a serving counter at the back behind which the day's biryani sits in enormous pots. The biryani is made in the traditional dum style — mutton, chicken, or vegetable, layered with long-grain basmati, caramelised onion, fried potato, and a dry spice blend that includes cinnamon, cloves, star anise, and a local proprietary mix that the family has never disclosed. The pot is sealed with dough and cooked over a slow wood fire for three hours, which produces the characteristic steam-infused, intensely aromatic rice that no shortcut method can replicate. It is available only at lunch, and it sells out every day without exception, usually before 1pm. Arrive at 11.30am for the best chance at the mutton version. The raita (yoghurt with cucumber) is the only side dish — there are no starters, no desserts. A glass of homemade alouda (rosewater milk with basil seeds) from the vendor next door is the traditional accompaniment.
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