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There’s a common misconception that healthy food can’t be comfort food. When you think of comfort food your mind automatically wanders to crispy fried chicken and potatoes in all shapes and sizes, creamy pastas infused with garlic and fresh herbs, sandwiches and burgers oozing with cheese and all the goodness that comes with the extravagance of calories. Yep, the mind has started wandering already. But when I think of comfort food, my mind doesn’t go to the last burger I had (and regret) in Dubai; it makes a beeline for a café, recommended by friends, that changed my misconception of the relationship between comfort food and healthy food. Healthy food can be comforting.

L’Eto Café is where my friend Sadiq and I had lunch before I caught a flight back to Karachi. It was definitely stuff a foodie’s dreams are made of because the buffet menu was colourful, soulful and delightfully flavourful. Just thinking about it makes me full. There was a choice selection of one protein and two salads and believe me, it was a tough choice to make so Sadiq and I decided to split our selection to try as many different things as possible.

 

Lunch set 1: Roasted Rosemary Turkey with a beetroot and wild rice salad.

 

The protein selection had an option of almost variant of meat; there was a salmon teriyaki, roasted rosemary turkey, chicken and sweet potato patties, lamb koftas and miso glazed chicken breast with crispy sea-weed  Sadiq opted for the glazed and sesame studded fillet of salmon while I went for the turkey with cranberry sauce. For our salads we chose two each.

 

Lunch set 2: Salmon Teriyake with beet and raspberry hummus and a bean salad

 

I don’t even remember the names, just that my beetroot and kale salad was the perfect balance of tarty and sweet and Sadiq’s beetroot and raspberry hummus (I remembered that right) tasted like it had descended straight from the heavens. I also took a portion of wild rice with roasted pumpkin, which to be honest was a little disappointing. I picked out the pumpkin but left the rice because it tasted like something you burn as incense. The wild rice tasted like potpourri, or at least my expectations of what potpourri would taste like. Pleasant it was not. Sadiq’s second salad, a bean concoction, he inhaled so rapidly that I didn’t even get a whiff of it. I have to believe him when he said it was delicious.

And that was our healthy, proportioned and well-balanced meal.

 

Here’s where healthy ends and sinful begins

 

We had been dreaming of topping it off with dessert but here’s the thing. For the last year or so I’ve been on a food trip whereby I eat a salad, skip the main course and then go straight for dessert, or ‘the kill’ as you’d call it. Unfortunately, my slices of roasted turkey and salad were so filling that I could not indulge in the chocolate, caramel and toffee delights that were screaming for attention from the dessert display. ‘Next time,’ Sadiq and I silently reassured the toasted almond croissants, the fruit tarts and the sinfully multi-layered caramel and chocolate brownies that painted the prettiest picture ever,

“We’re not having lunch here next time,” I told Sadiq. “We need to return for dessert and coffee.”

 

What an idea! The drinks are served in giant lightbulbs.

 

You will read a Part 2 of this review whenever I go to Dubai and head out to L-Eto just for a tasting of the desserts. Till then, check it out if you’re in any one of the global destinations that has a L-Eto Café, especially London. You won’t regret it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Aamna Haider Isani

Editor-in-Chief, The author is a full time writer, critic with a love for words and an intolerance for typos, although she'll make one herself every now and then.