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4 Reasons Why You Must Try Inner Chef

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at UDelhi chapter.

Inner Chef, an Indian adaptation of the US-based concept of Blue Apron, started off in April last year with covering office workers in Gurgaon and a year down the line has spread across the cities of Delhi (NCR), Bengaluru, Chennai, Hyderabad and Mumbai. Even though it has come under severe criticism at various points of time, I feel the concept is worth a shot – and here’s why:

1. The Menu

Photo Courtesy of Inner Chef and GIF by Bhanvi Satija

Inner chef’s menu will almost make you want to place an order immediately. With its diverse variety of courses as well as cuisines, it has a lot to offer to all the foodies. Its ready to eat menu has all day breakfast dishes (from cream cheese bagel to parantha sliders); snacks (from keema pao, a variety of rolls to salads and hummus pita); mains (from exotic pastas to classic laccha parantha and sabzi combos); drinks and desserts which are a must try too. Have a look yourself!

2. The Prices

Photo Courtesy of Inner Chef

Typically, the kind of variety that Inner Chef offers is found in a high-end expensive restaurant where your average bill will definitely be more than a thousand bucks. However, Inner Chef’s pricing ranges from a mere Rs. 90 and goes on till about Rs. 300. Which means, even if you include delivery charges and other taxes and you were to order for two people, you’d be done and dusted well under Rs. 600. Which is why average pricing remains one reason to place your next order from Inner Chef.

3. You Get To Be The Chef

GIF Courtesy of giphy.com

WHAAAT? Of course, you weren’t expecting this because you were planning on ordering food that was cooked so that you could eat it as soon as it comes. But here’s the catch – Inner Chef is based on the idea of making their consumers eat fresh. One of its co-founders, Rajesh Sawhney had even told the Economic Times,The whole idea is to give people food that’s fresh, and anyone can be a chef now.”

What could be fresher than something coming out of your own kitchen? So when you place your order, somebody at Inner Chef will do the raw material collection and chopping part for you and you will get a box full of things, along with a recipe on how to go about plating and do menial cooking jobs. You get to FEEL like a chef, despite doing only 0.1% of the whole job and you get to eat fresh food (which keeps your parents happy too, because you aren’t exactly eating junk or bahar ka khana!) Also, it beats for all the times when you had to reheat your ordered food because by the time it delivered, it was cold like ice and you couldn’t consume it directly anyway.

4. The Single Portion Phenomenon

GIF Courtesy of giphy.com

Being a latch-key child, I remember hogging on Maggi or idlis every time my parents weren’t around. Of course, I got bored pretty soon, but I still couldn’t order food from outside because I would end up wasting it. No restaurant would deliver below a certain amount, and fulfilling minimum requirements would mean ordering more food – which nobody was around to help me finish. Most dishes at Inner Chef are a single potion, so there will no food wastage because you can order whatever you want to eat and not feel guilty about wasting the leftovers. Also, it is a win-win for those young working lads who live in PGs and rented homes.

Bhanvi Satija was born in Delhi in February 1996, just in time to welcome the spring. Currently, she is pursuing a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism at the Lady Shri Ram College for Women at the University of Delhi. She was inspired to take up journalism due to her love of language and an ardent desire to change the world. She is an avid traveller, a voracious reader and a passionate storyteller. She also enjoys baking, so much so that she has earned the title of the official pastry chef of the family. She is a Bollywood junkie and believes that Shah Rukh Khan will lead all Indians to safety when the Apocalypse comes, and then do the Lungi Dance. She believes that her best feature is her smile, which literally says, “Ae vekho mere dimple!” She cares deeply about women’s issues and in the next five years, Bhanvi plans to “do enough to call [herself] a feminist” and travel widely whilst trying to change the world with her writing. Her love for her profession is what drives her to write and critique about different kinds of food, and she hopes to continue learning the multifarious amount of skills that Spoon has to offer.