The menu -- mainly consisting of Indo-French dishes -- has been recreated at some Taj hotels across the country to celebrate 70 years of the country's independence.
"While flipping through the archives of Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai one of our associates found the menu from the night of independence. It was shared with head chefs as a valuable piece of history," says Rajesh Wadhwa, Executive Chef at Taj Palace Delhi.
The menu, priced at Rs 1947, includes an array of vegetarian and non-vegetarian dishes celebrating independence -- such as the Consomme a L'indienne" or the "Indian consomme", "Vacherin de peches liberation" and "Poularde Souffle Independence". It will be on offer till August 14.
"We have retained the Indo-French touches not only in the names of the dishes but also in the core French sauces. We are also presenting the food in sync with the culinary traditions of that year," says Wadhwa.
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"We did research into how to localise this menu. It took us around ten days to create this elaborated spread. The challenge was to present our guests with a menu which is certainly dated and reminiscent of different times," he says.
The Taj is also offering all serving and retired Indian Armed Forces personnel a special discount of 70 per cent across its hotels in India.
Lord Louis Mountbatten, who was the country's first Governor-General, bid farewell to India from the steps of the Taj Mahal Palace in Mumbai in 1948.
Independence was ushered in with music, dancing, speeches and merry-making, the hotel states in a release.
"Everyone was very happy and gay," it quotes from its archives a guest, Catherine Courtney, as saying.
The guest recalled seeing "hundreds of people" coming up the stairs.
"They were all happy and gay and I said, 'Jai Hind' and they said, 'Jai Hind'".