Indian Hut: Tervuren’s Taste of India

“We have all communities here,” says Indian Hut’s Satwinder Singh. Since opening the restaurant in April 2016, Satwinder has embraced Tervuren with its 116 nationalities. “You cannot find a better place than this. There are parks for kids, summer activities, cycling—everything. It’s a very lovely community. When I came here, it felt like another world.”

And Indian Hut has become a beloved dining spot in Tervuren, not just for the town’s strong expat community. “People come here, sit, and relax. This is a better place now,” he says, looking around at the renovated space.

©Tervuren+ Indian Hut has become a beloved dining spot in Tervuren, not just for the town's thousand-strong British community. "People come here, sit, and relax. This is a better place now," he says, looking around at the renovated space.

Satwinder originally hails from Punjab, North India. So does the menu take a more Punjabi direction? “It’s actually a little bit from every corner—South India to the North,” Satwinder tells Tervuren+, emphasizing the restaurant’s diverse culinary offerings.

Tervuren diners are also expanding their choices beyond the usual chicken tikka masala. “People like everything; it’s all more or less popular,” he says. The restaurant attracts a multilingual crowd, not just the town’s 1200+ residents of British origin. But Satwinder admits that being only a few hundred meters away from Tervuren’s British School of Brussels ( BSB) is no coincidence.

Located on the Leuvensesteenweg 80, close to the Q8, big Carrefour and BSB, the restaurant is open 5-10PM and also 12–2PM on Sundays. More details at: https://www.indianhut.be

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Auteur: Dafydd ab Iago. © Artikel en foto’s zijn gelicentieerd © 2024 voor Tervuren+ onder de Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 Internationale licentie.

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