“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.

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