The next course was a salad of mix lettuce, roasted red and yellow pepper, quinoa, broccoli, snow peas with a drizzle of red wine and cumin dressing. If only food could transfer us to places exotic, the salad sure would take anyone to a lovely French countryside. Till this point everything I had put in my mouth tasted fresh, nothing in the menu till now had anything to do with oil, overpowering presence of cheese, froth (like that&rsquos even something that should be on a plate) the real sweetness of fresh fruits and vegetables with a drizzle of wine here and a sprinkle of sea salt there made the items interesting. Risotto of cauliflower florets, corn puree with truffle oil and pistachio dust was an impressive vegetarian item that surely gave a stiff competition to its non-vegetarian rival chicken leg confit with vegetable ragout. Hunger had left us way back when we were busy swallowing the appetisers whole, but Chef Aman decided we needed to be fed more. And thus came, HolyBelly Earth bowl&mdashcoconut and galangal curry with steamed rice and sprinkling of pumpkin seeds. The sharp citrusy flavour of galangal and coconut was a perfect match and the dish came in an earthen bowl which, later Chef Aman explained, also was where these items were cooked. That explained the wonderful earthy flavour. My unique experience with food at The HolyBelly came to an end with the gorgeous and silky Valrhona chocolate ganache with sea salt, extra virgin olive oil and poached cherries. I never fancied dark chocolates imagine my surprise when it came with olive oil and sea salt. The sea salt acted as a balancing agent between the bitter chocolate and the oil. Needless to say, we wiped the plate clean.