That night, we dine at the flagship restaurant, Thyme and Ash, which caters to those who seek a high end, fine dining option over their mutli-cuisine restaurants. The food here is innovative and unashamedly indulgent. In keeping with their design philosophy, the restaurant interiors are understated and elegant. The walls have been given a fresh white coat of paint, with white linen tables, comfy white chairs and large glass windows looking out into the game room next door. The dishes here are truly magnificent. My colleague and I are served a warm and comforting thyme and chamomile tea paired with a watermelon amuse-bouche as the executive chef Ravish Mishra and director of food Sharad Singh graciously explain the inspiration behind the specially curated menu for the night. The entrée, marinated apple and beet with rosemary diplomat cream, is served on a bed of olive ash, with thinly sliced shavings of apple and beet, lined on top of each other creating a dome, with a rosemary diplomat and mango cinnamon cream filling in the rolled-up shavings. There is an intense orchestra of texture and flavour that comes with every bite. The saltiness of the cream cheese and sourness of the beet is replaced with a completely different flavour profile, when I bite into the apple shavings with mango cinnamon filling which is delicately sweet and tangy. The two contrasting flavour profiles in one dish is not something you&rsquod think would work, but it does. And faultlessly so.