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A bite of royalty

By  You Desk
27 May, 2025

Recently, the popular eatery on Shaheed-e-Millat Road - formerly M’s Eatery - unveiled its ‘Mughal Thaalis’, an homage to the ceremonial feasts of the Mughal era....

Hamza Akram Qawwal and team
Hamza Akram Qawwal and team

eatery

Food has always had a way of telling stories, and at ‘M’s Kitchen’ in Karachi, it’s about to tell a grand one. Recently, the popular eatery on Shaheed-e-Millat Road - formerly M’s Eatery - unveiled its ‘Mughal Thaalis’, an homage to the ceremonial feasts of the Mughal era.

A bite of royalty

At M’s Kitchen, the mission is to delight guests with the rich and diverse flavours of authentic Pakistani and subcontinent cuisine, crafted from the freshest ingredients and time-honoured recipes. They aim to create a warm, inviting atmosphere that brings people together to celebrate food, culture, and community. The Mughal Thaali is a natural extension of that promise: a curated spread of melt-in-the-mouth Galouti Kebabs, creamy Chicken Korma infused with ground nuts, saffron-kissed Biryani, flaky Roomali Rotis, cooling cucumber-mint Raita, and decadent Shahi Tukray to close the meal. Every dish is slow-cooked ‘dum’ style, so each bite carries the depth of centuries-old royal kitchens.

Their vision is to be the premier destination for Pakistani cuisine, known for exceptional culinary experiences and an unwavering commitment to quality. They aspire to share Delhi-wala and Pakistani heritage with the world, one delicious meal at a time - and the new menu addition embodies that aspiration.

A bite of royalty

What makes this chapter especially meaningful is their collaboration with acclaimed Sufi artist Hamza Akram Qawwal. His soulful voice - familiar from mehfils and concert stages - joins hands with our kitchen to celebrate the region’s cultural legacy. Instead of a loud mash-up, this partnership is a quiet conversation between flame-kissed kebabs and soul-stirring qawwali: both steeped in history, both meant to be savoured slowly.

“For us, food is tied to memory, to family, to moments you don’t forget,” says co-founder Mahwish. “That’s exactly what the thaali offers - a chance to pause, to connect, and to taste something deeply rooted.”

The collaboration isn’t a loud fusion of performance and food - it’s a quiet, thoughtful nod to cultural legacy. A thaali that makes you pause, listen, and taste.

For anyone curious about what it means to eat like royalty - with a side of soul - this might be the place.

- You! desk